XRP Drops to $1.188 YTD Low as Traders Absorb $14M Blow From Liquidation Wave
On June 3, XRP hit a new year-to-date low of $1.188 amid a broader crypto sell-off, down nearly 34% for the year, before stabilizing just under $1.22.

Key Takeaways
- On June 3, XRP hit a new year-to-date low of $1.188 amid an escalating U.S.-Iran military confrontation.
- The bearish market triggered $14.06 million in long liquidations, completely stalling Ripple’s Mastercard news.
- Critics warn that future Strategy liquidations could similarly impact the market.
XRP Hits New Year-to-Date Low
On June 3, XRP dipped below $1.20 amid a market-wide sell-off that also saw bitcoin tap its lowest price since early February. Market data show that XRP briefly dropped to $1.188, a new year-to-date low for the digital asset, which traded at double this value on Jan. 6. With this decline, XRP maintained a trend that has seen it shed 9% of its value in the last seven days.
Although it quickly rebounded shortly afterwards, the cryptocurrency ultimately lost momentum shortly after passing the $1.24 mark before gradually making its way back to $1.21. At the time of writing at 3 p.m. EST, XRP traded just under $1.22, a marginal decline that trimmed its market capitalization to $75.3 billion. The price action also saw XRP’s 30-day losses jump to 13% and its year-to-date losses climb to nearly 34%.
Like much of the broader crypto market, XRP buckled under a wave of bearish sentiment triggered by intensifying military skirmishes between the U.S. Navy and Iranian forces. While Washington officials framed the strikes on Iranian assets strictly as defensive maneuvers, market observers and geopolitical analysts fear the two sides are sleepwalking into another full-scale bombing confrontation.
Compounding the geopolitical friction in the Middle East, XRP was already reeling from Strategy’s surprise disclosure that it liquidated 32 bitcoins to fund dividend payments to preferred stockholders. While staunch defenders of the bitcoin treasury pioneer shrugged off the liquidation as standard capital management, Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor’s June 3 post on X hinted that the company would resume buying bitcoin.
However, critics caution that this sale, as well as future liquidations to sustain dividend obligations, could break the bedrock narrative of Strategy as a permanent bitcoin treasury vault. The fallout from the sale has been so intense that it has completely overshadowed otherwise macroeconomic tailwinds, such as an announcement from Mastercard that it will integrate settlement support for Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin.
Meanwhile, XRP’s retreat on Wednesday triggered the liquidation of just over $14.06 million in long bets, compared with $1.07 million in shorts.
