The post Why Goldman Sachs Owning the XRP ETF Is Not the Bullish Signal Most People Think It Is appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Goldman Sachs appearing on the holder list of the newly launched XRP and Solana ETFs sent a ripple of excitement through crypto markets last week. A Wall Street giant owning a spot XRP ETF felt, to many, like a coronation. Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart has a more sobering read of the situation — and it is worth hearing.
The Headline That Got Everyone Talking
When regulatory filings revealed Goldman Sachs had taken positions in spot ETFs tracking XRP and Solana, alongside its already known holdings in Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, the reaction was immediate. For a community that has spent years waiting for traditional finance to take crypto seriously, seeing one of Wall Street’s most prestigious names on an XRP ETF holder list felt like validation at the highest level.
The story spread fast. The interpretation was almost universally bullish. Goldman is in. Institutions have arrived. XRP is legitimate.
Seyffart’s view is more complicated.
What Goldman’s Position Actually Means
“I wouldn’t ascribe too much to seeing a name like that at the top of the holders list,” Seyffart said when asked about the filings. Goldman sits at the top of the Bitcoin and Ethereum ETF holder lists too, he noted, and nobody reads those positions as a long-term directional bet on crypto.
The more likely explanation, according to Seyffart, is that the bulk of Goldman’s ETF exposure originates from its trading desk rather than from a conviction investment. Basis trading, market making, and facilitating client orders from high-net-worth individuals are all plausible explanations for the position. None of them represent Goldman making a strategic decision to back XRP as an asset.
Millennium Management, the second largest holder of the XRP ETF, sits in a similar category. Large financial institutions appear at the top of these lists not necessarily because they believe in the underlying asset, but because trading these instruments is simply part of what they do.
Where the Genuine Conviction Actually Lives
Seyffart drew a distinction when looking at the Solana ETFs, where a handful of dedicated crypto hedge funds lead the holder rankings. Those positions, he suggested, are far more likely to represent genuine long-term conviction. Several of those funds probably helped seed the ETFs in the first place by contributing their own Solana holdings, which means their appearance on the list does not even represent net new buying of the asset.
The same logic applies across the board. When an institution converts existing XRP or Solana exposure into an ETF wrapper, it is not adding to demand for the underlying token. It is simply changing the vehicle through which it holds an existing position. On a net basis, the market impact can be close to zero.
The Uncomfortable Truth
The crypto market has a habit of reading institutional ETF filings as endorsements. Goldman’s name on an XRP ETF holder list is genuinely important, and there may well be some client money in there that is straightforwardly long the asset. But the more mundane reality, according to one of the most respected ETF analysts in the business, is that Wall Street’s presence in these products says far less about institutional conviction in XRP than the headlines suggest.







