The Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (NYSE:GS) completely liquidated its $154 million investment in spot XRP exchange-traded funds (ETFs) during the first quarter of 2026. A 13F filing released on Friday, May 16, 2026, confirmed that the Wall Street bank exited its entire Ripple-linked position. This liquidation occurred across funds managed by Bitwise, Grayscale, 21Shares, and Franklin Templeton, marking a sharp pivot from the bank’s strategy in late 2025.
The disclosure reveals a broader reduction in the bank’s altcoin exposure. In addition to the XRP exit, Goldman Sachs fully liquidated its Solana (SOL) ETF holdings and slashed its Ethereum (ETH) positions by approximately 70%, leaving $114 million in those funds. However, the firm maintained a significant commitment to the sector, holding over $700 million in Bitcoin (BTC) ETFs. This move signals a “Bitcoin dominant” narrative as the bank seeks lower-risk digital asset allocations.
Analysts at Bloomberg previously suggested that the bank’s XRP build-up was likely client-facilitation and market-making rather than a long-term directional bet. By closing these positions, Goldman Sachs appears to have closed its “tactical window” for altcoins. Experts suggest Wall Street may be distancing itself from direct network risks as macro warning signs emerge due to global macroeconomic uncertainty and rising geopolitical tensions.
Infrastructure pivot replaces direct token holdings
While Goldman Sachs is offloading specific altcoin tokens, it is redirecting capital toward the underlying technology of the digital asset market. During the same period, the bank acquired 654,630 shares of Hyperliquid Strategies, a NASDAQ-listed firm valued at $3.33 million. This shift suggests the bank prefers owning shares in tech corporations building blockchain networks over holding the tokens themselves.
The bank also increased its stakes in crypto-linked companies such as Coinbase, Circle, and Galaxy Digital. Conversely, it pared back exposure to mining and treasury-heavy firms like MicroStrategy and Riot Platforms. This move reflects a broader preference for established corporate entities over high-beta assets. As XRP speculative activity continues to fluctuate, the bank’s rotation suggests a more defensive, equity-focused stance.
Despite the bank’s departure, the XRP market showed significant resilience. The exit triggered a temporary 3% price drop from $1.42 to $1.37 over a two-day period, but independent buyers rapidly absorbed the supply. Institutional demand elsewhere remained strong, with the broader XRP ETF market bringing in $176.3 million in new capital since April. This indicates that the ecosystem is no longer reliant on any single major institution.
Data shows strong institutional absorption
According to data from SoSoValue, total net assets across XRP ETFs climbed to $1.18 billion during the reporting period. This growth gave the ETF market control over 1.33% of the total XRP supply. While Goldman Sachs exited, other giants entered or expanded their footprints. UBS, the world’s largest wealth manager with $5.7 trillion in assets, accumulated 197,369 shares in the Volatility Shares XRP ETF and 317 shares in the Grayscale XRP Trust in Q1 2026.
RBC and Bank of America also disclosed small first-time XRP ETF stakes in their Q1 filings. This influx of fresh capital helped stabilize the market after Goldman’s exit, which at one point accounted for roughly 73% of disclosed institutional XRP ETF holdings. The steady inflows suggest that the bank’s selling was a localized tactical choice rather than a judgment on the network’s fundamental utility.
Institutional interest is also buoyed by legislative progress. Many investors believe market sentiment shifts are tied to the CLARITY Act. The bill, which passed the Senate Banking Committee on May 14, 2026, aims to classify XRP as a digital commodity. Standard Chartered projects that this regulatory milestone could eventually attract between $4 billion and $8 billion in total inflows into XRP-focused products.
Current price action and legislative outlook
The impact of Goldman’s exit has been secondary to broader market trends. On May 18, XRP was trading at $1.38, representing a 6.54% drop over seven days and a 26.46% decline year-to-date. This slide reflects general pressure across altcoins that started long before the 13F filing. XRP has faced consistent headwinds since its July 2025 peak of $3.65, and the recent institutional rotation is seen as part of that wider trend.
Despite the price pressure, the technical fundamentals of the XRP Ledger (XRPL) and its use in cross-border payments remain intact. Total cumulative inflows into XRP funds have passed $1.38 billion, with XRP-linked products now holding more assets under management than those linked to Solana. This trend suggests that while individual firms like Goldman Sachs may rotationally exit, the broader institutional appetite for XRP remains on an upward trajectory.
Holders are now looking toward the final reading of the CLARITY Act as the defining catalyst for the asset. If enacted, the legislation would provide the federal oversight and legal certainty necessary to unlock multi-billion dollar inflows. For now, the “Goldman dump” appears to be a tactical rebalance in a maturing market, rather than an exit from the future of digital finance.
