- CME XRP futures reached $62.87B volume and 1.32M contracts traded in their first year since launching in May 2025.
- Products include standard and micro cash-settled contracts tracking the CME CF XRP-Dollar Reference Rate for regulated exposure.
- Institutional adoption grew after Ripple’s SEC case, with broader expansion across crypto derivatives and rising XRP market activity.
CME Group said its XRP futures products generated $62.87 billion in notional trading volume during their first year on the market. Since launching on May 19, 2025, traders exchanged 1.32 million contracts across CME’s XRP futures suite, according to exchange data through May 15, 2026. The contracts also averaged roughly $238 million in daily trading volume as institutional demand for regulated XRP exposure increased.
XRP Futures Trading Activity Climbed
CME introduced two XRP futures products when trading began last year. The exchange launched a standard contract covering 50,000 XRP and a micro contract covering 2,500 XRP.
Notably, both products settle in cash instead of physical XRP delivery. The contracts also track the CME CF XRP-Dollar Reference Rate, allowing traders to gain XRP exposure through regulated derivatives markets.
According to CME data, traders exchanged contracts representing roughly 28.6 billion XRP during the first year. Futures markets also allow participants to take bullish or bearish positions without directly holding the underlying asset.
Meanwhile, CME later expanded its XRP derivatives lineup by introducing XRP options and Spot-Quoted XRP futures products.
Institutional Demand Expanded After SEC Case
The growth in XRP derivatives trading followed years of regulatory uncertainty surrounding Ripple and XRP. Many institutional firms previously avoided XRP-linked products during the SEC’s lawsuit against Ripple.
However, regulated XRP futures products created new access points for hedge funds, asset managers, and professional traders operating within U.S. regulatory frameworks.
Additionally, CME reported broader growth across its crypto derivatives business. Open interest across CME’s crypto futures and options products has increased 27% since October 2022.
The exchange’s crypto options complex now includes products tied to Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP.
Regulated Crypto Markets Continue Growing
Institutional investors increasingly shifted toward regulated trading venues after several liquidation events on offshore crypto exchanges. CME’s XRP futures activity reflects that broader migration into regulated derivatives infrastructure.
Meanwhile, spot XRP investment products also recorded fresh institutional activity. A U.S. spot XRP ETF recently reported $750,400 in single-day net inflows.
Activity on the XRP Ledger has also increased alongside rising derivatives market participation tied to XRP-related products.
