New York, Jan 13, 2026, 06:28 EST — Premarket
- XRP climbed roughly 1%, reaching about $2.06, following strength seen in major tokens.
- Traders highlighted renewed momentum in U.S. market structure alongside a packed macro calendar, with CPI taking center stage.
- Attention shifts to inflation figures due at 8:30 a.m. ET, with a Senate markup scheduled for later this week.
Early Tuesday, XRP climbed roughly 1% to $2.06, recovering from a volatile spell and tracking alongside bitcoin and ether’s advances.
The move arrives amid growing efforts in Washington to establish regulations for digital assets, a development that could redefine how tokens are regulated and determine who can sell them to U.S. investors. (Barron’s)
Ripple, the firm closely linked to XRP, has also pushed a legal angle in this debate. In a letter released by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Ripple urged the agency not to adopt methods that “collapse the distinction” between a securities offering and an asset that later trades on secondary markets. (SEC)
Macro risk looms as the U.S. consumer price index for December is set for release at 8:30 a.m. ET. This report frequently moves Treasury yields and, in turn, influences demand for speculative assets like crypto. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
Economists forecast headline CPI to climb 0.3% monthly and 2.7% year-on-year, with core inflation also projected to increase 0.3% for the month, according to a Reuters poll. (Reuters)
Rising yields usually weigh on crypto, making safer investments more attractive and squeezing financial conditions. The Federal Reserve’s upcoming policy meeting on Jan. 27-28 is a key date for trades sensitive to rates. (Federal Reserve)
In Washington, attention has zeroed in on the draft Digital Asset Market Clarity Act. Traders view it as a move closer to defining the boundaries between SEC regulation and commodities-style oversight. (Barron’s)
The House bill proposes a framework to regulate “digital commodities,” dividing oversight between the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Market watchers are eager to see how this language might shape the supervision of exchange listings and trading platforms. (Congress)
A clearer rulebook doesn’t guarantee a win for XRP. Bills can be rewritten, delayed, or stalled, leaving the industry vulnerable to enforcement risks and ongoing shifts in how a token sale is classified as a securities offering.
Traders are set to eye Tuesday’s inflation report for clues on how it might shift the rates landscape. Meanwhile, the Senate Banking Committee could push the market-structure package closer to a markup session scheduled for Jan. 15. (Senate Banking Committee)