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XRP’s $1.50 Breakout Is Back in Play After Senate Crypto Vote Clears Key Hurdle
14 May 2026
2 mins read

XRP’s $1.50 Breakout Is Back in Play After Senate Crypto Vote Clears Key Hurdle

Washington, May 14, 2026, 14:04 EDT

The Senate Banking Committee moved the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act forward on Thursday with a 15-9 tally, sending Washington’s major crypto market-structure bill closer to a Senate showdown and pulling renewed attention to XRP’s $1.50 mark. According to Reuters, every Republican on the committee supported the measure, joined by two Democrats—Ruben Gallego and Angela Alsobrooks—though both signaled their support on the floor isn’t guaranteed.

XRP’s price has long hinged on a central legal puzzle: is it a security, a commodity, or does it fit some other mold? Back in March, the SEC and CFTC tried to shed light on crypto regulation with a joint statement. In it, the Federal Register singled out XRP as a “digital commodity”—meaning a token tied to an active blockchain, not a slice of a company’s earnings. SEC

By the time the committee took up the measure, traders had already factored the vote into prices. According to TradingView/Invezz, XRP was last seen at $1.43, off 1.8% for the session. Resistance sits at $1.50, with $1.44 pegged as near-term support. A daily close above $1.50 could open the door to $1.60, and potentially even $1.80–$1.85, they noted.

Institutional money keeps stacking up. CoinShares said XRP exchange-traded products, which are funds pegged to the token, pulled in $40 million for the week ending May 8. That haul brings 2024 inflows to $191 million and pushes assets under management to $2.5 billion. James Butterfill, head of research at CoinShares, described the surge as a “notable acceleration.” TradingView

The bullish scenario goes beyond just regulatory shifts. On Thursday, Motley Fool contributor Dominic Basulto argued that XRP could touch $5 this year, but only if regulatory clarity aligns with the adoption of asset tokenization—essentially, bringing things like stocks and bonds onto the blockchain as tokens. Basulto pointed out, though, that over on Polymarket, the odds of XRP reaching $5 by 2026 are pegged at just 8%, which throws some cold water on that optimism.

That narrative aimed at retail traders had already been simmering ahead of the vote. Coinpedia, quoting crypto analyst Zach Rector, reported that the next XRP bull run wasn’t up for debate—just a matter of timing. The May 14 markup, according to Rector, was positioned as the final straightforward shot at legislation before midterm campaigning ramps up and clogs the agenda.

This wasn’t just about XRP. According to Barron’s, Bitcoin climbed roughly 3% to $81,500 after the committee voted. Coinbase shares picked up 7%, while Strategy added 6.4%. The moves signaled that traders were treating the bill as a broad U.S. crypto-policy play—not simply a single-coin narrative.

The real battle is buried in the fine print. According to Galaxy, the Senate Banking rewrite clocks in at 309 pages, a product of lengthy negotiations—one notable result: a Tillis-Alsobrooks deal over stablecoin rewards. Stablecoins, those crypto tokens pegged mainly to the dollar, are at the heart of it. Elliptic flagged that the compromise blocks intermediaries from offering yield on passive stablecoin balances, though it leaves the door open for certain rewards tied to user activity.

The bill isn’t law yet, and the upcoming floor vote could get messier than what played out in committee. Democrats have raised concerns—pointing to anti-money-laundering loopholes, ethics issues, and how the bill handles DeFi, shorthand for decentralized finance software that cuts out middlemen. Senator Elizabeth Warren called it “not ready for prime time,” warning it could threaten consumers, national security, and the broader financial system. Senate Banking Committee

David Carlisle at Elliptic pointed out the bill faces several hurdles: merging with the Senate Agriculture Committee’s draft, clearing the 60-vote threshold in the Senate, and getting the House to sign off on any revisions. XRP, in the meantime, is left hanging—standard Washington uncertainty after a favorable committee nod, with the possibility of the process grinding to a halt.

That $1.50 mark is just another number on the chart for now—not any sort of policy signal. According to Investing.com, XRP’s been boxed in between $1.30 and resistance from $1.51 up to $1.57 for months. Even if the price pushes past those levels, it’s staring down the 200-day moving average at roughly $1.72 and some old resistance near $1.80.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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