In a new market update, “Common Sense Crypto” host Rich — a YouTuber known for his XRP-focused technical and macro coverage — argues that XRP still looks “pretty bullish” on higher timeframes, even as U.S. lawmakers and banks push to limit yield on stablecoins and tighten control over digital assets.
The video centers on two fronts: XRP’s price structure around $2, and a brewing regulatory showdown in Washington that could shape how money moves into (and earns yield within) crypto.
XRP Price: Higher Low or Drop to $1.77?
Rich reviews the XRP chart on the 1‑day and 1‑week timeframes, noting price hovering around $2.13 after briefly touching $2.18. On the weekly chart, he says, XRP remains in a bullish structure as long as it prints a higher low.
Sponsored
He cites analyst Credible Crypto’s “two-path” scenario: either the recent move is a relief bounce that rolls over toward $1.77, or the so‑called “triple tap” pattern has already formed a demand base and dips will be “bought for continued expansion to the upside.” In that latter case, $1.77 would be defended and the market would aim for new highs.
ETF flows are part of his bullish thesis. According to Rich, XRP ETFs have now reversed an earlier $40 million outflow and recently logged about $44 million in daily inflows, more than double the $20 million level he views as a healthy baseline.
Bitcoin, Dominance& The Ideal Altseason Timing
Bitcoin trading above $97,000 in his chart setup (the video doesn’t clarify if this reflects a particular exchange, pair, or projection) is presented as a key driver. As long as BTC grinds higher, he expects it to “pull the rest of the market up” and eventually confirm a true altcoin season.
He highlights Bitcoin dominance as the pivot: many traders are “still expecting it to fall off a cliff,” which, if it happens, could send altcoins “parabolic.” For now, though, he characterizes the market as on the verge of altseason rather than firmly in it.
Stablecoin Yield Fight: Banks vs. Crypto Platforms
Much of the video zeroes in on U.S. crypto legislation. A Senate crypto market structure and stablecoin bill — whose markup has been pushed to January 27 — is stalled over the question of whether stablecoin holders can earn yield.
Rich notes Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse’s cautious support for the effort, calling the bill “a massive step forward” if it delivers real regulatory clarity. But he emphasizes that rewards on stablecoins are the main battlefield, with banks lobbying hard against them.
Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has even withdrawn support for the current draft, citing “a de‑facto ban on tokenized equities,” DeFi restrictions, broad surveillance of user financial data, and provisions that could “kill rewards on stablecoins” while letting banks block competitors.
VanEck’s Matt Hougan, featured in a clip Rich plays, takes a more pragmatic view, arguing that while the bill might bar issuers from paying interest directly, it leaves carve‑outs for platforms like Coinbase to offer yield through specific activities. “Yield is like water” Hougan says — it will find a way to reach investors through structured products and workarounds.
Rich is less convinced. He doubts that most people will jump through hoops to earn yield via complex programs; what threatens banks, in his view, is the simple scenario: move cash from a checking account into USDC or another stablecoin and collect 4–6% with minimal effort.
Warren’s Amendments Amidst Tokenization Clash
The video also touches on Senator Elizabeth Warren’s reported 38 amendments aimed at tightening the bill: more sanctions and AML obligations, reduced protections for developers, extra controls on DeFi front ends, and language that Rich says would “gut the SEC’s ability to allow tokenization.”
He frames this as increasingly out of step with Wall Street heavyweights. With BlackRock publicly backing asset tokenization, he argues, attempts to block it are unlikely to succeed long term, noting that governments have repeatedly leaned on BlackRock during financial crises.
Banks are “fighting for their business model,” he says, pointing to a statement from JPMorgan’s CFO calling interest‑bearing stablecoins “obviously dangerous and undesirable.” Rich interprets this as an admission that deposit flight into yield‑bearing stablecoins is a real risk.
Why This Matters
For traders, Rich’s message is straightforward: the XRP chart still supports a bullish continuation as long as key levels hold, but a retest of $1.77 remains on the table.
For longer‑term allocators, he suggests the more consequential story is regulatory: whether U.S. law will allow simple, direct yield on stablecoins, or force it into more structured, platform‑mediated products.
In his view, sustained ETF inflows, a potential drop in Bitcoin dominance, and eventual clarity around stablecoin rewards could combine into the environment XRP holders have been waiting for — but the timing, and path there, remain uncertain.
Stay in the loop with DailyCoin’s crypto news today:
People Also Ask
No. It presents both a bullish continuation scenario and a possible drop to around $1.77 before any breakout.
Mixed. Rich likes the idea of clear rules but criticizes provisions seen as anti‑privacy, anti‑DeFi, and anti‑yield, echoing Coinbase’s objections.
According to the video, banks are lobbying to prevent straightforward interest payments on stablecoins, fearing deposit flight from traditional accounts.
They are used as a key bullish data point: the recovery from prior outflows and current daily inflows above $20 million are framed as signs of increasing demand and eventual supply tightness.

