Société Générale is quietly pushing deeper into the crypto space, and this time it’s expanding its euro-backed stablecoin onto the XRP Ledger.
This marks the bank’s third blockchain integration, following earlier deployments on Ethereum and Solana.
What does this mean?
It signals that major traditional finance players are no longer just experimenting with crypto — they’re actively building across multiple chains to reach different ecosystems, users, and liquidity pools.
By bringing its euro stablecoin to XRPL, SocGen is tapping into a fast, low-cost network that’s already designed for payments and cross-border transactions. That could accelerate real-world use cases like instant settlements, remittances, and institutional transfers.
The bigger picture is clear: banks are not waiting on the sidelines anymore. They’re positioning themselves right in the middle of the next financial infrastructure wave.
And when legacy finance starts going multi-chain, you know the game is changing. 🚀
Michael Saylor says their Bitcoin strategy is built for the long game, not quick profits.
The crash from $66K to $16K didn’t scare them — it removed the weak hands and proved who really believes. When fear peaked, they were ready to hold through anything… even to zero if it came to that.
Last week alone, another $173 million left crypto investment funds, making it the fourth straight week of withdrawals. Over the past month, that adds up to a massive $3.74 billion pulled from the market.
Bitcoin continues to take the biggest hit, with $133 million exiting in just one week. Ethereum followed with $85 million in outflows, showing that even the largest altcoin isn’t escaping the selling wave.
Zoom out a bit and the trend looks even heavier. Crypto funds have seen money leave in 11 of the last 16 weeks. And since October 2025, US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs alone have seen $8.5 billion flow out.
This kind of sustained outflow signals one thing clearly: sentiment is getting extremely bearish.
But here’s the twist — historically, when fear reaches these extremes, markets often get closer to a turning point than most people expect.
Right now, the mood is negative. The data is weak. But for many experienced investors, this is exactly the kind of environment where the next big move quietly begins.