SEC Reviews NYSE Arca Rule Shift Opening Door for XRP ETF

SEC Reviews NYSE Arca Rule Shift Opening Door for XRP ETF Access

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SEC Reviews NYSE Arca Rule Shift Opening Door for XRP ETF Access
  • SEC reviews NYSE Arca rule change easing crypto ETF listings with stricter asset standards.
  • XRP appears alongside BTC, ETH, and SOL in ETF models under the proposed regulated framework rules.
  • New ETF proposal requires 85% regulated assets while allowing limited exposure to other tokens.

U.S. regulators are reviewing a proposed rule change that could reshape how crypto exchange-traded funds are listed and who can access them through traditional markets, including exposure linked to XRP. 

The Securities and Exchange Commission published the notice on April 27, 2026, after NYSE Arca filed changes to its commodity-based trust share framework in New York. The proposal seeks to make ETF listings easier while tightening the quality rules for the assets inside those funds.

The filing says ETF issuers could get approval more quickly if most of the assets they hold already meet regulatory standards. It uses example portfolios that include XRP alongside Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and gold to show how the new rules would work in practice. As a result, XRP now sits in the same comparison group as major crypto assets that already trade under regulated futures and surveillance frameworks.

ETF Structure Rules Tighten Asset Composition

NYSE Arca says at least 85% of a fund’s value must come from approved commodities, regulated securities, or cash. Issuers would also need to check compliance every day and report any violations immediately. The aim is to speed up ETF approvals while still protecting investors.

The proposal also allows up to 15% exposure to assets that fall outside the main eligibility rules. However, issuers would still need surveillance agreements in place for the markets tied to those assets. The exchange says this structure helps reduce manipulation risks while still giving fund managers some flexibility in how they build portfolios.

On the other hand, this filing exempts non-fungible tokens and collectibles from being considered commodities. This limits the classification of the commodity to assets that have more trading history and regulation. XRP remains an example of approved commodities when it is associated with approved crypto assets.

Market Reaction and Institutional Positioning

The proposal fits into a wider push by institutions toward tokenized assets and regulated crypto products. Firms like Franklin Templeton and Ondo Finance continue building ETF and tokenization strategies across both traditional finance and blockchain markets. At the same time, regulators are keeping a close focus on clearer reporting standards and consistent oversight across different asset classes.

Market analysts say XRP’s inclusion in the filing signals growing institutional recognition. Still, market performance remains uneven. XRP trades near $1.37 and has fallen over the past week, even after a modest monthly recovery. It remains far below earlier highs, despite ETF inflows reaching $1.29 billion since launch.

Related: Ripple’s Corporate Treasury Will Boost Companies’ Bottom Lines—Analyst

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