The post Was XRP’s Price Engineered to Hit $12,000? Analyst Alleges Long-Term Plan Behind SEC Lawsuits appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
XRP’s price has frustrated many investors over the past few months, barely moving while other cryptocurrencies surged. But according to financial and macro analyst Jim Willie, that lack of movement may not be accidental.
Speaking about the changing global financial system, Willie argued that XRP’s role was decided long ago and that powerful institutions are still quietly preparing the ground before the public sees any major price action.
“This Was Decided Five Years Ago”
Willie claims that major financial players began coordinating several years back, well before most retail investors paid attention to XRP. In his view, central banks, large clearing houses, and market infrastructure giants reached an understanding about how digital assets would fit into future money transfers.
He said in the interview, “I believe this happened five years ago. They (big Institutions) got together a long time ago and said, ‘We want to limit public ownership, so we’ll push some frivolous SEC lawsuits. Let’s agree on an initial price of $5,000, and eventually maybe $12,000, but we need this thing to work.’”
XRP as a “Building Block,” Not a Trade
According to Willie, XRP should not be viewed like a stock or a short-term trade. Instead, he describes it as a building block for moving massive amounts of money across the global financial system.
He argues that the real action is not happening on public exchanges like Binance or Coinbase. Instead, activity is taking place behind closed doors as institutions prepare systems capable of handling trillions of dollars in daily transfers.
“This isn’t about profit margins or quarterly earnings,” Willie said. “This is about moving huge volumes of funds.”
Big Names Preparing the Infrastructure
Willie pointed to some of the world’s largest financial institutions as key players in this preparation phase, including BlackRock, JPMorgan, Bank of New York Mellon, and Nasdaq.
He says these firms are focused on tokenization, derivatives settlement, and large-scale transfers, areas where even small efficiency gains could save billions. In that context, speed and liquidity matter far more than short-term price swings.
Why the Price Has Stayed Quiet
For everyday XRP holders, the big question remains: why hasn’t the price moved if all this is happening?
Willie’s explanation is simple. He believes institutions are still “loading up” and finalizing infrastructure. In his view, once the system is ready and a major trigger appears, the shift could happen quickly rather than gradually.
He described the potential change as an “all-at-once” event, possibly accelerated by a financial crisis or a sudden rollout of tokenized markets.
For now, XRP remains a slow mover on price charts. But if Willie is right, the real story may be unfolding far away from retail traders, inside the systems that move global money every day.









