
Canary XRP ETF hits a crucial milestone in just a few minutes of launch.
Just after its launch on Thursday, November 13, the Canary XRP ETF is already beating expectations, as it has recorded a surprising $26 million in volume within the first 30 minutes of its grand debut.
Eric Balchunas, the senior ETF analyst for Bloomberg, has shared this update via his X handle, revealing that the milestone has seen XRPC blow out his initial predictions of $17 million.
The analyst further shared data revealing that the ETF is priced at $26.54 per share. Hence, this means that about 1 million units have been traded early within half an hour after it launched.
The early momentum surrounding XRPC has far exceeded initial expectations, beating previous predictions of market experts. Apparently, this is attributable to the hype and heightened enthusiasm surrounding the product long before its official launch.
SHIB has added a new zero to its price as it continues its downtrend for November.
Shiba Inu has added a zero, following weeks of price volatility, which has prolonged the sideways trading range. This breakdown to lower levels comes as Shiba Inu breaks a historic November deadlock.
SHIB has faced consolidation since early 2025, with the price unable to sustain breaks above major support and resistance.
In late October, the SHIB price broke below the important psychological level of $0.00001 per coin, adding a new zero. While the drop did not last long, the damage was already done, and now the entire setup for Shiba Inu looks fragile.
This range-bound behavior reflected low volatility, weak demand and competition from other meme coins, leading to investor frustration over stalled growth.
CNB’s $1 million Bitcoin purchase is being framed as a controlled experiment, not an investment or a change to the Czech central bank’s reserves.
The Czech National Bank (CNB) has created a “test portfolio” of digital assets worth $1 million, including Bitcoin, U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins and a tokenized dollar deposit.
This is not part of the CNB’s official international reserves and is more like an experimental account for learning purposes. Central banks typically do not hold crypto directly because of its volatility and regulatory uncertainty.
Central banks typically do not hold crypto directly because of its volatility and regulatory uncertainty. CNB’s move is notable because it is the first central bank within the European Union to experiment with digital assets.
With the latest move, the CNB wants to gain practical experience with blockchain-based assets. They aim to prepare for future changes in the financial system, including tokenization, digital payments and new forms of assets.






