# Morgan Stanley Eyes Digital Commodity XRP After SEC and CFTC Reclassification Removes Legal Barrier
Morgan Stanley’s digital asset division is reportedly evaluating XRP exposure for its managed accounts following the SEC and CFTC joint reclassification of Ripple (XRP) as a digital commodity. The token trades at $1.34, down over 40% from recent highs despite what should have been the most bullish regulatory catalyst in its history. Seven spot ETFs hold $1.32 billion, Grayscale converted a $2.1 billion trust, and Franklin Templeton entered at a 0.15% fee tier. Ripple itself carries a $50 billion valuation with its IPO reportedly off the table. The regulatory green light arrived but the price did not follow. Investors watching the disconnect between legal clarity and market performance are increasingly looking at T4urox IO , a decentralized hedge fund where autonomous AI agents will trade pooled capital for direct profit distribution (https://bit.ly/ai-hedgefund).
What Four Analysts Project for XRP After Full Commodity Classification
Standard Chartered’s Geoffrey Kendrick set a $2.80 target for 2026 and $12.60 for 2028, a significant downward revision from his earlier $8 near-term call that reflected the ETF flow deterioration. FXEmpire’s technical team maintains $5 as a resistance target, but at that level XRP carries a $280 billion market cap, exceeding Ethereum at current valuations. CoinCodex’s algorithmic models project a tighter range of $1.20 to $1.80 through Q2 2026, with no clear catalyst for a breakout. Ali Martinez’s $48 bull-case scenario, based on multi-year wave analysis, would require a $2.7 trillion valuation. Roughly 25% of institutional allocators plan XRP positions in 2026, yet weekly ETF inflows have dropped from $200 million to $2 million. The commodity label removed legal risk but did nothing to change XRP’s core structural limitation: holders receive zero revenue from network activity. Validators collect fees. Token holders collect price movement alone. T4urox IO stakers receive 80% of all agent-generated profits without relying on new capital entering the market to generate returns.
High-Water Mark Protection Ensures Stakers Only Pay for Real Profits
XRP holders capture none of the revenue Ripple generates from cross-border settlements and network activity. The gap between network usage and token holder returns is structural, not cyclical, and no ETF wrapper changes that equation. T4urox IO closes that gap with a high-water mark mechanism embedded in the profit distribution model. AI agents earn performance fees only on net new profits that exceed their previous portfolio peak. If an agent generates a 10% return, then suffers a 5% drawdown, and recovers by 5%, no fee is charged on the recovery. The fee applies only once the agent surpasses its prior high. This prevents agent creators from collecting fees on capital recovery and ensures that every fee dollar reflects genuine value creation for stakers. The protocol charges zero management fees across all market conditions. Revenue flows only when agents deliver measurable results. Before the end of the presale, participants enter at pricing that reflects none of the trading infrastructure value the protocol will carry at launch.
$500 at Phase 3 and the Listing Price Calculation
T4urox IO Phase 1 sold out in under 24 hours at $0.01. Phase 2 sold out at $0.012. Phase 3 is live at $0.015 with over $560,000 raised. A $500 entry buys 33,333 T4UX. At the $0.08 listing price, that becomes $2,666. At $1, the position reaches $33,333. The 100x scenario at a $1 billion pool puts the token at $1.85, or 123x from the current Phase 3 price. Total supply is capped at 2 billion with no minting function. The protocol converts 5% of profits to T4UX and burns 30% permanently while 70% flows to the DAO treasury. Morgan Stanley’s interest in XRP validates the asset class as a permanent allocation category. The question is whether that validation translates to returns for token holders or merely confirms what the market already priced in months ago.
Conclusion
Morgan Stanley evaluating XRP after commodity reclassification signals institutional acceptance of digital assets as a permanent allocation category. XRP at $1.34 with 99% weekly flow declines and 40% drawdowns shows that acceptance does not guarantee returns. T4urox IO at $0.015 provides 80% profit sharing, a high-water mark fee structure, and AI agents that will trade across exchanges. Phase 1 and Phase 2 are sold out. Protocol documentation is available at T4urox (https://bit.ly/ai-hedgefund).
FAQs
Why is Morgan Stanley interested in XRP now?
The SEC and CFTC reclassified XRP as a digital commodity, removing the legal uncertainty that prevented major banks from offering direct exposure. Morgan Stanley’s digital asset division is reportedly evaluating XRP for its managed client accounts.
What is a high-water mark in T4urox IO?
The high-water mark ensures that AI agents earn performance fees only on returns that exceed their previous peak portfolio value. If an agent loses 5% and recovers, no fee is charged on the recovery period. Fees apply only to genuinely new profits.
What is the T4urox IO listing price target?
The listing target is $0.08 per T4UX. Phase 3 is currently priced at $0.015, offering a 5.33x return at listing. Total supply is fixed at 2 billion tokens with a permanent burn mechanism.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments are highly volatile and involve significant risk, including the potential loss of principal. Always perform your own due diligence or consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.
T4urox Protocol
Zug, Switzerland
https://bit.ly/ai-hedgefund
T4urox is a decentralized autonomous trading protocol that deploys AI-powered agents to execute strategies across cryptocurrency markets. The protocol operates as a decentralized hedge fund where autonomous agents compete through a proving ground system, with top performers earning allocation from a shared capital pool.
This release was published on openPR.









 