The FTX Recovery Trust is distributing $2.2 billion to creditors on March 31, but all payments are in USD valued at November 2022 prices.

Previous FTX payouts that happened during fearful markets saw the weakest reinvestment rates, and the current Fear & Greed Index reading of 8 is one of the lowest since the FTX collapse itself.

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Three years ago, FTX collapsed and wiped out billions in customer funds overnight. On March 31, the FTX Recovery Trust will distribute $2.2 billion to affected creditors as part of its fourth round of payouts, bringing the total amount returned to roughly $10 billion since the recovery process began in early 2025.

All payments are being made in USD, not crypto, and every dollar is based on November 2022 market prices. So a creditor who had 1 BTC on FTX is getting roughly $16,871 in cash while Bitcoin trades around $66,000 today.

Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) and XRP (CRYPTO: XRP)  are both down over 40% from their peaks, and the crypto Fear & Greed Index is at 8. Could $2.2 billion flowing back to crypto-native investors be what finally helps the market start turning things around?

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The creditors receiving this money were crypto investors before FTX took everything from them, and now they are getting cash while Bitcoin and XRP are sitting near their lowest prices of 2026. They can convert their payouts right back into crypto through Kraken or BitGo, which means the on-ramp back into the market is built into the distribution itself.

FTX has already distributed roughly $7.8 billion across three previous rounds, and each one played out differently depending on what the market looked like at the time. The February 2025 payout of $1.2 billion barely moved anything because BTC was already above $96,000 and the amount was small. The May 2025 round was $5 billion during a bull run, and a noticeable chunk of that did flow back into crypto. The September 2025 round of $1.6 billion happened while Bitcoin was already falling from its October peak, and the reinvestment rate was the weakest of the three.

This time around, the crypto Fear & Greed Index is at 8 and the Iran war just expanded with Houthis opening a new front and U.S. ground troops arriving in the region. Oil is above $100, the Fed is not cutting rates, and Bitcoin is trading over $15 billion in daily volume. Even if every dollar of the $2.2 billion went straight back into crypto, it would barely register against that sort of daily activity.

The payout puts cash in the hands of people who might buy back in, but geopolitics and macroeconomic conditions are currently off-putting, which means they might not reinvest in the market.

Bitcoin dipped toward $65,000 over the weekend of March 29 as the Iran war escalated further, and has since bounced back above $66,000. If creditors reinvest some of their FTX payouts into BTC, it would add some buying pressure, but the same week as the payout is loaded with U.S. economic data that will likely have far more impact on the Bitcoin price.

Job openings, employment numbers, and the March jobs report all land in the days following the distribution, with the jobs report dropping on Good Friday while stock markets are closed, meaning crypto absorbs the full reaction alone.

For XRP, the FTX payout comes with something that did not exist when the exchange collapsed in 2022: spot XRP ETFs. Creditors who held XRP on FTX and want to buy back in now have a regulated way to do it. XRP ETFs pulled in $15.8 million in net inflows during the week ending March 28 while Bitcoin and Ethereum products lost a combined $416 million, so there is already some buying interest in XRP. If FTX creditors add to that, it would help, but the broader trend still shows weekly XRP ETF inflows down from $200 million at launch to under $2 million through most of March.

Roughly $10 billion has now been returned from the worst fraud in crypto history, and that is a good sign for the industry's credibility. But credibility alone does not push the Bitcoin or XRP price higher, and the market conditions that have been driving both assets lower since October have not changed.

The FTX payout is a good thing for the crypto industry, but if you're expecting it to turn the Bitcoin or XRP price around, the timing is working against it. Every previous round of payment that happened during a bearish market saw the weakest reinvestment, and the Fear & Greed Index has not been this low since the FTX collapse itself.

The fifth FTX distribution is already confirmed for May 29, so this question is coming back in two months. If oil drops below $90 and the Fed starts signalling rate cuts by then, that round could happen in a completely different market where creditors are far more willing to buy back in. For now, the April 4 jobs report and whether Bitcoin holds $66,000 in the days ahead will tell you more about where the market is heading than anything FTX distributes.

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