
The post Everything Brad Garlinghouse Said at XRP Las Vegas: His Best Ripple and XRP Quotes appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
Brad Garlinghouse took the stage at XRP Las Vegas for the fourth year running and did not waste time on pleasantries. Over roughly 22 minutes he covered Rippleβs commitment to XRP, the Clarity Actβs shrinking window, the OCC trust charter, a Fed master account ambition, Rippleβs IPO timeline, and a pointed dig at a competitor doing its conference down the street. Here is everything that mattered.
On Rippleβs Commitment to XRP
βI always thought it was kind of funny and strange that people questioned Rippleβs commitment to XRP. Today, Ripple is still the largest holder of XRP on the planet. We are the most interested party in seeing XRP be successful. We will continue to be the most interested party.β
On the Clarity Act and Its Deadline
This was the most urgent part of the conversation. Garlinghouse was direct: the window is closing.
βWe were on the finish line three months ago in late January. We were on the finish line.β He pointed to Coinbaseβs decision to pause negotiations as the moment that created a vacuum in Washington filled with new objections, including housing policy concerns from a Republican senator with no obvious connection to crypto.
His timeline: βIf it doesnβt get out of committee by the end of the third week in May, I think weβre in real trouble. If it gets out of committee, weβre good, because it will pass the Senate if it gets out.β
He added that even if the Clarity Act fails, XRP itself has legal clarity that others do not. βAn independent federal judge was clear. XRP in and of itself is not a security. Boom. We have clarity. Thatβs what we care about.β
On the OCC Trust Charter and Fed Master Account
Ripple received conditional approval for an OCC trust charter in December and Garlinghouse confirmed the conditions are all within Rippleβs control to meet. He described the companyβs regulatory posture as wanting to be βthe most white hat around stablecoins as possibleβ given its institutional customer base.
On the Federal Reserve master account, he was deliberately cagey but revealing. βThe Fed master account is very much on our radar.β When pressed on whether it would be enough for Rippleβs ambitions, he said plainly: βIβm going to dodge that question. Iβm transparent that Iβm dodging.β
On Rippleβs IPO
No rush, no timeline. Garlinghouse noted that recent crypto IPOs including Gemini and GitGo have not performed well, and that Kraken has delayed its own listing. βWeβre just not in a big hurry to go down that path.β He added with a grin that being private has its advantages, including being able to speak freely on stage without a call from the legal team reminding him what he cannot say.
On the XRP Ledgerβs Strengths and Limits
Garlinghouse was candid about what the XRP Ledger is and is not designed for. βIt is going to be a multi-chain world. The XRP Ledger is exceptionally good at some things and not good at some other things. And thatβs okay.β He pointed to bond settlement as an area ripe for disruption, describing the current system as βslow, arcane, and absurd to think about in the world of the internet.β
On Crypto Becoming Partisan
βThe fact that technology became partisan is just madness. Itβs crazy to me. Itβs almost like saying email is a partisan issue. If you hate email because youβre a Democrat and like it because youβre a Republican, it makes no sense.β

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