Ripple's Acquisition of Crypto-Focused Chartered Trust Company Fortress Trust

SEC's Response to Challenge Groundbreaking XRP Ruling

MicroStrategy's Significant Bitcoin Impairment Losses May Mislead: Berenberg

In a CNBC-hosted fireside discussion at the Paris Blockchain Week Summit last week, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said, "Polarization isn't healthy in my opinion."

"I own bitcoin, ether, and a few other cryptocurrencies." "I am a firm believer that this industry will prosper in the future."

"All boats have the ability to lift," Garlinghouse added.

Former Yahoo executive Garlinghouse compared today's crypto business to the dotcom period of the late 1990s and early 2000s.

"Yahoo and eBay both have a chance to succeed... "They're dealing with different issues," he explained. "There are a variety of use cases, audiences, and marketplaces to consider." Many of those parallels, I believe, still exist today."

According to CoinGecko data, there are currently tens of thousands of cryptocurrencies in circulation, valued a total of $2 trillion.

Some digital coins have developed a devoted following, most notably bitcoin, whose hardcore supporters are known as "maximalists."

The so-called maximalists, who favor just bitcoin and not other cryptocurrencies, include Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey and MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor.

According to Garlinghouse, the crypto industry's maximalism has resulted in "fractured representation" when it comes to lobbying US lawmakers.

President Joe Biden signed an executive order last month directing the federal government to investigate the risks and benefits of cryptocurrencies.

"I find the absence of coordination within the crypto sector in Washington, D.C. to be alarming," he remarked.

Ripple is frequently associated with XRP, a cryptocurrency that the company employs for cross-border transactions.

The business controls the bulk of the 100 billion XRP tokens in circulation, which it releases from an escrow account on a regular basis to maintain price stability.

The Securities and Exchange Commission has accused Ripple of fraudulently selling more than $1 billion in XRP in an unregistered securities offering. XRP, according to the business, should be classified as a virtual currency rather than a securities.

========

Related Video: