The host of a recent mainstream crypto YouTube show zeroed in on remarks from Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, arguing that the real “alpha” in his latest comments on stablecoins has little to do with an altcoin rally and everything to do with who gets cut out of the next phase of digital finance: retail users.
In a clip highlighted by Wendy O, Garlinghouse describes a wave of interest from corporate finance teams in using stablecoins for payments, framing it as a structural shift rather than a niche experiment.
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But the video’s central critique is that the regulatory path being cleared — through what the host refers to as “The Clarity Act” — appears designed to benefit banks and institutions, not everyday crypto holders seeking yield on stablecoins.
Garlinghouse: $13 Trillion in Payments, 0% via Crypto
Garlinghouse says Ripple’s acquisition, G-Treasury, orchestrated “13 trillion dollars of payments” last year — and “zero percent of those were through a stable coin or crypto.” For him, that gap is where the upside lies.
He outlines a near-term product reality: corporate treasurers will soon sit in front of dashboards that let them choose between traditional rails and a crypto route. Giving CFOs that binary choice, he argues, is “the unlock.”
Garlinghouse also cites “33 trillion dollars of stablecoin trades last year,” repeating a line from a Citibank analyst who called this moment the “ChatGPT moment of crypto” — stablecoins as the main entry point into broader blockchain-based services.
Yield, “Clarity,” and a Growing Retail-Institution Divide
Crypto Wendy pushes back hard on what this stability-and-Clarity narrative means for ordinary users. In their view, the emerging regulatory framework explicitly avoids granting “retail yield on stable coins,” keeping the benefits of tokenized dollars squarely in institutional hands.
Wendy O notes they previously supported Ripple during what they call an “unjust attack” by the SEC because retail XRP holders were directly at risk.
Now, they argue that Ripple’s rapid push to get regulatory clarity primarily strengthens its institutional business — while the same retail investors who helped make XRP “the second largest crypto” receive no guarantee of access to yield or broader upside.
She characterizes Ripple as a “bankers’ coin” and an institutional project, and while they acknowledge that’s a valid strategy, they emphasize that “ripple wouldn’t be where it’s at today if it was not for retail.”
The larger warning: don’t assume that regulatory clarity around stablecoins automatically translates into an altcoin season or a more democratic financial system.
Instead, Wendy O suggests the market is still anchored to a familiar four-year cycle and that the coming stablecoin-led infrastructure may entrench institutions even further, despite crypto’s original promise of a level playing field.
People Also Ask:
According to Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse, Ripple Treasury processed about $13 trillion in payments last year, none via crypto or stablecoins so far.
He referenced “13 trillion dollars of stablecoin trades last year” as evidence of growing mainstream usage.
The research argues that regulatory “clarity” is being structured to deny retail users yield on stablecoins, reserving those benefits for banks and large institutions.
Crypto Wendy cautions viewers not to assume that the Clarity Act alone will spark an altcoin boom, stressing that markets still appear to follow a four-year cycle.



