The ripple ceo's commentary on the evolving perception of crypto by traditional finance, particularly recalling warren buffett's 'rat poison' remark and highlighting the 'chatgpt moment' for stablecoins, suggests a growing institutional interest. while not directly about xrp's price, this shift in narrative could indirectly benefit xrp by normalizing digital assets and blockchain technology, potentially leading to increased adoption and investment.
The narrative shift from dismissal ('rat poison') to active exploration and integration by traditional finance ('chatgpt moment' for stablecoins) is generally bullish for the crypto market as a whole, and by extension, for major players like xrp. increased institutional adoption and a more favorable regulatory outlook (implied by the sec/cftc acknowledgment) can drive demand.
The impact of a significant shift in institutional perception and regulatory clarity takes time to fully materialize. while short-term price reactions can occur, the long-term trend is more likely to be influenced by sustained institutional adoption and the integration of blockchain technology into the broader financial system.
Cover image via U.Today The "rat poison" dig The "ChatGPT moment" Gensler's "lawfare" Advertisement Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse recently took to the X social media network to note that there has been a massive change in the perception of the cryptocurrency industry by traditional finance. The highly influential executive has recalled when traditional finance titans dismissed digital assets as nothing more than toxic speculation. In particular, he recalled when crypto used to be called "rat poison" only for the technology to end up rewiring the financial system, with major global companies now exploring stablecoins and digital assets. HOT Stories Will Dogecoin (DOGE) Remove Zero This Week? New Reality for XRP's Price, Shiba Inu's Volatility Compression Is Close: Crypto Market Review Canadian Billionaire Mocks Crypto Bull's Tom Lee Latest Market Prediction The "rat poison" dig The infamous "rat poison" moniker has been immortalized by legendary investor Warren Buffett. Advertisement During the 2018 Berkshire Hathaway annual shareholder meeting, Buffett aggressively one-upped his longtime business partner. This happened just months after Bitcoin had collapsed from its initial mainstream peak of nearly $20,000. You Might Also Like Sun, 03/29/2026 - 13:33 Ripple Processes $13 Trillion in Legacy Volume, Garlinghouse Eyes On-Chain Shift By Tomiwabold Olajide Buffett's colorful insult stems from his fundamental value-investing philosophy. The Oracle of Omaha has long maintained that assets must be inherently productive to hold any real intrinsic value. He famously favors established businesses that generate consistent cash flow, products, and dividends. Advertisement The "ChatGPT moment" Garlinghouse recently noted that Fortune 500 CEOs and boards are now actively asking their CFOs about stablecoin integration. He pointed out that the $3 trillion orchestrated in stablecoin payments last year is an eye-opener for corporate America. "This is the ChatGPT moment of crypto, and people [are seeing] stablecoins as the entry point into other blockchain-based and crypto solutions," he said. At the same time, he did offer a slight warning about the current hype surrounding tokenization. Garlinghouse has stated that it must actually improve efficiency to be valuable: "Silicon Valley has a reputation of having a technology in search of a problem... Tokenization has very valuable applications, and there are some examples that I see, I don't quite get it," he said. Gensler's "lawfare" Garlinghouse has also praised the recent joint announcement by the SEC and CFTC acknowledging 16 digital assets as commodities as a "massive step forward." He has fiercely criticized the regulatory hostility of the past four years under the leadership of former SEC Chair Gary Gensler. "Instead of engaging in thoughtful rulemaking, it was lawfare. Let's attack the companies and drive them offshore," he said. #Ripple News #Brad Garlinghouse