Ripple CEO Predicts 2026 Will Be A Breakout Year For Crypto
Alex Smith
2 weeks ago
At Binance Blockchain Week on December 3, Ripple Labs CEO Brad Garlinghouse argued that a rare alignment of regulatory change, institutional demand and real-world utility is setting up crypto for what he called powerful âmacro tailwindsâ heading into 2026.
âI personally will echo some of the things Richard said: there are so many macro factors that are continuing to provide tailwinds for this industry that I think as we go into 2026 I donât remember being this optimistic in the last handful of years,â the Ripple CEO told CNBCâs Dan Murphy, speaking alongside Binance CEO Richard Teng and Solana Foundation President Lily Liu.
Ripple CEO Is Optimistic For 2026: Hereâs Why
He framed the latest drawdown not as the start of a structural bear market but as a risk-off interlude against a fundamentally improved backdrop. âCrypto has gone through cycles and when you have risk-on people are excited [âŚ] now you have kind of a risk-off moment, thereâs uncertainty,â he said. The difference this time, he argued, is that the United Statesâthe largest single economy and roughly â22% of global GDPââis finally moving away from what he described as years of open hostility toward the sector.
âThis is a market that has been really openly hostile to crypto for four or five years or maybe longer, and now you have that that has changed significantly, pretty quickly,â he said. Institutions, in his view, are only beginning to adjust. He pointed to the visible presence of traditional asset managers at the event: âYou saw Franklin Templeton on stage here, you saw BlackRock on stage just this week. I think Vanguard has now opened up [âŚ] Vanguard historically has said âwe wonât touch cryptoâ and now theyâve had a massive sea change.â
On crypto ETFs, the Ripple CEO rejected the idea that the trade was over-hyped. âDefinitely no,â he said when asked whether the ETF âfloorâ narrative had been exaggerated. He stressed how new these vehicles still are in the United States and highlighted early demand for XRP products. âIn the last two or three weeks over $700 million have flowed into XRP ETFs, which is just pent-up demand from institutional investors, from investors who want access because they donât want to custody themselves,â he said.
He argued that the key metric is cryptoâs still-small slice of the overall ETF universe. âThe total ETF marketâonly one or two percent of the total ETF market is crypto. I will bet anybody here that a year from now that will be more than one or two percent,â he said. Short-term outflows from Bitcoin products, he suggested, should be viewed in context: âOver 2026 do we really think crypto ETFs are only going to be one or two percent of the total ETF market? No chance.â
Garlinghouse said Rippleâs own prime brokerage business is already seeing that shift in behavior. Institutions that had remained âon the sidelinesâ due to regulatory uncertainty or risk aversion are now âgetting involved and theyâre starting small, and theyâre going to walk, then theyâre going to crawlâor crawl then walk then run.â Asked directly whether recent volatility had deterred institutional capital, he replied: âDefinitely not.â
Stablecoins Will Be A Key Pillar
Stablecoins were another pillar of his 2026 thesis. He agreed that in the latest risk-off phase, capital largely rotated into stablecoins rather than exiting on-chain rails, which he said reflects both utility and trust. âPeople are recognizing stablecoins can be stable and easier to manage,â he said.
Garlinghouse highlighted that Rippleâs own stablecoin, launched âjust over a year ago,â has âjust passed about a billion market cap,â is âapproved and whitelisted in Abu Dhabi,â and is being used as âgood collateral on various platforms from a lending point of view.â For him, stablecoins are an entry ramp to broader adoption, alongside other applications that will be built across Solana, Binance and Ripple ecosystems.
On US policy, he said the trajectory has clearly improved, especially for payment tokens. He cited the GENIUS Act as âregulatory clarity for stablecoinsâ and linked it to growing corporate interest in on-chain payments. After Rippleâs acquisition of GTreasury, which has visibility into âover 10 trillion dollars of payments,â he said âthe number of those customers that are already approaching us interested in leveraging stablecoins [âŚ] because of that clarity, people are leaning in.â
The Ripple CEO noted that XRP has already received a form of clarity from US federal courts but said broader legislation is still needed. He referenced the âClarity Actâ for crypto, saying there is âstill forward momentumâ and predicting that âsometime in the first half of next year weâll see passage of legislation, which will continue to unlock and create more tailwinds for the whole industry.â
He closed with an explicit price target for the next cycle, acknowledging he was âgoing out on a limbâ: âIâll say Bitcoin $180,000 December 23rdâor December 31stâ2026.â
At press time, XRP traded at $2.15.
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