Ripple CEO Slams Dogecoin, ‘Not A Good Thing’ For The Crypto Industry

Ripple CEO Slams Dogecoin, ‘Not A Good Thing’ For The Crypto Industry

At the recent 2024 Consensus Conference, Brad Garlinghouse, the CEO of Ripple, delivered pointed remarks on the state of cryptocurrency, particularly focusing on Dogecoin and its role within the broader industry. Garlinghouse’s assessment was both critical and nuanced, emphasizing that his reservations about Dogecoin stem from concerns over its utility and the speculative dynamics it fostered rather than an outright opposition to the coin itself.

Garlinghouse opened his discussion highlighting the United States’ lag in cryptocurrency regulation, describing it as shockingly inadequate for the world’s largest economy. “The United States represents the bottom decile of regulatory clarity,” he stated, suggesting that this uncertainty hampers the flow of institutional money into cryptocurrencies and clouds the potential growth of the industry.

The Ripple CEO argued that the current environment, characterized by regulatory ambiguity, has inadvertently paved the way for the proliferation of meme-driven cryptocurrencies like Dogecoin. “When you get the real unlock of the United States economy and you get the real institutional money flowing in, it’s just hard to predict some of the upside opportunity,” Garlinghouse explained, indicating that clearer regulations could refocus investment toward more fundamentally sound projects.

Why Dogecoin Is Not “A Good Thing” For Crypto: Ripple CEO

Turning his attention specifically to Dogecoin, Garlinghouse expressed doubt about the cryptocurrency’s value addition to the sector. “You know, I get a ton of s*** when I say these things, but I’m going to say it anyway. I don’t think Dogecoin has been a good thing for the industry. And I’m not anti-Dogecoin, but it’s like, I don’t know what the use case is,” he elaborated.

His critique revolves around the lack of substantive projects or utilities developing around Dogecoin, unlike other blockchain technologies, which are increasingly applied to real-world problems. Dogecoin was the first memecoin, the forerunner of today’s memecoin craze.

Notably, this is not the first instance of the Ripple CEO critiquing Dogecoin. Earlier in the year, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, he highlighted the lack of a clear use case for Dogecoin, attributing its popularity and market movements largely to endorsements by high-profile individuals like Elon Musk, rather than any technological or economic merit. “Other than Elon Musk as the central actor, I don’t see the use case and purpose,” he said.

Garlinghouse’s remarks come at a time when the crypto market is seeing a divergence in performance between traditional altcoins and meme coins. While Bitcoin has already surged above its previous high from 2021, altcoins such as XRP and Cardano are still down -85% from their peaks. Meanwhile, meme coins, including PEPE, Dogwifhat (WIF), and BONK, have captured substantial trader interest, delivering significant gains.

This trend underscores a broader market behavior leaning towards speculation over utility. It’s a dynamic that Garlinghouse criticizes, advocating for a shift towards solving genuine problems. “We have to be about more than speculation […] I see lots of real utility across lots of different, you know, chains. And I think that is what is critical. And for me, the 10 -year prediction has to be about [this], it’s not about speculation, it’s about solving real problems,” he stressed.

At press time, Dogecoin traded at $0.1445.