Home Garlinghouse: Ripple can’t control the price of XRP
Crypto News

Garlinghouse: Ripple can’t control the price of XRP

  • Garlinghouse also shed light on a potential Ripple fork.
  • Crypto Bitlord started a petition to stop Ripple from selling portions of its holdings.

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has stated that Ripple has no influence over the price of the XRP token. This year, XRP’s value is down by 27% while Bitcoin has surged 175%. This has caused a crypto influencer known as Crypto Bitlord to start a petition to stop Ripple from selling portions of its holdings to crypto exchanges and institutions. So far, more than 3,500 people have signed the petition.

During an interview with CNN, he compared Ripple’s holdings of more than half of the total supply of XRP to Bitcoin whales that own large quantities of BTC. He said:  

“The point I have made is we are the most interested party in the success of the XRP ecosystem. We’re very focused on our use case and how do we solve problems with XRP. One of the things I’m excited about is you’re seeing a growing ecosystem of other players investing in other use cases around XRP. “If you look at the correlations between XRP and most of the crypto market, or what are often called the altcoins, you see a very high degree of correlation.

Ripple can’t control the price of XRP any more than the whales can control the price of Bitcoin. Some of these markets, particularly smaller tokens that have a lower market cap and lower flows, if you will, they are at risk of people manipulating them. But you’re talking about XRP trades an order of magnitude of a billion dollars a day of activity according to CoinMarketCap. So I don’t think anybody’s in a position to really manipulate those prices”¦

Around the ownership price, as is the case with Bitcoin, there’s some big whales that were early in the Bitcoin community. There’s one wallet that has a million Bitcoin in it. Nobody knows who owns it. In the XRP community, Ripple is the largest owner.”

Garlinghouse, being the biggest single owner of XRP, reported that Ripple doesn’t want to flood the market with the digital asset. He also explained Ripple’s use of XRP as a means to support the development of the XRP ecosystem. He reported saying:

“The point I have made is we are the most interested party in the success of the XRP ecosystem. We’re very focused on our use case and how do we solve problems with XRP. One of the things I’m excited about is you’re seeing a growing ecosystem of other players investing in other use cases around XRP. Just recently we announced a partnership with Coil, which is doing micropayments for content. So the next time you’re reading a story on the Financial Times and you hit that paywall, you hypothetically just pay a dime, a quarter, 50 cents, where today that’s a pretty hard problem. And companies like Coil are going to use XRP for those micropayment transactions.

So yes, Ripple owns a lot of XRP. We’re very interested in the success of XRP. But the accusations of us dumping, that’s not in our best interest to do that. We’re clearly interested in a healthy, successful ecosystem. And so, we would never do that and in fact have taken steps to lock up most of the XRP we own in escrow. Essentially, we can’t touch it.”

Crypto Bitlord also warned about forking the XRP ledger if Ripple doesn’t stop selling XRP. Garlinghouse says a fork may happen as the XRP Ledger is an open-source technology. He said:

“When people talk about forking technologies, you have seen Bitcoin forked multiple times. You have Bitcoin Cash, BSV, Bitcoin Diamond, I can’t name them all. There’s four or five forks of the Bitcoin blockchain. Bitcoin, obviously, the primary BTC, has remained the most notable.

But in the same way, people can take XRP, an open-source technology, and hypothetically they could fork that if they chose to do so.”
 
 
 
 
 
 

FX Street

FX Street

FXStreet is the leading independent portal dedicated to the Foreign Exchange (Forex) market. It was launched in 2000 and the portal has always been proud of their unyielding commitment to provide objective and unbiased information, to enable their users to take better and more confident decisions.