_ Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse signals record-breaking Q1 2026 results, warns against crypto policy weaponization, and says global finance is actively rewiring around digital assets._
Brad Garlinghouse said it plainly. Q1 2026 is shaping up to be Ripple’s best quarter on record. And the numbers building underneath that claim are hard to ignore right now.
The Ripple CEO joined Fox Business anchor Maria Bartiromo this week. He said the industry’s reputation has completed a full journey, from “rat poison” to “pet rock” to something far more concrete. As Brad Garlinghouse posted on X, the world’s biggest companies are no longer debating crypto. They’re asking their CFOs whether they should be using stablecoins and digital assets today.
Ripple’s deal-making strategy explains a lot of the momentum. Garlinghouse said on X the company deliberately focused outside the U.S. echo chamber. The goal was to close the gap between traditional finance and crypto infrastructure. Those bets are paying off in Q1.
Corporate boards are not sitting on the sidelines. They are pushing finance teams to understand stablecoins operationally. The tone has changed sharply in the past few months alone.
Banks are already integrating XRP directly, with Ripple’s CTO confirming financial institutions are running cross-border payments through XRP and the XRP Ledger. That is not a pilot. That is live infrastructure.
The record-quarter prediction is only half the story. As Maria Bartiromo shared on X, Garlinghouse used the Fox Business appearance to fire a direct warning at policymakers. His words were unambiguous: the industry cannot survive “another Gary Gensler moment.”
He called out the weaponization of crypto policy by name. He addressed the SEC and CFTC’s new framework and the CLARITY Act during the sit-down. Regulatory clarity, he said, is the industry’s priority. But clarity weaponized as a political tool destroys everything the current administration is trying to build.
The reference to Gensler lands in context. Years of enforcement-first regulation, litigation, and jurisdictional overreach left the industry operating in legal grey zones. Garlinghouse is saying clearly: that chapter cannot repeat.
Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin is now live in Singapore’s MAS BLOOM initiative, with BNY Mellon serving as primary custodian for reserves. The oldest bank in America, holding over $50 trillion in assets under custody, is not a casual partnership footnote. RLUSD’s market cap has already crossed $1.3 billion.
Ripple also moved from pilot to active execution with Mastercard this quarter. Settlement of real credit card transactions through RLUSD on the XRP Ledger is not theoretical. It is running now. Garlinghouse’s record-quarter prediction does not come from nowhere.
The financial system is no longer watching from outside. It is building from the inside. And Ripple, by its CEO’s account, is sitting right at the construction site.