- Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino calls Ripple chief Brad Garlinghouse an “uninformed” CEO.
- Ripple is launching a stablecoin at the end of 2024.
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse reignited a long-running spat between stablecoin issuers after saying authorities are coming for his biggest rival.
âThe US government is going after Tether,â he said on the Worldclass podcast on Friday. âThat is clear to me.â
The crypto payments firm chief failed to explain much else, most notably how he knows such a detail about the $111 billion stablecoin.
Tether was quick to snap back: A spokesperson told DL News that Tetherâs executives âwish Rippleâs team will have more success with their new stablecoin than theyâve had so far.â
Garlinghouseâs comments came a month after Ripple announced the launch of a stablecoin. The coin is expected to hold reserves in cash and Treasuries, much like market leaders Tether and Circle, and is slated to launch by the end of the year.
According to CoinGecko, Tether is worth more than $111 billion, and Circleâs USDC stablecoin is worth $33 billion.
Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino took to X on Monday to share âupdated statisticsâ about his companyâs work to win over regulators and critics. Notably, he said Tether froze $1.3 billion in USDT â the firmâs stablecoin â linked to illicit finance and said the firm cooperates with law enforcement.
Ardoino called Garlinghouse âan uninformed CEOâ who is spreading fear about USDT, pointing out that the Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Ripple.
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Ripple is being sued by the SEC for alleged securities violations related to the sale of the XRP token. The regulator initially included Garlinghouse and fellow Ripple executive Chris Larsen but dropped them from the lawsuit in October.
Garlinghouse then qualified his statement, responding to Ardoino that he âwasnât attacking Tether.â
âMy point was that the US govt has clearly indicated they want more control over USD-backed stablecoin issuers, and thus, Tether, as the largest player, is in their line of sight.â
State of stablecoins
Rippleâs strategic initiatives lead, Eric van Miltenburg, told DL News in a recent interview that thereâs plenty of room for more than two players to operate.
âThe market will always look for reliable, compliancy-first stablecoin players,â he said. âCircleâs doing great work.â
As for Tether, he said it has âa little bit more of a chequered past.â
Besides concerns over sanctioned entities like Venezuelaâs state-backed oil company or terrorist organisations leveraging Tetherâs stablecoin, the firm has gone more than a decade without a formal audit of its reserves.
Liam Kelly is a Berlin-based DL Newsâ correspondent. Contact him at liam@dlnews.com.