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Been watching the stablecoin narrative shift pretty closely lately, and honestly it's getting hard to ignore. Brad Garlinghouse just made a comparison that's got people talking — he's calling stablecoins crypto's ChatGPT moment, and when you look at the numbers, it actually makes sense.
Here's what's interesting: last year we saw $33 trillion in stablecoin trades. That's not small. Even a Citibank analyst picked up on this, framing it as the ChatGPT-level inflection point for crypto. What's happening is that Fortune 500 companies and their boards are actually asking their CFOs and treasurers about stablecoins now. That's a huge shift in how traditional business thinks about this space.
The adoption angle is what really stands out. Bloomberg Intelligence was projecting stablecoin flows could hit $56.6 trillion by 2030. If that happens, we're talking about stablecoins becoming core infrastructure for global payments. Right now USDT and USDC dominate with about 90% of volume, but Ripple's RLUSD has been making moves since its late 2024 launch — sitting at around $1.4 billion market cap now.
On the regulatory side, Garlinghouse's been pretty vocal about the CLARITY Act. He originally said we'd see it signed by end of April, but he's now pushing that to end of May. The key thing here is what happens when it actually passes — banks have been hesitant about diving into crypto infrastructure because of regulatory uncertainty. Once CLARITY gets codified, that unlock could be massive for institutional adoption.
Ripple's been putting resources behind this too. They acquired Hidden Road (now Ripple Prime) for $1.25 billion and GTreasury (now Ripple Treasury) for $1 billion. Both are already performing ahead of forecasts for Q1 2026, with Ripple Prime tripling its revenue run rate.
The way Garlinghouse frames it, stablecoins are basically the entry ramp for everything else in crypto infrastructure. Once businesses get comfortable with that, broader blockchain adoption follows. Whether that actually materializes depends a lot on regulatory clarity, but the momentum is definitely there.