The long-standing ideological battle between Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse and MicroStrategy (now operating under the ticker Strategy) Executive Chairman Michael Saylor has flared up once again.
In a new social media post, Garlinghouse fired a fresh shot at the Bitcoin maximalists' aggressive accumulation tactics.
He quoted a segment from CNBC's Squawk on the Street, declaring: "Financial engineering doesn't drive long-term value. Utility does." The quote reinforced Garlinghouse's televised remarks where he explicitly stated, "I think team Michael Saylor wasn't focused on the right stuff, and that has hurt the overall market."
Utility or financial engineering?
The latest social media dig serves as an extension of Garlinghouse’s recent appearance on CNBC, where he openly criticized Saylor's playbook for financing corporate Bitcoin purchases.
Garlinghouse argued that Strategy's heavy reliance on issuing preferred securities to buy more Bitcoin amounts to "financial engineering" rather than building real-world technological utility. To illustrate his point, the Ripple executive pointed directly to the market performance of Strategy's preferred shares, specifically STRC. The STRC shares, which carry an 11.5% cumulative annual dividend obligation, have recently traded roughly 25% below their $100 face value.
According to Garlinghouse, this steep discount is a "serious negative signal" from the market, suggesting that a highly leveraged accumulation strategy can compound negatively during downturns and ultimately harm the broader crypto industry. Garlinghouse maintains that the long-term value of digital assets will naturally flow toward those that solve real-world problems and provide institutional utility, not those propped up by debt-driven capital structures.
A history of animosity
The friction between the two prominent crypto executives is well-documented and deeply rooted in their opposing views on the digital asset landscape.
In 2022, Saylor famously called XRP an "unregistered security" and actively urged the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to shut down XRP alongside other altcoins. Saylor's insistence that Bitcoin is the only legitimate institutional digital asset has naturally positioned him as a direct antagonist to Ripple's core mission.
Though Saylor recently surprised the market by expressing support for a U.S. multi-token cryptocurrency reserve that might tentatively include XRP, the clash seemingly remains unresolved.
For Garlinghouse, Strategy's current market woes present an opportunity to vindicate Ripple's utility-first approach while throwing a very public jab at his long-time industry critic.

U.Today Editorial Team
Dan Burgin