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Four years of Trumpian crypto regulation: What might we see?

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Four years of Trumpian crypto regulation: What might we see?

Analysis The 2024 presidential election tipped the United States into a new era of uncertainty, but one thing’s for sure: The crypto industry was triumphant. 

Hundreds of pro-crypto lawmakers were elected earlier this month, alongside Donald Trump’s victory in the presidential race. The cryptocurrency industry reportedly spent millions of dollars (in fiat currency, ironically) supporting candidates and platforms advocating for policies that could expand the Bitcoin-driven cryptocurrency sector.

Shortly after Trump’s election victory, Bitcoin advocates from the non-profit Satoshi Action Fund sent out an email congratulating the industry, while CEO Dennis Porter talked up legislative priorities alongside the promise that “our team will have direct lines to senior government officials” in the coming years. 

That naturally raises the question of what sort of policies the cryptocurrency world would like to see enacted in Trump’s second term behind the Resolute desk. We pinned Porter down to discuss the matter between events in his busy schedule.

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Priorities in the crypto community aren’t unified, Porter told us in a phone interview. 

“You have a lot of excitement around the strategic Bitcoin reserves, but I think it’s also important that the folks in Washington, DC get some of the more basic structures across the finish line,” Porter said, referring to legislation like FIT21, which is designed in theory to place some basic regulatory structures on the crypto world and assign government bodies to manage the rules. 

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Porter admitted that the Trump team hasn’t said anything about supporting market definition legislation or other basic structure rules for Bitcoin and its relatives – “but, I mean, they’ve got to be supportive of the market structural legislation,” he suggested. 

One area that Trump has expressed support for publicly is the aforementioned “strategic Bitcoin reserve” – an idea that the US federal government should invest in Bitcoin as a store of value similar to the gold reserve or other commodities. 

“There’s clear signaling from the Trump camp – which will soon be the Trump administration – that they’re very interested in this policy,” Porter observed. “Trump endorsed that type of legislation at the Bitcoin conference right after Senator [Cynthia] Lummis introduced her legislation, the Bitcoin Act of 2024.”

That Act, which hasn’t budged since being introduced in the Senate in late July, would establish a program to allow the Department of the Treasury to buy as much as one million Bitcoins over five years, with a minimum holding period of 20 years before any coins in reserve could be sold, swapped, auctioned “or otherwise disposed of for any purpose other than retiring outstanding Federal debt instruments.” 

Bitcoin dreams vs Bitcoin realities

Crypto opponent Molly White – who recently wrote about what Trump’s win could mean for the crypto industry – isn’t so sure Porter’s hopes, or the industry’s plans, match up with the reality of crypto’s history. 

“There’s this industry talking point that, you know, we just want clear, responsible regulation,” White told The Register. “That’s pretty much the line you’ll get from anyone who’s working on this stuff.

“When you actually look at what they have supported in the past and how they have reacted to various proposals that would add more clarity or define stuff, the crypto industry basically unilaterally opposes it,” White added. 

White cited FIT21 as an exception to the crypto industry’s general opposition to regulation, but noted a significant caveat: the bill reduces the Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) authority over cryptocurrencies. It does so by excluding “investment contract assets” from the definition of federal securities – effectively narrowing the SEC’s jurisdiction over digital assets.

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No regulations have changed that would prevent another FTX from happening. And now the crypto industry is actually trying to reduce regulations.

“They want regulation inasmuch as they want their interpretation that crypto assets do not fall under the SEC and therefore are not regulated by the SEC,” White explained. “I don’t think most reasonable people would say that that’s regulation in any sort of normal sense.

“If you look at it, no regulations have changed that would prevent another FTX from happening,” White added. “And now the crypto industry is actually trying to reduce regulations.”

As for the strategic Bitcoin reserve, White said she doesn’t think the idea will get very far – especially Trump’s vision of it, which differs significantly from what most of the crypto community supports. There she’s referring to the policy espoused by Lummis and Trump’s pick for Secretary of Health and Human Services, Robert F Kennedy, Jr, who made his pitches shortly before Trump announced his idea at a Bitcoin conference in Nashville, Tennessee, in July. 

RFK Jr’s proposal would have led to the US buying as many as four million Bitcoins at the rate of 550 a day, while also pointing out that Trump previously called the digicoins a scam.

Trump, on the other hand, promised to use Bitcoin seized by the federal government as part of investigations into crimes involving stolen bitcoins, or those used for illegal purposes. 

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“[Trump’s idea] doesn’t even make sense. He’s talking about it as like, these are Bitcoins that were stolen from you, and so we’re gonna keep them,” White observed. “Once court cases are over and the assets are firmly forfeited, they’re usually sold and then returned to victims.” 

That wouldn’t happen, presumably, under Trump’s plan. Though White acknowledged that return programs often end up with Bitcoin going unclaimed by people who wish to remain anonymous. 

No matter how you swing it, White told us, “I don’t have much faith that either [BTC reserve proposal] will come to pass.” 

But what about the environment?

Cryptocurrency mining using proof-of-work – the technique used by Bitcoin and many of its derivatives to verify transactions and create new coins – is incredibly energy and water intensive. Digiconomist’s Bitcoin Energy Consumption, run by data scientist Alex de Vries, estimates that a single Bitcoin transaction eats up the same amount of electricity as the average US household uses in almost a month. 

When asked how the crypto community plans to address all that energy consumption and electronic waste generated – which will only grow if Bitcoin becomes more popular – Porter had two recommendations.

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First, the Satoshi Action Fund is pushing for the use of orphaned oil and gas wells – of which there are more than 120,000 across the country – to generate energy for Bitcoin mining. Many of those wells are leaky, and many also lack a custodian to keep seals working properly and prevent the emission of methane and other greenhouse gasses. If we were to put mining operations at those abandoned wells we could eliminate some of that spillage, argued Porter. 

“Ultimately, that’s really good for the environment in a number of different ways,” Porter told us. “You have the reduction of methane going into the atmosphere. Additionally methane can leak into the groundwater and cause contamination.

“The chance that the next EPA administrator could come in and actually do something about it would be, I think, a huge win for the environment,” Porter added. He’s confident that Satoshi Action will have a willing ear at the EPA – Porter’s cofounder, Mandy Gunasekara, spent several years at the EPA, part of it as chief of staff in the latter year of Trump’s first presidency. 

Second, Porter advocates for attaching Bitcoin mining operations to renewable energy facilities to avoid curtailing energy from sources like wind and solar during periods of underutilization. When asked why we shouldn’t prioritize energy storage modules like batteries for times of excess need, Porter told us batteries are expensive, and also need additional infrastructure to support the distribution of power. 

Much better to just slap a mining rig in there to eat up that excess juice, he argued.

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“I guess that’s sort of an argument, that it’s better than literally nothing at all,” White explained when asked what she thought about burning leaking methane or using excess renewable energy on Bitcoin mining. “But it doesn’t actually change the fact that these gasses are being burned for this purpose.” 

White doesn’t believe the argument for deploying cryptocurrency mining infrastructure at renewable or abandoned wells is a compelling one – especially given crypto miners already have thin margins and tend to try to mine as cheaply as possible. 

That, and White believes Trump is unlikely to pay much attention to greening the Bitcoin mining process.

“Bitcoiners who are pro-Trump and also think that environmental causes will be followed under Trump just need to look at some of his appointments who are talking about basically reinvigorating the entire US oil industry,” White observed. “If any Bitcoin renewable projects do well in the next couple of years, I think it will be largely incidental.”

In the meantime, expect Bitcoin’s energy footprint to grow if, as Porter suggested, “Bitcoin is very undervalued” and could reach “upwards of $13 million per coin.” 

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“Roughly 60 percent of the price value will ultimately end up as electricity costs, so for a $100k Bitcoin that means the electricity cost per coin could be $60k, which comes down to 1,200,000 kWh per BTC at 5 cents per kWh,” Digiconimist’s de Vries told us in an email. “I should however warn against simply multiplying this with a factor ten to get the impact for a $1m Bitcoin. Such a steep increase would certainly massively boost energy consumption.”

Bitcoin’s value rallied in the wake of Trump’s election, but it hasn’t managed to hit $100k yet. And it’s falling again, losing nearly $7,000 in value in the past five days. 

If Bitcoin wins, most of us stand to lose

Porter’s wishes for a Bitcoin-fueled future are, like much of the crypto industry’s projects, just that: wishes. Bitcoin strategic reserves are largely untested outside of countries like El Salvador, which has seen financial gains since Trump’s election on the price rally, but which saw its credit downgraded prior to BTC’s rally. Mining at abandoned wells is largely theoretical too, as is using curtailed renewable energy to mine.

In the meantime, all this Bitcoin advocacy is pushing the price – and the energy footprint – up. 

The only blessing in the 2022 cryptocurrency wipeout was that people without crypto investments were pretty much entirely insulated from the carnage.

White is also concerned that a pro-crypto regime could weaken the barricade between the crypto industry and the rest of the economy if the Trump administration legitimizes it with new policies. 

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“The only blessing in the 2022 cryptocurrency wipeout was that people without crypto investments were pretty much entirely insulated from the carnage,” White wrote in her blog post shortly after the election. With Trump’s pick for Treasury Secretary a big proponent of Bitcoin, that legitimization could mean that future crypto volatility will begin to affect the broader US economy. That shakiness has already shown itself as the price of Bitcoin fell this week. 

“I fear we may soon wave goodbye to such a firewall as Trump’s crypto-enthusiastic administration and the new Congress allow crypto to enmesh itself within the broader financial and banking system,” White predicted. 

Whether any of this comes to pass, of course, is just as easy to predict as Bitcoin’s day-to-day price. Like many things with the Trump administration, mercuriality is the only real rule. ®

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This Popular Cryptocurrency Could Soar by 177% in 2026, According to Wall Street Analyst Tom Lee

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This Popular Cryptocurrency Could Soar by 177% in 2026, According to Wall Street Analyst Tom Lee

Key Points

  • Ethereum is the leading platform for developers who want to build decentralized software applications, which are popular in areas like gaming and finance.

  • Ether, which is Ethereum’s native cryptocurrency, set a new record high during 2025, but it ended the year in the red.

  • Wall Street analyst Tom Lee thinks Ether could soar in the early stages of 2026, and he chairs a company that owns over $13 billion worth of coins.

Cryptocurrencies had a tough year in 2025, with most popular coins and tokens suffering losses. Not even the industry leaders like Bitcoin and Ethereum(CRYPTO: ETH) were spared, ending the year down 5% and 11%, respectively.

But 2026 is here, and Wall Street analyst Tom Lee recently came out with a set of very bullish forecasts. He thinks Ether, which is the native cryptocurrency of the Ethereum network, could soar to $9,000 per coin early in the year, implying a potential upside of 177% from where it’s trading as I write this.

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Lee founded Fundstrat Global Advisors, but he’s also the chairman of BitMine Immersion Technologies(NYSEMKT: BMNR), which owns approximately $13.4 billion worth of Ethereum, so he certainly has some skin in the game. How realistic is his latest forecast?

Image source: Getty Images.

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What is Ethereum?

Ethereum is a platform where people develop decentralized software applications, which are increasingly popular in industries like gaming and financial services. These apps are governed by smart contracts, which are pieces of computer code that live on the Ethereum blockchain. They typically can’t be changed, so no person or company can manipulate the app’s core set of rules, ensuring it stays decentralized.

The Ethereum network itself is also completely decentralized. Instead of using one large data center, it’s hosted on thousands of nodes (computers) all over the world that store an updated copy of its blockchain. Therefore, the network won’t be compromised even if some nodes go down, and that’s how Ethereum has boasted 100% uptime over the last decade.

Ether is like the fuel that makes the Ethereum network function. Every time a person activates a smart contract by using an app, or even transfers a crypto token built on Ethereum, they incur a fee that is payable in Ether. Therefore, the larger the network grows, the more demand there is for Ether, and the more valuable the coin becomes (in theory).

Thousands of decentralized apps have been built on Ethereum so far. Uniswap, for instance, is a popular exchange where people can trade their cryptocurrencies for other cryptocurrencies. Pricing and execution is handled entirely by smart contracts with no intermediaries, creating a lightning-fast and cost-effective experience. Users don’t even need to create an account, because they can connect their crypto wallets directly to Uniswap and immediately start transacting.

How realistic is Lee’s target?

Tom Lee thinks decentralized apps will take over the financial industry, and as the largest platform of its kind, he’s betting Ethereum will lead the transition. The world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock, is already exploring plans to tokenize some of its exchange-traded funds (ETFs) by moving them onto the blockchain, where they can trade more efficiently compared to using traditional stock exchanges.

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That is just one example suggesting Lee could eventually be right. But the growing adoption of stablecoins — many of which are built on Ethereum — is another sign. These cryptocurrencies are designed to maintain a stable value (hence their name), and they can be sent anywhere in the world practically instantly. Therefore, they are far more efficient than traditional payment rails that often take several days to move money across borders.

According to Cathie Wood’s Ark Investment Management, over $15 trillion in payment volume was processed using stablecoins in 2024, which was more volume than both Visa and Mastercard processed.

But could all of this send Ether soaring by 177% to $9,000 per coin in the early stages of 2026? I’m not so sure. Ether climbed to a record price of $4,946 per coin in 2025, which was a win for investors, but it was the first new high in four years. Plus, the coin has already lost 32% of its peak value, so I’m not sure if it can muster enough momentum to almost triple in value in the next few months like Lee predicts.

With that said, $9,000 per coin would give Ether a market capitalization of around $1.08 trillion, so it would still be much smaller than Bitcoin, which has a market cap of $1.85 trillion. Therefore, I wouldn’t rule out Lee’s target, especially if the decentralized revolution continues to gather momentum, but I would certainly be cautious about the timing. Plus, it’s important to remember Lee chairs the BitMine Immersion Technologies company, which owns 4.1 million Ether coins, so he has a vested interest in putting forward highly bullish targets.

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Anthony Di Pizio has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Bitcoin, Ethereum, Mastercard, and Visa. The Motley Fool recommends BlackRock. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Fed ‘Sweet Spot’ Sends Signal for Bitcoin as Jobs Data Quietly Sets Stage for $100K BTC

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Fed ‘Sweet Spot’ Sends Signal for Bitcoin as Jobs Data Quietly Sets Stage for 0K BTC
Bitcoin’s march toward $100,000 is gaining momentum as cooling U.S. labor data, shifting Fed policy expectations, and geopolitical tensions converge, setting the stage for renewed price discovery and a possible breakout beyond prior all-time highs.
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Rumors are swirling about Venezuela holding $60 billion in Bitcoin—but crypto experts are skeptical | Fortune

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Rumors are swirling about Venezuela holding  billion in Bitcoin—but crypto experts are skeptical | Fortune

Following the United States’ capture of Nicolás Maduro over the weekend, a report came out claiming that Venezuela had $60 billion stored in Bitcoin—leading to speculation that the U.S. could lay claim to cryptocurrency as well as oil. Despite numerous reports of the huge Venezuelan Bitcoin stash, however, a crypto forensic firm is skeptical of the claims. 

The news of Venezuela’s Bitcoin holding began to bubble up last Saturday, the same day that Maduro was ousted. The digital publication Project Brazen reported that his regime could control $60 billion in the original cryptocurrency—but offered little in the way of proof.

“The article does not mention any addresses as a starting point, making it difficult to verify any of these speculated claims,” said Aurelie Barthere, principal research analyst at Nansen, about Project Brazen’s report. 

Barthere is not the first person to express skepticism about the country’s purported crypto treasure trove. Mauricio di Bartolomeo, the Venezuelan co-founder of the financial services company Ledn, told Fortune on Wednesday that the level of the country’s corruption makes the figure hard to believe. He expanded his argument in an opinion piece he wrote for Coindesk. 

Estimates of Venezuela’s crypto holdings vary wildly. Bitcointreasuries.net estimates that the country has $22 million worth of Bitcoin. That figure would make Venezuela the government entity with the ninth-most money tied up in the original cryptocurrency, just behind North Korea. 

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While the exact size of Venezuela’s Bitcoin wealth is unclear, the country has long been a player in crypto. Maduro introduced a token called the Petro in 2018, which was shuttered six years later. Its citizens have also turned to stablecoins as a way to fight their currency’s hyperinflation.

Trump has said that he will “run” Venezuela, and some have speculated that includes seizing the country’s Bitcoin holdings. Andrew Fierman, head of national security intelligence at Chainalysis, said he could not speak to the likelihood of such a seizure. He did, however, explain what gaining control of assets might look like. 

A freezing of assets could occur through centralized services, he says. These services would get a court order for an exchange or an issuer like Tether or Circle who could blacklist an address. The second method is through physical seizure. The U.S. could get control of wallets, devices, and keys through compelled cooperation. 

For now, there is unlikely to be a full and accurate account of Venezuela’s Bitcoin holdings until the political situation in the country becomes more stable.

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