Tag: crypto

  • A crypto pioneer was denied housing in ‘mecca’ of Democratic Party fundraisers. Now he alleges discrimination

    A crypto pioneer was denied housing in ‘mecca’ of Democratic Party fundraisers. Now he alleges discrimination

    A San Francisco apartment co-op used to house ritzy Democrat campaign parties and its megadonors has found itself as the defendant in a new discrimination lawsuit filed by a cryptocurrency pioneer.

    Jesse Powell, the co-founder of crypto exchange Kraken, is suing the 2500 Steiner Street shareholder corporation over alleged discriminatory actions against his financial, criminal and potential political affiliations that led to the denial of his purchase of California Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis’ unit.

    “I’m just frankly exhausted at dealing with this, exhausted from being discriminated against,” Powell told Fox News Digital on Friday. “And San Francisco should not be the place where that happens. In fact, San Francisco needs the crypto industry more than ever right now.” 

    “I think that the hypocrisy of the so-called progressive movement that somehow can’t tolerate ideas that disagree with their own, meanwhile claiming to be open to everything,” he added. “It’s just bizarre to me.”

    TRUMP’S CRYPTO CZAR, CONGRESSIONAL LAWMAKERS ANNOUNCE MOVES TOWARD U.S. ‘GOLDEN AGE’ IN DIGITAL ASSETS

    Powell filed the lawsuit last Wednesday – claiming he “tried everything to avoid” it – where it’s alleged that he and the unit seller inked a nearly $15.5 million deal for the sale of the unit in September and entered escrow before the co-op board learned of his identity and their “demeanor changed.”

    Kraken Chairman and co-founder Jesse Powell tells Fox News Digital that he’s “exhausted” after alleged housing discrimination and “the hypocrisy of the so-called progressive movement.” (Getty Images)

    Powell holds protected status under California’s Fair Employment Housing Act (FEHA) and the Unruh Act, due to his source of income and criminal history. FBI agents had searched Powell’s Los Angeles home in July 2023 over hacking and cyberstalking allegations, but he was never charged with any crime in connection to the search and seizure.

    “The final attempt that I made was to send each shareholder a personal letter explaining why I think I would be a good neighbor, asking to have a conversation with them. And the response we got back from that was, ‘We consider the matter to be closed,’ from their attorney,” Powell explained. “And so that, to me, was the end of the road of trying to resolve this amicably. And I had no other choice but to file a lawsuit at that point.”

    In a co-op building, buyers invest in shares of a housing cooperative as opposed to owning a property. When Powell’s offer reached the shareholders for final approval, the lawsuit says the board “schemed to discriminate against Mr. Powell by refusing to approve the sale,” and “the Corporation never gave Mr. Powell a straight answer for its denial, instead offering only obfuscation and shifting pretexts for hindering.”

    This specific 12-unit property is colloquially known as “Susie’s Building,” named after businesswoman and longtime Democratic donor Susie Tompkins Buell.

    “Whether our political differences might have sort of tinged their opinion or willingness to have an open mind about those things, maybe. But, the building is packed with Democrats,” Powell noted. “It’s obviously known for [and] has a reputation of being this sort of mecca of Democratic Party fundraisers where the who’s who of the party go floor to floor collecting checks.”

    “I’m not a Democrat, but I’m not a Republican either. I vote the issues. I consider each candidate independently. I look at the public policy implications of things. And so, I just happen to be, I think, more aligned with sort of right-coded causes over the last four years as the Biden administration had attacked our industry,” the Kraken co-founder continued.

    When going through the shareholder approval process, Powell understood that an agreement between him and the sellers was not the end of the purchase. Bylaws required the sale to be submitted to the building’s non-selling shareholders.

    Powell’s application was initially denied in October, when no reason was reportedly listed for the denial. Upon pressing for an answer, the building’s property manager claimed there were “a number of concerns” deemed “unresolvable.”

    Days later, the lawsuit alleges, the 2500 Steiner Street board told Powell that the denial was a matter of finances, which his attorneys argued were “far from ‘unresolvable.’” He provided necessary documentation, and requested a meeting with the board as typical in co-op transactions, but “no such meeting happened” before the shareholders delivered their final decision in November.

    TRUMP INAUGURATION DRAWS BIG CRYPTO DONATIONS

    “The shareholders knew who the seller was all along. They received the entire package of materials, including the transfer agreement… They knowingly, to the lieutenant governor of California, were willing to block her from selling her unit that she’s been trying to sell, from my understanding, for over a year, quietly and off the market,” Powell said.

    “Obviously, she didn’t want coverage of this. And they sort of forced her into a position of now being in the media about this transaction. And so, you have to wonder if there’s some bad blood there – why is she getting out of the building? If she’s leaving San Francisco, why is she leaving San Francisco? That’s probably a larger question.”

    Representatives for the 2500 Steiner Street corporation did not return Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

    Lt. Gov. Kounalakis’ office also did not respond to Fox Digital’s request for comment.

    Though Powell has no formal attachment to the Democrat or Republican Parties, he did donate $1 million to President Donald Trump’s campaign in June and has recently “supported nationally popular conservative causes,” the lawsuit says. He co-founded Kraken in 2011 and stepped down as CEO in April 2023, but remains as chairman and a large shareholder.

    He argues that preventing this real estate deal is “very bad for San Francisco,” perpetuating a city housing supply shortage, keeping millions of dollars from entering the local economy and hindering other successful entrepreneurs from moving there.

    “This has far-reaching implications. It’s not just about this one unit in the city preventing somebody from moving from one city to another city… I think we need to look at the rules around co-ops, and maybe we need some new law that says you can’t discriminate against anybody for any reason other than financial qualifications when it comes to housing. No matter how much you like them, no matter how much you don’t like them, no matter whether you think they’re going to be a good neighbor or not. If they’re financially qualified, you got to let them in.”

    When asked why he has no desire to find another property, Powell replied that 2500 Steiner Street’s “amazing” views of the Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz Island and its location convinced him to move back to San Francisco after leaving for Los Angeles in 2018.

    “I guess I just sort of became emotionally attached to it. And me going to another unit doesn’t really solve the housing problem. It’s still one less unit that’s on the market,” he said. “I’m happy to live in a neighborhood with people with different ideas, happy to live in a building with people with different ideas… I take care of my neighbors and I want to make San Francisco a better place. And I don’t think ruffling a few feathers, people being uncomfortable, people not wanting to see me as they pass me in the lobby… is a reason to block somebody from having an apartment. I think it’s extremely selfish.”

    The Kraken co-founder isn’t interested in playing a part in the California exodus either, though people have suggested he move to places like Austin, Texas, or Miami, Florida. He stood firm in that he hopes to “make a difference” in his longtime home state “rather than flee.”

    A court date has been set for July 9 in California’s superior court to hear opening arguments of the case. Powell and his attorneys are asking the judge to move the unit sale forward and award declaratory relief for compensatory damages, punitive damages and legal fees and costs.

    “We may get to some sort of settlement before that happens. If this ultimately goes to trial, a jury will have to decide on whether there was unlawful discrimination or not,” Powell said. “There are a few avenues we can discuss in settlement if they’re interested in settlement. But, I’m really focused on just being able to move into that unit. And that’s really the most satisfying outcome to me.”

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    “San Francisco’s obviously welcoming of a wide variety of people from all walks of life who have very different ideas about how to live and what their identities are. In fact, San Francisco is a sanctuary city… And so you would think that the people that live in this building, who were largely Democrats and donate to these causes of diversity and inclusion, would be open to somebody with a diverse job or a diverse opinion about politics or even cryptocurrency. As you know, the cryptocurrency industry has faced significant debanking. And so we are used to being discriminated against on the basis of our industry and the work that we do. And it feels like this is yet another example of being discriminated against on the basis of the work that I do.”

    “I think the city has a lot of work to do to bring back businesses, to revitalize downtown. And it’s not going to get very far if people like me continue to be discriminated against when they’re looking for housing to return to San Francisco,” he concluded.

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  • Trump’s commerce pick with crypto ties advances to Senate floor

    Trump’s commerce pick with crypto ties advances to Senate floor

    The Senate Commerce Committee moved to advance the nomination of billionaire banker Howard Lutnick to lead the Commerce Department to the Senate floor on Wednesday. 

    The nomination advanced out of committee on a party line vote other than Sen. John Fetterman, D-Pa., who gave Lutnick a “yes” vote along with Republicans.

    Lutnick, a longtime friend of President Donald Trump and CEO of investment firm Cantor Fitzgerald, will be charged with ushering in new crypto and tariff policy for the Commerce Department, if confirmed. 

    He’ll also take the lead on a new executive order from Trump establishing a sovereign wealth fund for the U.S. government. 

    The no-nonsense CEO is best known for leading Cantor through the 9/11 terrorist attacks, when he lost his brother and more than 600 coworkers in the attacks on the North Tower. Lutnick has been praised for his charitable work through Cantor Fitzgerald’s Relief Fund, which helps support families impacted by acts of terrorism, natural disasters and other emergencies.

    ​​HOWARD LUTNICK, TRUMP COMMERCE SECRETARY PICK, SAYS IT’S ‘NONSENSE’ THAT TARIFFS CAUSE INFLATION

    The Senate Commerce Committee moved to advance the nomination of billionaire banker Howard Lutnick to lead the Commerce Department to the Senate floor on Wednesday. (ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Lutnick, who is supportive of strong tariffs, promised in his confirmation hearing to “use any and all authorities at its disposal to implement the president’s trade agenda.”

    He claimed it’s “nonsense” to suggest tariffs cause inflation. 

    “The two top countries with tariffs, India and China, do have the most tariffs and no inflation,” Lutnick noted. 

    “A particular product’s price may go up,” he conceded, while arguing that levies would not cause broad inflation. “It is just nonsense to say that tariffs cause inflation. It’s nonsense.” 

    Lutnick also said he prefers “across-the-board” tariffs on a “country-by-country” basis, rather than ones aimed at particular sectors or products. 

    “I think when you pick one product in Mexico, they’ll pick one product. You know, we pick avocados, they pick white corn, we pick tomatoes, they pick yellow corn. All you’re doing is picking on farmers.”

    “Let America make it more fair. We are treated horribly by the global trading environment. They all have higher tariffs, non-tariff trade barriers and subsidies. They treat us poorly. We need to be treated better,” Lutnick said. “We can use tariffs to create reciprocity.”

    U.S. Vice President JD Vance introduces Howard Lutnick

    Lutnick will be charged with ushering in new crypto and tariff policy for the Commerce Department, if confirmed.

    Lutnick testifies on Capitol Hill

    Lutnick said it’s ‘nonsense’ to suggest tariffs cause inflation.

    TRUMP’S BILLIONAIRE COMMERCE SECRETARY PICK VOWS TO SELL ALL HIS BUSINESS INTERESTS IF CONFIRMED

    He said Trump was of a “like mind” that tariffs need to be simple. “The steel and aluminum had 560,000 applications for exclusions. It just seems that’s too many.” 

    Lutnick’s ties to the dollar-pegged cryptocurrency Tether also came under scrutiny during his hearing. Lutnick’s firm Cantor has around 5% ownership of Tether, valued at $600 million, the Wall Street Journal recently reported. Lutnick told lawmakers that his company had no equity in Tether, but had a convertible bond. 

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    “I believe U.S. dollar stablecoins should be audited, should be completely backed by U.S. treasuries 100%,” Lutnick said during his hearing. 

    He has promised to sell all of his business interests if confirmed for the role. 

  • Trump’s crypto czar, Congressional lawmakers ‘golden age’ digital assets

    Trump’s crypto czar, Congressional lawmakers ‘golden age’ digital assets

    Trump administration crypto czar David Sacks and chairs from multiple House and Senate committees held a press conference on Capitol Hill Tuesday to lay out how the White House and Congress plan to carry out President Donald Trump’s plans for America leading the world in the digital asset ecosystem.

    Sacks said he looks forward to working with Congress in “creating a golden age in digital assets.”

    Representative Glenn Thompson, a Republican from Pennsylvania, from left, Senator Tim Scott, a Republican from South Carolina, David Sacks, White House Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Crypto czar, Representative French Hill, a Republican from Arkans (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Sacks was joined by Senate Banking Committee Chairman Tim Scott (R,S.C.), Senate Agriculture Committee Chairman John Boozman (R,Ark.), House Financial Services Committee Chairman French Hill (R,Ark.), and House Agriculture Committee Chairman G.T. Thompson (R, Pa.), who laid out moves being made to carry out Trump’s executive order last week that seeks to clarify regulations in the crypto industry.

    MOONPAY CEO: ‘CRYPTO IS THE FUTURE’

    The four committees are forming a bicameral committee to lead on crypto regulation where they will prioritize stablecoin and market structure legislation.

    Committees plan to build from the “FIT21” bill for market structure legislation that was passed in the House Financial Services Committee last year, and will use Sen. Bill Hagerty’s (R, Tenn.) new stablecoin bill that dropped Thursday as a starting point for new legislation this Congress. 

    CRYPTO’S ‘NEXT FRONTIER’ IS IN EVERYDAY USE, TOKENIZATION: ROBINHOOD CEO VLAD TENEV

    Senate Banking Chairman Tim Scott said he plans to be “as aggressive as possible” to get the bills through the Senate in the first 100 days.

    Stablecoin legislation is moving forward quickly, according Scott, who said Republicans have been working with Democratic sponsors on the bill and they plan to move on that first. Hill said the group plans to work on both market structure and stablecoin bills simultaneously on a bipartisan basis in the House.

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    Sacks, who is also the White House’s artificial intelligence (AI) czar, confirmed that one of the first things the Presidential Working Group on Digital Assets formed by Trump’s EO is going to look at is the feasibility of a Bitcoin reserve, but noted the initiative is still in the early stages as some members of the working group have not yet been confirmed.

  • Top Texas GOP official rallies around Trump’s AI, crypto plans amid state’s crucial investments

    Top Texas GOP official rallies around Trump’s AI, crypto plans amid state’s crucial investments

    One of the top officials in Texas says he is on board with President Donald Trump’s aggressive plan to expand the AI and crypto capabilities of the United States.

    “There’s no daylight between President Trump and I on this issue,” Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told Fox News Digital this week. “

    “I totally support the president and his Stargate Plan. We are completely aligned in our desire to see Texas and America lead in AI, data centers and crypto. These industries understand they will have to supply their own power needs and are diligently working toward that goal so costs are not disproportionally shifted onto residential and small businesses customers.”

    Patrick, long considered a loyal ally of Trump, raised eyebrows last year when he warned of the burden that crypto mining and data centers could put on the state’s electrical grid. However, he repeatedly emphasized that there is “no daylight” between him and Trump on these issues.

    TRUMP CRYPTO CZAR DAVID SACKS TOUTS PRESIDENT’S EXECUTIVE ORDER, SAYS BIDEN DROVE INDUSTRY OFFSHORE

    Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick told Fox News Digital he backs President Donald Trump’s AI infrastructure plan. (Getty)

    “We need to take a close look at those two industries,” Patrick posted on X in June 2024 while expressing concerns that data centers and crypto mining expansion add more to the grid than they pay off in jobs. 

    “They produce very few jobs compared to the incredible demands they place on our grid. Crypto mining may actually make more money selling electricity back to the grid than from their crypto mining operations… Texans will ultimately pay the price. I’m more interested in building the grid to service customers in their homes, apartments, and normal businesses and keeping costs as low as possible for them instead of for very niche industries that have massive power demands and produce few jobs.”

    EXPERTS SAY FIRST WEEK OF ‘TRUMP EFFECT’ IS DERAILING GLOBAL CLIMATE MOVEMENT’S ‘HOUSE OF CARDS’

    Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick

    Republican Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick speaks at a news conference. (Reuters/Jon Herskovitz)

    Crypto mining and data center expansion have been dominant themes of the Presidential Transition’s economic messaging, including earlier this month when Trump announced a new $20 billion foreign investment for the expansion of data centers across several U.S. states, including Texas. The announcement drew praise from many conservatives, including Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas.

    Trump has also garnered significant support from the crypto community and raised large chunks of money from the industry along with his promotion of a message emphasizing energy independence, economic growth and framing the expansion of crypto mining as an essential tool toward ensuring the U.S. leads the industry. 

    “The need to quickly scale data center capacity to support the 21st-century economy continues to increase, given the growing demand for AI and other digital services by individuals, households, businesses, government, and organizations of all sizes,” Dan Diorio, senior director of state policy at the Data Center Coalition, told Fox News Digital. 

    President Donald Trump and Melania Trump

    President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump wave as they board Air Force One, Friday, Jan. 24, 2025, at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, for a trip to North Carolina and California. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

    “The data center industry appreciates President Trump highlighting the essential role of the data center industry in advancing America’s national security and global economic competitiveness. We also appreciate his commitment to promoting the rapid development of additional data center and energy capacity to support the nation’s leadership in AI,” Diorio continued. “Texas is uniquely poised to benefit from this. With continued support for data centers, Texas can continue to drive innovation and investment while promoting American economic leadership and national security today and into the future.”

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    Last week, Trump announced Stargate, a joint venture of OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle that will invest up to $500 billion in AI-related infrastructure.

    Texas will serve as ground zero, with 10 data centers by the venture already under construction in the state, 10 more on the way and the first project based in Abilene, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison said. Each building will occupy half a million square feet.

    Patrick said in a statement last week to The Texas Tribune that he believes Texas should be the “world leader in AI, data center and crypto. The key is to ensure they have the power they need without a major impact to our electrical grid. The industries understand that and they are working on solutions.”

    Texas’ main grid operator predicts power demand will nearly double by 2030, in part due to more requests to plug into the grid from large users like data centers, crypto mining facilities, hydrogen production plants, and oil and gas companies.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

  • Trump crypto czar says Biden-era executive order hamstrung American AI

    Trump crypto czar says Biden-era executive order hamstrung American AI

    Cryptocurrency czar David Sacks on Monday backed President Donald Trump’s reversal of a Biden-era executive order that instituted guardrails on artificial intelligence technology but “hamstrung” American AI companies. 

    Sacks cited DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup that that develops open-source large language models (LLMs). The company has been outperforming American AI companies like OpenAI and Meta. 

    The company recently unveiled R1, a specialized model designed for complex problem-solving, on Jan. 20, which “zoomed to the global top 10 in performance,” and was built far more rapidly, with fewer, less powerful AI chips, at a much lower cost than other U.S. models, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    SILICON VALLEY PRAISING CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK: ‘PROFOUND GIFT TO THE WORLD’

    In a post on X, Sacks said DeepSeek R1 proves that the AI race “will be very competitive” and that Trump was “right to rescind the Biden EO.”

    David Sacks, co-founder of Craft Ventures LLC, speaks during the Token Summit in New York, U.S., on Thursday, May 17, 2018. The Token Summit explores the economics, regulation and best practices around blockchain-based tokens, protocols, and crypto-a (Alex Flynn/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    He said the order “hamstrung American AI companies without asking whether China would do the same. (Obviously not.) I’m confident in the U.S. but we can’t be complacent.”

    Hours after returning to the White House, Trump rescinded Biden’s executive order, which set in motion a sprint across government agencies to study AI’s impact on everything from cybersecurity risks to its effects on education, workplaces and public benefits.

    Trump said the order acted as a barrier to American AI innovation.

    “We must develop AI systems that are free from ideological bias or engineered social agendas,” Trump’s order says. It also “established unnecessarily burdensome requirements for companies developing and deploying AI that would stifle private sector innovation and threaten American technological leadership.”

    In a policy directive last year, the Biden administration said federal agencies must show their artificial intelligence tools aren’t harming the public, or stop using them. Trump’s order directs the White House to revise and reissue those directives, which affect how agencies acquire AI tools and use them.

    CHINESE APP DEEPSEEK HAMMERS US STOCKS WITH CHEAPER OPEN-SOURCE AI MODEL

    Image of DeepSeek

    A chatbot app developed by the Chinese AI company DeepSeek (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “For the last four years, the Biden administration has basically prosecuted and persecuted crypto companies, really driving them offshore,” Sacks said on FOX Business’ “The Evening Edit” last week. “I’ve heard so many outrageous stories by founders, by entrepreneurs, the Biden administration would not tell them what the rules of the road were, and they would then get prosecuted. And what the industry wants more than anything else is regulatory clarity.”

    “They’re saying, ‘just tell us what the rules are. We will abide by them’,” he added. “And the Biden administration would never do that. And because of that, all the innovation was basically moving offshore, and America was about to lose this technology of the future.”

    Alexandr Wang, CEO at Scale AI, a San Francisco-based software company, spoke out over the weekend on the DeepSeek technology, calling its quick success a “wake-up call for America.”

    “DeepSeek is a wake up call for America, but it doesn’t change the strategy,” Wang wrote in a post on X. 

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    Wang explained that the “USA must out-innovate & race faster, as we have done in the entire history of AI” and “tighten export controls on chips so that we can maintain future leads.”

    “Every major breakthrough in AI has been American,” Wang said. 

    FOX Business’s Stepheny Price, Breck Dumas and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

  • Trump crypto czar David Sacks touts president’s executive order, says Biden drove industry offshore

    Trump crypto czar David Sacks touts president’s executive order, says Biden drove industry offshore

    President Donald Trump’s cryptocurrency czar, David Sacks, is celebrating after the president signed an executive order seeking to clarify regulations in the industry on Thursday, hailing his embrace of the industry while slamming the Biden administration for driving it away.

    In an exclusive interview with FOX Business’ “The Evening Edit” on Friday, Sacks said Trump’s actions showed he is following through on his campaign promise to make the U.S. the “crypto capital” of the world.

    Sacks said that Trump’s crypto EO directs his working group to produce a regulatory framework to encourage innovation and crypto in the U.S., rather than driving the industry to other countries.

    PROMINENT PRIVATE SECTOR INVESTMENTS MOUNT AMID TRUMP’S RETURN TO THE WHITE HOUSE

    “For the last four years, the Biden administration has basically prosecuted and persecuted crypto companies, really driving them offshore,” Sacks told host Edward Lawrence. “I’ve heard so many outrageous stories by founders, by entrepreneurs, the Biden administration would not tell them what the rules of the road were, and they would then get prosecuted. And what the industry wants more than anything else is regulatory clarity.”

    David Sacks

    David Sacks, CEO of Zenefits, speaks during 2016 TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco, California, U.S. September 13, 2016.  (REUTERS/Beck Diefenbach / Reuters)

    “They’re saying, just tell us what the rules are. We will abide by them,” Sacks said. And the Biden administration would never do that. And because of that, all the innovation was basically moving offshore, and America was about to lose this technology of the future.”

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    Trump’s order establishes the Presidential Working Group on Digital Asset Markets, which will develop a federal regulatory framework for digital assets, including stablecoins, and evaluate the creation of a strategic national digital assets stockpile. It will be chaired by the White House AI and crypto czar and include the treasury secretary, the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), as well as other relevant department and agency heads.

  • President Trump signs crypto executive order

    President Trump signs crypto executive order

    President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday that seeks to clarify regulations in the crypto industry to “secure America’s position as the world’s leader in the digital asset economy,” FOX Business has learned.

    Trump’s order establishes the Presidential Working Group on Digital Asset Markets, which will develop a federal regulatory framework for digital assets, including stablecoins, and evaluate the creation of a strategic national digital assets stockpile. It will be chaired by the White House AI and crypto czar and include the treasury secretary, the chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), as well as other relevant department and agency heads.

    Additionally, the executive order prohibits agencies from establishing, issuing or promoting central bank digital currencies, and directs other federal agencies and departments to provide the group with recommendations about digital asset regulations that should be rescinded or modified. It also revokes the Biden administration’s digital assets executive order framework for international engagement on the industry.

    “President Trump will help make the United States the center of digital financial technology by halting aggressive enforcement actions and regulatory overreach that have stifled crypto innovation under previous administrations,” the White House announcement said.

    SEC LAUNCHES CRYPTO TASK FORCE TO CREATE REGULATORY CLARITY

    President Donald Trump campaigned on boosting the U.S. crypto industry. (Jabin Botsford /The Washington Post via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The executive order comes after Trump touted a crypto-friendly approach to regulating the growing industry during his presidential campaign. He pledged at a crypto conference he attended last summer to make the U.S. the “crypto capital of the planet” and the “bitcoin superpower of the world” if elected.

    Former President Joe Biden’s administration, through then-SEC Chair Gary Gensler, carried out a regulatory crackdown on the digital assets industry in an effort to root out bad actors. 

    Gensler resigned from the SEC on Inauguration Day and Trump appointed SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda, a Republican appointee, as the agency’s acting chair while his nominee to serve as the new permanent chair, Paul Atkins, awaits Senate confirmation. 

    PRESIDENT TRUMP APPOINTS MARK UYEDA ACTING SEC CHAIR

    Uyeda’s first official action was to create a new crypto task force led by GOP Commissioner Hester Peirce, often referred to as “Crypto Mom.” 

    The task force will foster a dialogue with industry players to promote a friendlier regulatory environment by focusing on drawing clear regulatory lines, providing realistic paths to registration, crafting sensible disclosure frameworks and deploying enforcement resources. 

    It will also coordinate those activities with other federal agencies, including the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is poised to take on a larger role in crypto regulation.

    Bitcoin prices were up slightly on Thursday in advance of the news, rising by 0.35% to $104,043. In the last month, bitcoin prices have been up over 8.6%.

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    FOX Business’ Edward Lawrence and Eleanor Terrett contributed to this report.

  • SEC launches crypto task force to create regulatory clarity

    SEC launches crypto task force to create regulatory clarity

    The relationship between Wall Street’s top cop and the U.S. cryptocurrency industry is on the mend following more than four years of friction.

    On Tuesday, the Securities and Exchange Commission announced it is spearheading efforts to establish a regulatory framework for digital assets with the creation of a new crypto task force.

    The initiative, which will be led by Republican commissioner Hester Peirce, was acting chair Mark Uyeda’s first official action following his appointment to the position by President Trump on Monday. Uyeda, a Republican commissioner, will serve in the role until Paul Atkins, Trump’s permanent pick to lead the agency, is confirmed by the Senate.

    FOX Business was first to report in November that the task force was a possibility and that Peirce, often referred to as “Crypto Mom,” had expressed interest in leading such a group.

    PRESIDENT TRUMP APPOINTS MARK UYEDA ACTING SEC CHAIR

    SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda speaks during the 2024 Financial Markets Quality Conference at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 17, 2024. (Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    As FOX Business previously reported, the task force will work closely with industry players to create an open dialogue that will allow for a friendlier regulatory environment. 

    Tuesday’s announcement stated the task force will focus on helping the commission draw clear regulatory lines, provide realistic paths to registration, craft sensible disclosure frameworks, and deploy enforcement resources judiciously. It will also coordinate with other federal agencies, including the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which is poised to take on a larger role in crypto regulation.

    The SEC, under the leadership of Biden’s chair Gary Gensler, brought more than 100 legal actions against crypto players over the last four years as the commission has attempted to bring the sector into compliance using enforcement. Many of the lawsuits were brought over credible allegations of fraud and manipulation, but others centered around companies failing to register their sales of digital assets as securities.

    Industry participants have long complained that the decentralized nature of cryptocurrencies and the blockchain technology they run on disqualifies them from being regulated like traditional securities, i.e. stocks and bonds. They have frequently called on regulators and Congress to develop a new regulatory framework specific to digital assets. 

    Gensler, however, believed traditional securities laws were enough to properly regulate the industry and that most digital assets aside from bitcoin are securities, suing companies that challenged this view by refusing to register with the commission.

    PRESIDENT TRUMP LAUNCHES OWN CRYPTOCURRENCY MEME COIN AHEAD OF INAUGURATION

    SEC Chairman Gary Gensler participates in a meeting of the Financial Stability Oversight Council at the U.S. Treasury on July 28, 2023 in Washington, DC. The council met to deliver an update on the Council’s Climate-related Financial Risk Committee and spoke on the transition from LIBOR. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

    SEC Chairman Gary Gensler participates in a meeting of the Financial Stability Oversight Council at the U.S. Treasury on July 28, 2023 in Washington, DC. The council met to deliver an update on the Council’s Climate-related Financial Risk Committee a (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    President Trump has promised a lighter regulatory touch that will benefit developing industries like artificial intelligence and crypto. Since his election on November 5, he’s appointed a handful of industry advocates to key leadership positions at the Treasury, SEC and CFTC, and named venture capitalist David Sacks the first ever crypto and AI ‘czar’.

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    Peirce and the crypto task force are already welcoming input on regulation from the public via email and will hold roundtables with industry participants in the future.

    “This undertaking will take time, patience, and much hard work…,” Peirce said in a press release announcing the initiative. “We look forward to working hand-in-hand with the public to foster a regulatory environment that protects investors, facilitates capital formation, fosters market integrity, and supports innovation.”