President Donald Trump took another step toward his promise to make the U.S. the “crypto capital of the planet” on Thursday, signing an executive order aimed at promoting the domestic cryptocurrency sector and exploring the possibility of a new national digital asset stockpile.
President Trump's Jan. 23 executive order creates a crypto task force to craft rules and study a national reserve or stockpile of digital assets.
The SEC’s statement regarding the commission doesn’t really provide much insight into what it will seek to do, other than “provide clarity” on the rules regulating the crypto industry. It will likely achieve that by just stripping back those rules altogether,
Democratic lawmakers are asking federal regulators to look into legal and ethical questions around the meme cryptocurrency coins launched by Donald Trump.
The likelihood of the first memecoin-based exchange-traded funds (ETFs) is growing under new leadership at the US securities regulator, industry watchers told Cointelegraph. Despite the increasing ETF likelihood paired with the massive rally following the launch of President Donald Trump’s Official Trump (TRUMP) memecoin,
We’re tracking the executive orders Trump signed on his first day in office, just hours after being inaugurated as president.
The lawmakers sent the letter to the Office of Government Ethics, the Department of the Treasury, the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday that would possibly create a national digital asset stockpile for the first time along with promoting the advancement of cryptocurrencies.
Circle chief executive Jeremy Allaire thinks President Donald Trump will enable banks to trade crypto assets. In a new interview with Reuters, Allaire predicts Trump will sign a flurry of executive orders (EOs) enabling banks to hold digital assets in portfolios, trade them and offer crypto services to wealthy customers.
US President Donald Trump has signed an executive order to establish a working group on digital asset markets.
Cryptocurrencies launched by Donald and Melania Trump before the presidential inauguration raise conflict-of-interest concerns.
Donald and Melania Trump launched new cryptocurrencies over the weekend. Some experts are advising investors to be cautious.