Under the Trump administration, U.S. regulators have shifted toward integrating cryptocurrency into the traditional financial system, marking a historic change from prior enforcement-heavy approaches. Key developments include new legislation for stablecoins and approvals for crypto firms to operate like banks. This evolution has boosted institutional adoption amid Bitcoin's volatile but upward price trajectory.
In 2025, the U.S. government under President Donald Trump adopted a strategy to absorb cryptocurrency into the existing financial framework rather than treating it as a regulatory threat. This shift was evident in actions by major agencies. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), previously led by Gary Gensler with a focus on lawsuits against firms like Coinbase and Binance, introduced Project Crypto under new leadership. This initiative aims to clearly define which digital tokens qualify as securities, moving away from regulation through enforcement.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) advanced integration by recognizing Bitcoin and Ethereum as commodities and approving them, along with USDC, as collateral in derivatives markets via its Digital Asset Collateral Pilot Program. Traditional risk controls, such as haircuts, were applied, signaling institutional trust in crypto as functional infrastructure.
A structural milestone came from the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), which conditionally approved national trust bank charters for companies like Circle and Ripple in late 2025. This allows these firms to operate nationwide without state-by-state licensing, facilitating direct settlements and closer ties to traditional banking.
Congress passed the GENIUS Act, providing legal clarity for stablecoins by mandating 100% reserve backing, banning rehypothecation, and establishing federal oversight. Described as transforming stablecoins into 'legally recognized digital dollars,' this was the first major crypto legislation in U.S. history, signed into law this year.
These changes reduced legal uncertainty, encouraging institutional investment and innovation. Bitcoin's price reflected market resilience: it surged above $109,000 early in the year on pro-crypto optimism, pulled back after tariff announcements, and reached a new all-time high near $125,800 in October following Federal Reserve rate cuts. Regulators scaled back enforcement actions, dismissing most prior cases, while ongoing suits like Sam Bankman-Fried's appeal persist. Globally, regulatory efforts continue, but the U.S. focus on integration stands out.