The U.S. House of Representatives passed a housing bill with an attached clause: banning the Federal Reserve from issuing CBDCs, locking it until 2030. Trump’s signature makes it effective.


This is not crypto-friendly; it’s the U.S. clearly saying: the digital dollar path is not going forward.
Global regulatory trends are becoming unified. South Korea has incorporated token securities into capital market reforms, and OpenPayd has obtained MiCA approval to build compliant stablecoin channels in Europe. The window for CBDCs is closing, but the territory for stablecoins is expanding.
BTC 62,636, the market is eerily quiet. TRB up 3% is today's king, with not even a decent volume spike. Such a policy signal level, the market completely ignores it — either it hasn't digested it yet or it’s already priced in. I lean toward the latter. Since Trump’s campaign, CBDCs have been on the target.
The clearer the regulatory framework, the shorter the path for institutions to enter. BTC’s underlying logic remains unchanged; what changes is the approach to entering. From betting on policies to betting on compliance infrastructure winners.
Resistance above at 64,000 and 66,000; support below at 61,500 and 60,000.
The narrative in the crypto world is shifting from regulatory confrontation to compliance arbitrage. Whoever gets the license first, eats first.
BTC-1.77%
TRB-1.27%
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