Judging from the current layout by U.S. institutions, things overall are still following the same analysis chart drawn up in the early days of Trump’s first term.


Over the past year, whether it’s strategic Bitcoin reserves, stablecoin regulation, or legislation on the structure of digital-asset markets—or the gradual clarification of crypto-asset rules by regulatory agencies such as the SEC and the CFTC—has all shown that the U.S. is trying to incorporate blockchain into the national financial system, rather than treating it merely as a speculative market.
From a global perspective, the U.S. is indeed currently the only major economy pushing digital assets up to the national strategy level, with clear advantages in regulation, capital markets, institutional participation, and the U.S. dollar stablecoin ecosystem. However, other economies such as the European Union, Singapore, and the UAE are also actively building their own digital-asset frameworks. So if we say “the world has only the U.S.,” that statement may be too absolute—but in terms of influence, the blockchain network effect is only driven by “the U.S.”
If, in the future, the U.S. can continue to attract global blockchain companies, developers, and capital while maintaining its advantages in the development of dollar stablecoins, tokenized assets, and on-chain finance, then blockchain is likely to become one of the new growth engines for the U.S. financial markets, further strengthening the international influence of the dollar financial system.
I now do very few long-term predictions, but I believe that with U.S. institutions continuing to build out blockchain infrastructure and digital assets, in the coming years they could become the most important force driving the prosperity of U.S. capital markets.
Crypto assets will also enter an extremely thriving development phase— the track is strong enough.
#韩国KOSPI暴跌5%触发熔断
TRUMP-2.57%
BTC-2.51%
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