Judging by the current layout of U.S. institutions, the overall structure is still following the analysis chart drawn up in the early days of Trump’s first term in office.


Over the past year, whether it’s the Bitcoin strategic reserve, stablecoin regulation, or digital asset market-structure legislation—or the gradual clarification by regulatory bodies such as the SEC and CFTC on rules for crypto assets—has shown that the U.S. is trying to integrate blockchain into the national financial system, rather than viewing it merely as a speculative market.
From a global perspective, the U.S. is indeed the only major economy currently pushing digital assets up to the level of national strategy. It has clear advantages in regulation, capital markets, institutional participation, and the dollar stablecoin ecosystem. However, the EU, Singapore, and the UAE are also actively building their own digital-asset frameworks. So saying “the world only has the U.S.” may be too absolute, but in terms of influence, only the U.S. has the blockchain network effect.
If, in the future, the U.S. can continue attracting global blockchain companies, developers, and capital, while maintaining its development advantages in 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 market, further strengthening the international influence of the U.S. dollar financial system.
I now rarely make long-term predictions, but I believe that with U.S. institutions continuing to lay out blockchain infrastructure and digital assets, in the coming years they are poised to become the most important force driving the prosperity of U.S. capital markets.
Crypto assets are also likely to enter an extremely prosperous development phase—the sector is strong enough.
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