Trump’s Tech Agenda: Is Crypto Getting Left Behind?
Trump's latest tech blueprint drops—and the digital asset sector is scanning the fine print.
The Missing Piece
Silicon Valley gets its usual shoutouts—AI dominance, semiconductor supremacy, and a full-throated defense of American tech giants. But the section that has crypto insiders leaning in? Noticeably thin. The agenda talks future finance, yet the most disruptive piece of that future gets a passing glance, not a plan.
Reading Between the Policy Lines
It’s not an outright rejection. The framework champions innovation and deregulation, music to any builder’s ears. But for an asset class that’s reshaped capital flows and spawned its own political action committees, the omission feels strategic. Is it a deliberate sidestep of a polarizing issue, or a blind spot for an old-school financial worldview?
The Market's Quiet Verdict
Traders didn’t panic-sell—no flash crash on the headline. Instead, a collective shrug from the charts. Perhaps the market’s learned: political theater moves tweets, but protocol adoption moves needles. After all, when was the last time a D.C. pronouncement actually stopped a degen from apeing into the next memecoin?
The Bottom Line
Forget the campaign trail. Crypto’s real policy is being written on-chain, in boardrooms, and by developers—not in political manifestos. The agenda’s silence speaks volumes: digital assets have matured past needing a political patron. They’re building their own table, while Washington is still arguing over the menu. A classic case of the future arriving faster than the bureaucracy can tax it.
Why Did President Trump Leave Out Crypto?

President Trump’s exclusion of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technology may play a much larger role. Many have highlighted that national security involves hard tech, and crypto inclines more towards the finance industry. Trump’s exclusion of crypto does not mean that he is moving away from his love for the budding industry. In fact, one of the first executive orders signed by the President was to establish a digital asset reserve for the US.
On the other hand, the cryptocurrency market continues to face substantial resistance. Bitcoin (BTC) is struggling to breach past the $91,000 mark, and other assets are also showing signs of consolidation. The market does seem to be showing signs of entering a long crypto winter.
Will The Market Recover Soon?
The cryptocurrency market’s recent crash and current lackluster performance could be due to macroeconomic uncertainties. However, there is a high chance that the Federal Reserve will roll out another interest rate cut later this week. Another rate cut could trigger a market-wide bull run.
Moreover, Grayscale recently stated that they believe Bitcoin (BTC) could hit a new all-time high in 2026. The financial institution presented a new thesis that claims that Bitcoin (BTC) may be following a 5-year cycle. If true, the original cryptocurrency may climb to a new peak in 2026, five years after the 2021 peak. If BTC hits a new all-time high, other assets will likely follow its trajectory.
ETF inflows are also expected to increase over the coming weeks. ETF inflows have been a key driver this cycle. Increased inflows could lead to another bullish leg for the cryptocurrency market.