Trump’s Crypto Reserve Announcement Boosted Bitcoin — But Only for 24 Hours

March 3, 2025

On Sunday, President Donald Trump announced plans to theoretically deliver on a promise to Silicon Valley cryptocurrency whales who backed him with millions in Super PAC donations during his 2024 run. In order to “make sure the U.S. is the Crypto Capital of the World,” and as an extension of an executive order supporting the growth of digital assets, he wrote in a post on Truth Social, his administration intends to move forward with the creation of a “U.S. Crypto Reserve.” The stockpile, he noted, would include the well-known currencies Bitcoin and Ethereum, along with the tokens XRP, Solana, and Cardano.

While it’s not known exactly what form such a strategic reserve would take, nor whether the government would seek to buy crypto for the stockpile with taxpayer dollars — a move that would theoretically require approval from Congress — blockchain enthusiasts cheered the news. Currencies that had rallied since Trump’s election only to start slipping in recent weeks once again climbed sharply, with Bitcoin surging 10 percent.

But the pump was short-lived, as Trump on Monday announced that harsh tariffs on goods imported from Canada and Mexico were imminent. That news caused huge losses on Wall Street, and crypto tokens also saw their gains of the day prior immediately erased. As of Monday afternoon, Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, and XRP all stood where they did before Trump teased the strategic reserve, while Cardano had shed about 20 percent of its peak value.

Even before these plunges, commentators questioned the supposed benefits of a national crypto stockpile. Some in the industry were perturbed that the White House is apparently looking to include more volatile currencies among the holdings. (Trump had only added that Bitcoin and Ethereum would be among the reserve’s assets in a follow-up post to his original announcement, as if to quell alarm.) Economists have described the crypto reserve idea as a boon to crypto investors but a risk to average taxpayers. A few journalist critics described it as outright corruption in that sense — seeing as Trump’s crypto czar, tech venture capitalist and Elon Musk associate David Sacks, held stakes in the five currencies Trump named on social media.

 

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