Bitcoin (BTC) held steady on Friday after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) repealed an accounting rule that previously forced banks to classify the cryptocurrency and other digital assets as liabilities on their balance sheets,
President Donald Trump this week signed an executive order to establish U.S. dominance in the digital asset market and make the country the global center of crypto. But does that order deliver on what Trump said he'd accomplish?
MicroStrategy Inc.’s (MSTR) stock remained flat on Friday, even as other crypto-linked stocks rallied following the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s decision to repeal a rule that limited banks from holding digital assets.
The SEC has rescinded SAB 121, removing barriers for banks to custody Bitcoin and crypto, signaling a major shift in crypto regulation.
Any level above $150,000 for Bitcoin would be "speculative fever," US SEC cancels SAB 121 rule, and more: Hodler's Digest
President Trump has officially eliminated a controversial guideline from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that effectively prevented US banks from holding crypto assets. The administration’s new leadership at the SEC just rescinded Staff Accounting Bulletin 121,
The world's leading cryptocurrency may reach $160,000 later this year, and even jump to $240,000 in a best-case scenario, according to an expert.
Nasdaq has submitted a proposal to enable in-kind creation and redemption for the BlackRock iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT).
Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies recoiled after Trump's first set of policies following inauguration did not refer to this asset class.
Ongoing presidential backing for digital assets is a key determinant for the continuation of 'crypto's golden era,' the report said.
The president's executive order on digital assets and the SEC's crypto task force could set off a flurry of changes for crypto operations in the U.S.