Trump's Bitcoin Watershed
Remember when BTC was only for crooks...?
DONALD TRUMP spoke at the Bitcoin 2024 conference in Nashville this
weekend, making history as the
first former US president to attend the conference and make a full-throated endorsement of Bitcoin,
writes Frank Holmes at US
Global Investors.
My team and I had the pleasure of joining some
8,000 other Bitcoiners to
listen to Trump's speech, which I believe will be remembered as a watershed moment in the history of the
digital asset.
I'll share more details from Trump's speech below, but for now, I want you to consider how
far Bitcoin has come in just
the first 15 years of its existence.
You may remember a time not so long ago
when the prevailing perception
of Bitcoin was that only criminals and terrorists used it. It wasn't on any institutional investor's
radar. Warren Buffett famously
called it "rat poison squared".
How things have changed! Post-Bitcoin ETFs, the
world is gradually moving
toward mass adoption. Major tech companies, from MicroStrategy to Tesla, keep it on their balance sheet.
In two countries so far, it's
used as legal tender.
And now a former US president is throwing his full weight
behind it.
Bitcoin's price could be "going to the moon," President Trump said, and if that's the case,
he "want[s] America to be the
nation that leads the way."
I don't think it's hyperbole to say that this
year's presidential race is unlike
any in modern US history – maybe ever.
President Joe Biden's withdrawal and
endorsement of Vice President
Kamala Harris has sent shockwaves through the political establishment, and while former President Donald
Trump remains the
frontrunner, the wind has certainly shifted in Harris's favor. She's managed to secure a majority of
Democratic delegates, and she now
has the endorsement of all top party leaders, including Barack Obama.
Harris's
campaign said it raised a
jaw-dropping $200 million in the first week of her campaign, which, if true, has to be a record. Users
on the online betting platform
Polymarket now believe the vice president has a 38% probability of winning in November, up from just 1%
just a month
earlier.

As a
bit of trivia, Biden isn't the first sitting president to choose not to seek reelection, but he's the
first to make the announcement
so close to Election Day.
Not including Richard Nixon, who quit the office
outright in 1974, the last two
presidents to forgo reelection were Lyndon Johnson, in 1968, and Harry Truman, in 1952.
This political
upheaval comes at a time when the US economy is sending mixed signals. On the one hand, gross domestic
product (GDP) growth in the
second quarter hit an impressive 2.8%, beating expectations and more than doubling the growth in the
first quarter.
The S&P 500 is up about 14% this year, despite recent pullbacks as investors rotate out
of high-flying tech stocks
into smaller, undervalued companies. The shift appears to be partly driven by expectations of lower
interest rates from the Federal
Reserve.

In any case, these
positive indicators – a solid economy and stock market – typically bode well for the incumbent party,
giving Harris an
edge.
However, we can't ignore the economic anxiety that many Americans are
feeling right now. A recent
survey by buy-now-pay-later company Affirm found that three in five Americans believe we're in a
recession, even though we're not
officially in one.
Credit card payment delinquencies are also rising at a
concerning rate right now as
Americans' pandemic-era savings have run dry. The percentage of cardholders who are more than 30 days
delinquent is at a 12-year high,
while the percentage of those who are 60 days or more past due hit a new series high of around
2.6%.

Recently, I discussed
J.D.Vance, a former venture capitalist and Trump's running mate. I indicated that Vance is likely to
serve as the Trump campaign's
bridge to Silicon Valley's deep pockets.
But Harris, 59, has similar
connections as well. She served as
California's attorney general from 2011 to 2017 and then as senator from 2017 to 2021. As a result, she
reportedly has long-term
connections to Silicon Valley.
The New York Times reports that, in past
campaigns, the vice president has
relied on Silicon Valley's tech elites for donations. A recent CNN headline, in fact, reads that "Kamala
Harris wants to be America's
first Silicon Valley president."
An area I'm watching closely is the Bitcoin
and cryptocurrency space. As
someone who's deeply involved in the sector through HIVE Digital Technologies, I believe the next
administration's stance on crypto
could have significant implications for this emerging and yet important asset class.
Although Harris hasn't
made any statements for or against digital currencies in the past, her team has reportedly reached out
to crypto-savvy figures like
Mark Cuban. The Blockchain Association, the industry's trade group, said that Harris presents a "fresh
opportunity" to make inroads
with the Democratic Party, which has historically not been as welcoming to digital assets and crypto
mining as Americans on the
political right have been, generally speaking.
Trump, on the other hand, has
transformed himself into the
ultimate pro-Bitcoin candidate after being "orange pilled" by Bitcoin mining executives at his
Mar-a-Lago home last month. The former
president posted on his social media platform Truth Social soon after the meeting that he wants "all the
remaining Bitcoin to be made
in the USA."
Trump repeated the same forceful message when he spoke to an
enthusiastic crowd at the Bitcoin
conference. If the US didn't embrace Bitcoin technology, Trump warned, "China will...and we cannot let
China dominate."
Specific policy plans that Trump laid out for making the US the "Bitcoin superpower of the
world" included drafting clear
regulations, protecting the right to self-custody and dramatically increasing electricity
output.
"We will be
creating so much electricity that you'll be saying, 'Please, please, Mr. President, we don't want any
more electricity. We can't stand
it,'" the former president joked. He also said he would fire SEC Chairman Gary Gensler "on day
one."
The
cornerstone of Trump's plan is that the US government would hold 100% of the digital assets it has or
will acquire in the future in a
"strategic Bitcoin reserve." The government currently holds around 210,000 bitcoins, valued at over $14
billion, through law
enforcement activities.
This would set the US apart from other countries, many
of which have policies on the
books to sell assets confiscated during criminal investigations – assets including Bitcoin. Germany, for
instance, recently completed
disposing of 50,000 bitcoins, an action I predict the country will one day regret.











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