From outsider to the Oval Office, bitcoin surges as a new administration
embraces crypto
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[December 06, 2024] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — Born from the ashes of the 2008 global financial crisis,
bitcoin arrived after trust had withered in the financial system and in
Washington's ability to protect those who must participate in it. Now,
it's Washington's very embrace of bitcoin that's helping to send its
price to records and lining the pockets of its believers.
Bitcoin briefly surged above $103,000 after President-elect Donald Trump
said he intends to nominate Paul Atkins, a former regulator who's seen
as friendly to crypto, as the next chair of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. He would replace Gary Gensler, who critics say has been
overly aggressive in his oversight of crypto.
It's the latest leg in an astonishing run for bitcoin, whose swings in
price are already notoriously extreme.
Bitcoin has more than doubled this year, with a particularly big jump
coming after Election Day, when its price was sitting below $70,000.
During his campaign, Trump called for making the United States “the
crypto capital of the planet."
The crypto industry, meanwhile, did its part to bring politicians
friendly to digital currencies into Washington. Crypto corporations
poured over $119 million into influencing federal elections in 2024,
primarily into a political action committee dedicated to electing
pro-crypto candidates and defeating crypto skeptics, according to a
recent review by Public Citizen.
It's a large amount. Crypto companies accounted for 44% of all the
corporate money contributed during this year’s elections, according to
the consumer advocacy organization.
Such a tight embrace marks an interesting twist from bitcoin's early
days, when someone or a group of someones under the name of Satoshi
Nakamoto created a kind of electronic cash that wouldn't be beholden to
any government or financial institution.
In the white paper announcing bitcoin, Namakoto said the traditional way
of doing business on the internet “works well enough for most
transactions.” But, Nakamoto said, it “still suffers from the inherent
weaknesses of the trust based model,” where a third party like a bank
needs to process payments.
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People arrive at the Bitcoin 2024 Conference on July 24, 2024, in
Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, File)
Instead, Nakamoto suggested
harnessing computing power around the world as a way to create a
digital currency that can’t be double-spent. “What is needed is an
electronic payment system based on cryptographic proof instead of
trust, allowing any two willing parties to transact directly with
each other without the need for a trusted third party.” That is what
became the bitcoin network.
Since then, bitcoin has moved from the financial fringes toward the
mainstream, in jagged fits and starts. While it hasn't taken off as
a way to pay for groceries, it found popularity as a kind of
“digital gold,” or a way to store value in something that's not
subject to the direct influence of a federal government or a central
bank.
In its early days, it had a reputation for use by drug dealers,
scammers, crypto enthusiasts, libertarians and others who were
looking to move money without oversight by the government. Now, it's
also found its way into more investor portfolios. Earlier this year,
the SEC approved exchange-traded funds that track the spot price of
bitcoin. Such ETFs give investors a relatively easy way to buy
bitcoin directly in their existing trading accounts.
Through its life, bitcoin has soared through a series of manic bull
runs as well as “crypto winters” that brought extreme declines. It
went from just over $5,000 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic to
nearly $69,000 by late 2021, before crashing below $17,000 following
hikes to interest rates by the Federal Reserve and the 2022 collapse
of crypto exchange FTX.
With bitcoin in its latest bull run, the man who's about to roll
into the White House seemed to take at least some credit.
“CONGRATULATIONS BITCOINERS!!!” Trump said in a post on his Truth
Social network. “$100,000!!! YOU’RE WELCOME!!!”
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