Trump, who has his own meme coin, promotes crypto at industry conference

President Donald Trump spoke Thursday, March 20, 2025, to a crypto industry conference. (Photo illustration by Namthip Muanthongthae / Getty Images)
President Donald Trump signaled his continued support for cryptocurrency, saying at an industry conference Thursday morning he wanted to see the United States lead the world in digital asset technology.
In a brief recorded video broadcast to the Digital Assets Summit in New York, Trump, who launched his own meme coin in January that held an overall market value of $2.3 billion Thursday, noted some steps his administration has taken to encourage crypto. He positioned himself as a leading advocate for the technology but was vague about future policy proposals.
βItβs an honor to speak with you about how the United States is going to dominate crypto and the next generation of financial technologies,β he said. βAnd itβs not going to be easy, but weβre way ahead.β
Trump noted he held the first ever White House digital assets summit this month, appointed a White House artificial intelligence and crypto czar and created a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and Digital Asset Stockpile.
The reserves would allow the government to retain the value of digital currencies, he said, adding that was impossible under his predecessor, Joe Biden.
Reversing policy
Trump said his administration would seek to loosen regulations, in a reversal from Biden policy.
βWeβre ending the last administrationβs regulatory war on crypto and bitcoin,β he said. βFrankly, it was a disgrace. But as of Jan. 20, 2025, all of that is over.β
He also said heβd asked Congress to create βsimple, commonsense rules for stable coins and market structure.β
Despite looser regulations, the framework would lead to βgreater privacy, safety, security and wealth for American consumers and businesses alike,β he said, calling the decentralized finance system βone of the most exciting technological revolutions in modern history.β
Trumpβs ties to industry
The decentralized nature of cryptocurrency allows anyone to launch a currency, which has led to a series of so-called meme coins fronted by celebrities or tied to internet trends that form a particularly volatile segment of the crypto market.
Trump has a vested interest in the success of the crypto market, with a reported 80% stake in his own token.
Trumpβs coin peaked at a value of $14.5 billion the day before his inauguration but has since lost nearly 85% of its value. The financial news service Reuters reported last month that firms generated nearly $100 million in trading fees associated with the Trump coin, even as its market value plummeted.