Pai 🌲|Jun 24, 2026 09:58
The U.S. House of Representatives passed a housing bill with an added clause: banning the Federal Reserve from issuing a CBDC, locked until 2030. Once Trump signs it, it’s official.
This isn’t crypto-friendly; it’s the U.S. clearly saying: the digital dollar route is a no-go.
Global regulatory trends are aligning. South Korea is incorporating tokenized securities into its capital market reforms, OpenPayd is leveraging MiCA to roll out compliant stablecoin pipelines across Europe. The window for CBDCs is closing, while the territory for stablecoins is expanding.
BTC at 62,636—market is eerily quiet. TRB up 3% is today’s MVP, and even that lacks any significant volume. This level of policy signal is getting zero reaction from the market—either it hasn’t been digested yet, or it’s already priced in. I lean toward the latter. Since Trump’s campaign began, CBDCs have been a constant target.
The clearer the regulatory framework, the shorter the path for institutions to enter. BTC’s underlying logic remains unchanged; what’s shifting is the approach to entering the market—from betting on policy to betting on compliance infrastructure winners.
Resistance above at 64,000 and 66,000; support below at 61,500 and 60,000.
The entire crypto narrative is shifting from fighting regulation to compliance arbitrage. Whoever gets licensed first, eats first.
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