Crypto business leaders and US government officials are set to meet at the White House Crypto Summit on March 7, a high-profile event that follows President Donald Trump’s executive order to establish a strategic Bitcoin (BTC) reserve and national digital asset stockpile.
The event — the agenda of which is not yet public — will feature prominent figures from the crypto industry, including Strategy executive chairman Michael Saylor, Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and White House AI and Crypto Czar David Sacks.
The Trump administration has moved quickly on a number of pro-crypto policies, vowing to position the US as a global leader in digital assets, but some industry observers remain skeptical about the event’s impact on regulatory clarity and policy direction.
Confirmed and unconfirmed attendees of the March 7 White House Crypto Summit. Source: Cointelegraph
White House Crypto Summit: Historical moment or “nothingburger”?
Since taking office, Trump has delivered on a number of promises he made to the crypto industry on the campaign trail.
During his campaign, Trump pledged to make the US a leader in the cryptocurrency industry, vowing to dominate other nations in Bitcoin mining with “all the remaining Bitcoin to be MADE IN THE USA!!!”
When the summit was announced, advertising executive Marc Beckman told Fox and Friends:
“This is historic. […] He said that he wanted to make the United States the center of the cryptocurrency universe, to take the lead in the world, and he’s doing it.”
Chainlink co-founder Sergey Nazarov, who is attending the event, told Bloomberg on March 6 that he expects the crypto summit to focus on strengthening US leadership in the digital asset industry:
“From what I can tell about the administration’s goals and David Sack’s statements, […] I think the general direction is, how do you create a level of leadership from the United States in the Web3 economy, and how does the US financial system, as it transitions into a Web3, blockchain-powered format, […] remain the dominant leading financial system in the global system?”
Strategy’s Saylor told Fox Business that the summit should focus on highlighting the need for clarity for digital assets, including distinguishing between different types, such as digital commodities like Bitcoin, digital currencies like stablecoins, digital securities, and “digital tokens — assets with issuers that provide digital utility that are very interesting and compelling.”
Other observers are less optimistic about the summit. Cardano and IOHK co-founder Charles Hoskinson, who said in a video stream that he was not invited to the event, pointed out that while the president signs bills into law, legislation must be passed by Congress.
Related: Trump’s White House Crypto Summit: Confirmed attendees so far
“Everybody focuses on the White House because it’s simple and easy to do so. […] And as much as we, as an industry, want this to be a short process, it’s going to be a long and methodical process,” Hoskinson said in the video stream.
He argued that the crypto industry should focus its efforts on working with Congress to achieve lasting regulatory change.
Hoskinson also criticized the invitation-only nature of the summit, saying there needs to be other structures through which the industry can push for adoption and that all the expertise needed cannot be sourced “if it’s 25 people, an invitation-only event at the White House. It’s just not possible.”
George Mandrik, an early Bitcoin adopter who made headlines for selling baklava for Bitcoin, was more brief in his prediction:
Source: George Mandrik
Some critics have gone further, suggesting that the summit is a profit-driven move for Trump and his associates.
World Liberty Financial (WLFI), a decentralized finance platform associated with and run by members of the Trump family, purchased $20 million worth of crypto ahead of the event.
Blockchain analysis account Chain Mind claimed that the summit is just another pump-and-dump scheme from WLFI, which released Trump-themed tokens ahead of his inauguration, the prices of which have since collapsed.
Crypto Summit follows Bitcoin reserve order
The White House Crypto Summit follows Trump’s March 6 executive order for the establishment of a strategic Bitcoin reserve and digital asset stockpile, an economic policy move championed by Bitcoin maximalists like Saylor and pro-crypto policymakers alike.
The policy has also gained traction at the state level, with Bitcoin or crypto reserve-related legislation pending in 19 different state legislatures, according to the Bitcoin Reserve Monitor.
Trump’s order repurposes Bitcoin “owned by the Department of Treasury that was forfeited as part of criminal or civil asset forfeiture proceedings” into a strategic financial reserve. Other agencies will subsequently determine whether it’s legal for them to transfer such forfeitures to the Bitcoin reserve.
The order authorizes the Treasury and Commerce secretaries to make additional Bitcoin purchases, but only if it can be done through budget-neutral means that “impose no incremental costs on American taxpayers.”
Saylor wrote on X that he had “a few budget-neutral strategies” the government could use to increase its Bitcoin holdings.
David Zell, co-president of the Bitcoin Policy Institute, said the president could use the Exchange Stabilization Fund — a Treasury fund traditionally used for foreign currency trades — to buy Bitcoin.
“The fund has a net position of ~[$39 billion], so substantial acquisition could begin right away,” he wrote.
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