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A sudden crypto market crash is putting Donald Trump’s growing crypto exposure under fresh scrutiny.
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Bitcoin slid back to 2021 levels as Trump-linked meme coins suffered even steeper losses.
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Rising interest rates and hidden crypto deals are raising new questions about risk and transparency.
The crypto market just had one of its worst days in months, and Trump might have felt the heat too.
In a recent video breakdown by The Bulwark, hosts Tim Miller and Catherine Rampell unpacked the crash, what caused it, and why the Trump family’s deep crypto exposure makes this sell-off different from the rest.
$TRUMP Coin Down, Bitcoin Back to 2021 Levels
Bitcoin fell toward $60,000, with realized losses reaching about $3.2 billion in just one day – the highest daily total ever recorded. It now sits 46% below its all-time high, back to where it was in 2021. Ethereum lost 50% over six months. Dogecoin dropped 66% in a year.
The $TRUMP meme coin took the hardest hit. It currently trades at $3.33, down 95.58% from it’s all-time high just a year ago.
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Bessent Says No Crypto Bailout
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent made one thing very clear: the government is not coming to save crypto. That statement sent markets deeper into panic, triggering forced liquidations and stop-loss cascades that made the drop worse.
The bigger issue is the rising long-term interest rates.
Rampell explained it simply: “You want money to be really cheap… when you have long-term rates going up, that tends to be bad for asset bubbles.”
Cheap money fuels speculation. When borrowing gets expensive, assets like meme coins are the first to break.
Trump Family’s Secret Crypto Deal With Abu Dhabi
The Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump family’s crypto exchange sold a 49% stake to an Abu Dhabi royal who serves as the country’s national security chief. No one knew about the deal until journalists broke the story.
Rampell raised the concern directly: “We don’t have a lot of visibility into those transactions and whether Trump and his family may be doing lots of shady deals or selling off at various points to enrich themselves.”
Gold Up, Crypto Down?
While crypto crashed, gold kept climbing.
According to Rampell, that gap challenges the idea that Bitcoin works as a hedge against inflation. She argued that gold has thousands of years of history behind it, while crypto still behaves more like a speculative risk asset tied to cheap money conditions.
Retail Investors Take the Biggest Hit
Rampell was blunt about who loses the most here: “There are a lot of people who maybe lost their shirts who can’t afford it.”
With this level of political involvement in crypto markets, the questions around transparency and investor protection are only going to get louder.
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