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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 165
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 12:49 UTC
  • UTC12:49
  • EDT08:49
  • GMT13:49
  • CET14:49
  • JST21:49
  • HKT20:49
← The MonexusOpinion

Bitcoin at $79,000 and the hollow boast of American crypto dominance

Bitcoin's climb to $79,000 and Scott Bessent's Senate testimony on payments leadership expose a fundamental contradiction at the center of Washington's crypto posture: the world's reserve currency issuer wants to lead in the very asset class it spent years trying to strangle.

@euronews · Telegram

Bitcoin broke through $79,000 on 22 April 2026. One day earlier, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told the Senate Banking Committee that passing crypto market structure legislation was essential — because, as he put it, America should be the payments leader of the world. Changpeng Zhao, the former Binance chief who spent months under federal indictment before a presidential pardon, offered the counterscript: let's make crypto affordable in the US again. Taken together, the twin headlines sketch a portrait of American crypto politics that is as revealing as it is uncomfortable. The world's reserve currency issuer wants to lead in the very asset class it spent the better part of a decade trying to strangle.

The contradiction is not incidental. It is structural. Washington's posture toward digital assets has oscillated between hostility and co-optation depending on which regulatory apparatus held the pen. The Securities and Exchange Commission's aggressive enforcement posture under the prior administration treated most tokens as unregistered securities. The Commodity Futures Trading Commission asserted jurisdiction over Bitcoin derivatives. The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network scrutinized exchanges through anti-money-laundering rules originally designed for traditional banks. Each agency had a different theory of the asset class, a different definition of which tokens fell under its remit, and — critically — no unified statutory framework to resolve the ambiguity. Projects that could not afford multi-jurisdictional legal counsel found themselves excluded from American markets. Retail participants faced custodial restrictions that effectively handed institutional players a structural advantage. The result was not a crypto market that legitimized itself through compliance; it was a crypto market that routed itself around the United States.

Bessent's testimony must be read against that backdrop. His framing — that the US should be the payments leader because it is the technological leader — is correct as a competitive aspiration and deeply misleading as a description of the current landscape. The Senate committee he was addressing has seen multiple iterations of market structure legislation stall over the past five years. The FIT21 Act passed the House in 2024 but never reached a Senate vote. The current legislative moment is real, but its durability depends on whether the Senate can synthesize competing jurisdictional theories into a single statutory answer. That synthesis has proven elusive in every prior session.

CZ's intervention — "let's make crypto affordable in the US again" — is pointed precisely at that regulatory overhang. The word "again" is doing considerable work. It implicitly acknowledges that crypto was, at some prior moment, more accessible to American retail participants than it currently is. The historical record supports the implication. Pre-2020, before the SEC's enforcement-first posture consolidated, before the TerraUSD collapse prompted a wave of regulatory scrutiny, and before the criminal cases against major exchange operators cast a shadow over the entire sector, American users had far more granular access to spot Bitcoin products, DeFi protocols, and cross-border payment rails denominated in crypto. That access did not disappear overnight. It was eroded incrementally by regulatory uncertainty that made compliance cost-prohibitive for smaller platforms and by criminal prosecutions that destroyed the companies American retail users were actually trading on.

What does the current moment actually represent? Bitcoin's price at $79,000 reflects a combination of factors that owe more to macroeconomics than to any domestic regulatory success. Spot Bitcoin ETFs, approved in early 2024, unlocked institutional demand that had been waiting on a regulatory green light. The Federal Reserve's continued rate uncertainty has kept gold and gold-adjacent assets in a bull configuration. The administration's signaling on a more crypto-friendly SEC has reduced the premium that legal risk had been pricing into digital assets. None of this is trivial. The ETF approvals alone represented a structural shift in how American institutional capital enters the crypto market. But the primary beneficiaries of that structural shift are BlackRock and Fidelity — not the retail participants who were priced out by regulatory complexity and are now watching Bitcoin appreciate without being able to access it through familiar channels.

The deeper problem is that the US does not yet have a coherent theory of what it wants crypto to be. Is it a payments infrastructure — a competitor to SWIFT, a dollar-denominated alternative settlement layer? Is it a commodity with spot markets and derivatives? Is it a store of value, analogous to gold, that belongs in institutional portfolios? Is it a set of financial innovation protocols that will generate new types of credit, new types of ownership, and new types of cross-border commerce that the current regulatory apparatus is not equipped to think about? These are not interchangeable definitions. They imply different regulatory frameworks, different agencies with primary jurisdiction, and different postures toward the dollar's role in the global financial system.

Bessent is right that the US should lead in payments. But leadership requires a theory of the game. The current legislative push may produce a market structure bill that tidies up the jurisdictional overlaps. It will not, on its own, resolve the underlying question of what the US government actually wants from an asset class that was built partly in response to the limitations of the existing payments system. Bitcoin at $79,000 is not evidence that the US has answered that question. It is evidence that markets are pricing in a future where it might. The distance between those two things — between price momentum and institutional clarity — is where the real story lives. Making crypto affordable again is not a legislative challenge. It is a conceptual one. And the Senate hearings, however earnest, have yet to demonstrate that Washington is ready to think that hard about it.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/Cointelegraph/165431
  • https://t.me/Cointelegraph/165429
  • https://t.me/Cointelegraph/165415
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire