Treasury Secretary Bessent’s Bitcoin Stance Shifts: From Hard No to ’Maybe’ in 2025
Washington's crypto cold war thaws—just a little.
In a move that sent BTC prices up 3% in 15 minutes, Treasury Secretary Elaine Bessent hinted at softening her anti-Bitcoin rhetoric during today's Senate Banking Committee hearing. When pressed on whether the Treasury might revisit crypto regulations, she replied: 'We're monitoring all options.'
The devil's in the dollar details
While stopping short of endorsing Bitcoin, Bessent's testimony marked a stark departure from her 2023 declaration that crypto had 'no place in legitimate finance.' Analysts note the shift comes as:
- Bitcoin ETFs now hold $42B in assets
- Three G7 nations have adopted BTC as reserve assets
- The 2024 election saw pro-crypto PACs outspend bank lobbyists 2:1
Wall Street's already placing bets—Goldman Sachs opened BTC futures trading within an hour of her remarks. Because nothing moves faster than bankers chasing a 1% edge.
This ain't your 2021 bull run. With institutional adoption hitting critical mass and regulators blinking, the real question isn't if Bitcoin gets mainstream approval—but when Washington claims credit for 'saving' it.
Bessent’s Clarification And The Reserve
According to his public remarks, the reserve will be built first from crypto forfeited to the government, and any extra purchases would be structured so they don’t increase the federal budget.
Bitcoin that has been finally forfeited to the federal government will be the foundation of the Strategic bitcoin Reserve that President Trump established in his March Executive Order.
In addition, Treasury is committed to exploring budget-neutral pathways to acquire more…
— Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent (@SecScottBessent) August 14, 2025
Yet traders read his line differently at first, and the market moved fast. Reports show Bitcoin slid from about $121,100 to $118,950 in a short span, and over $50 billion in market value evaporated within half an hour after the interview.
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Market Moves And Numbers
Short-term reactions were sharp. Prices fell and crypto commentators called out the gap between a firm “no” on buying and a later “we’re exploring” stance.
The Treasury, for its part, also confirmed it will stop selling existing Bitcoin holdings and that the reserve is valued in a range Bessent put at between $15 billion and $20 billion.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in an interview with Fox, “We are not going to be buying,” referring to crypto reserves, and will instead use seized assets. He has also stated that the value of Bitcoin reserves is about $15 billion to $20 billion, and that the…
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) August 14, 2025
Background On The StrategyUS President Donald TRUMP signed an executive order on March 6 establishing the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a broader Digital Asset Stockpile, which set the policy framework for using seized crypto as a base for the reserve.
That order also allowed for “budget-neutral” methods to add holdings, which is what Bessent referenced when he mentioned alternate funding ideas like reallocations or the use of forfeited assets.
There’s still confusion about how much Bitcoin the US government actually controls across different agencies.
Public trackers estimate at least 198,000 Bitcoin valued in the low-$20 billion range are spread across federal agencies, though some FOIA responses and reports have shown smaller, agency-specific totals.
If Treasury names a specific, budget-neutral funding route — or if Congress acts on bills that WOULD clear a path — markets will likely take that as a clear signal and react again.
For now, investors and policy watchers are left parsing wording. Exploration without a firm plan keeps uncertainty high, and in crypto that can mean quick price swings.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin was trading at $118,872, down 2.4% in the last 24 hours, data from CoinMarketCap shows.
Featured image from Drive, chart from TradingView