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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(134,148 posts)
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 09:13 PM Feb 4

Bitcoin sinks after Treasury Secretary Bessent says US government can't tell banks to bail out crypto

Source: Yahoo Finance

Bitcoin (BTC-USD) fell 2% on Wednesday to around $73,000 per token after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested the US government would not bail out the cryptocurrency.

In a heated back-and-forth during a House Financial Services Committee hearing, Bessent was asked if the US Treasury had the authority to buy bitcoin or other cryptos.

"I do not have the authority to do that, and as chair of FSOC, I do not have that authority," Bessent stated.

The decline on Wednesday was also fueled by the broader selling pressure in markets and a warning from notable investor Michael Burry that a sustained decline in bitcoin's price could "set in motion a death spiral leading to massive value destruction."

Read more: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bitcoin-sinks-after-treasury-secretary-bessent-says-us-government-cant-tell-banks-to-bail-out-crypto-195504406.html



Nor should we. Though I wouldn't be surprised if Bessent's boss would pressure him to bail it out.
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Bitcoin sinks after Treasury Secretary Bessent says US government can't tell banks to bail out crypto (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 4 OP
No they shouldn't bailout that pseudo pyramid scheme. lostincalifornia Feb 4 #1
I never understood the value of the record of a transaction ClaudetteCC Feb 4 #4
Sure, it's just numbers in the cloud, but .... reACTIONary Feb 4 #8
etherium has better use cases than bitcoin ClaudetteCC Feb 4 #9
ETF's? At least.. reACTIONary Feb 4 #14
Decentralized Applications or 'dApps' ClaudetteCC Feb 5 #19
iirc etherium was designed specifically for dApp 'smart contracts' ClaudetteCC Feb 5 #20
You forgot drugs and child porn.... nt Shipwack Feb 4 #10
I stick with what I know.... reACTIONary Feb 4 #12
So they hid all the QE in crypto bucolic_frolic Feb 4 #2
It seems the price of 'homes' even with inflation ClaudetteCC Feb 4 #5
Good point bucolic_frolic Feb 5 #16
Sounds like dweller Feb 4 #3
Crypto is simply canned air. It has no intrinsic value. All it will take is for one large holder to sell off a flashman13 Feb 4 #6
Bitcoin has fallen 43% since its $126,000 all-time high back in October progree Feb 4 #7
Well... OldBaldy1701E Feb 4 #11
HA HA. pansypoo53219 Feb 4 #13
"value destruction" of cryptocurrency has a nice ring to it. (nt) pat_k Feb 5 #15
that means they will. Javaman Feb 5 #17
That's the only reason bitcoin and other crypto started climbing after Trump took office. ChicagoTeamster Feb 5 #18

ClaudetteCC

(165 posts)
4. I never understood the value of the record of a transaction
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 09:30 PM
Feb 4

While capped at 21m it is really an electronic form of 'ledger paper.' Yes, I get hashes and blocks and chains of blocks and all that but I just don't see a conversion to dollars from that other than 'scarcity.'

reACTIONary

(7,081 posts)
8. Sure, it's just numbers in the cloud, but ....
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 09:58 PM
Feb 4

.... it has a couple of killer-app use cases: Money laundering and ransom payments!

reACTIONary

(7,081 posts)
14. ETF's? At least..
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 10:57 PM
Feb 4

... trading cards are rather benign. Not good for supporting criminal enterprises.

bucolic_frolic

(54,594 posts)
2. So they hid all the QE in crypto
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 09:21 PM
Feb 4

In 2008 it was hidden in the price of homes. But a lot of people will implode if crypto falls. Massive value destruction indeed.

ClaudetteCC

(165 posts)
5. It seems the price of 'homes' even with inflation
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 09:36 PM
Feb 4

have currently (in the USA) far exceeded the 2008 price.

bucolic_frolic

(54,594 posts)
16. Good point
Thu Feb 5, 2026, 06:17 AM
Feb 5

There's plenty of slush fund to go around. Imagine the price of either asset - housing or crypto - without the sponge effect of the other.

flashman13

(2,233 posts)
6. Crypto is simply canned air. It has no intrinsic value. All it will take is for one large holder to sell off a
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 09:51 PM
Feb 4

significant amount of coins all at once. That will cause the next two holders to sell while the price is still high. Next thing you know there is a mass stampede for the door. In very short order prices collapse and it all becomes worthless. That would probably be okay, but because of lax regulation, it is possible to collateralize real world loans with bitcoin. If bitcoin goes south, all those loans go south too. It's effectively what happened in 1929 all over again.

progree

(12,837 posts)
7. Bitcoin has fallen 43% since its $126,000 all-time high back in October
Wed Feb 4, 2026, 09:57 PM
Feb 4

That's like 2 bear markets in series end-to-end
Currently at 71,664 and falling
https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/BTC-USD

ChicagoTeamster

(650 posts)
18. That's the only reason bitcoin and other crypto started climbing after Trump took office.
Thu Feb 5, 2026, 09:12 AM
Feb 5

The assholes were expecting their crypto to be bought for the creation of Trump's Crypto Reserve.

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