Hoskinson Slams Trump in ADA ‘Crypto Reserve’ Move: Why It’s Not All Good News

Charles Hoskinson, the founder of Cardano, called Donald Trump’s new crypto reserve plans “frustrating” after the president’s team listed ADA in a proposed US “Crypto Strategic Reserve.” ADA barely moved, trading in line with a flat large‑cap market, while BTC held its range near prior highs as traders waited for real policy details instead of headlines.

This clash occurs amid a significant U.S. regulatory shift, where the SEC has eased some enforcement pressure and the Trump administration has relaxed bank restrictions for crypto firms, according to Reuters.

Why Is Trump Putting ADA in a ‘Crypto Strategic Reserve’ Without Asking Cardano?

Let’s start with the basic idea. A “crypto strategic reserve” is a digital version of a gold vault. Instead of holding gold bars, the government holds cryptocurrencies like BTC and ETH.

Trump’s proposal name‑checked Cardano’s ADA alongside BTC, ETH, XRP, and SOL, according to AP News. That sounds flattering if you hold ADA. It puts Cardano in the same political sentence as the biggest coins on the market, even if it’s just fallen below the top 10 in crypto market cap.

Hoskinson said he “knew nothing” about ADA being selected. So, the Cardano team woke up to find their coin drafted into national policy without a heads‑up. That feels exciting for price watchers, but pretty scary from a governance and coordination angle.

This all sits on top of an existing U.S. stash of Bitcoin. The government already holds an estimated 328,000 BTC through seizures and other actions. The idea of a formal, multi‑coin reserve is not a fantasy or daydream. It builds on something that already exists and gives it a political brand.

If you want more context on Trump’s broader crypto stance, we covered it in Trump’s Crypto Circus and how the hype faded in Trump crypto bubble. For Cardano‑specific price action, check our recent look at Cardano price.

What Does Hoskinson’s Critique Mean for ADA Holders and U.S. Crypto Policy?

For ADA investors, this is a double‑edged sword. On one side, inclusion in any US reserve list signals that policymakers view Cardano as one of a handful of “blue‑chip” coins. That usually helps long‑term brand strength and can pull in new retail buyers who had never heard of ADA before.

On the other side, Hoskinson’s frustration reveals a deeper problem. When politicians use a coin’s logo for their own agenda without consulting the designers, you get misalignment. The tech roadmap runs one way. The political narrative runs another.

This matters for your wallet because policy‑driven hype can push prices up fast, then drop them just as quickly when the story changes. We already saw this kind of whiplash around Trump‑related tokens and narratives, which we broke down in our Trump crypto bubble analysis. Political pumps rarely last as long as solid product development.

Zooming out, Trump’s regulatory shift relaxed enforcement and gave banks more room to serve crypto firms, according to Reuters. That environment tends to help large, established coins first. BTC, ETH, and SOL already feature heavily in U.S. policy talk, as covered in proposals for a broader digital asset stockpile on Wikipedia.

So who wins today? Politicians gain a talking point. Big‑cap coins gain legitimacy in the eyes of some traditional investors. But small retail buyers face more noise and bigger emotional swings as their bags get dragged into election‑season narratives.

×

Loading...