Crypto’s New Power Grab: Why Digital Assets Are No Longer the Outsider Play
Crypto used to be a bet against the system. In 2026, it’s increasingly a tool of the system—shaped by regulation, Wall Street wrappers, and payment-network plumbing. Here’s what changed, who holds the leverage now, and a
- TL;DR
- What replaced the “outsider play”
- Power Center #1: Washington Found the On/Off Switches
- Power center #2: Wall Street packaged crypto into familiar wrappers
- Power center #3: Payments and banks
- Europe’s parallel shift: MiCA made compliance the default
- So what is the “power grab,” exactly?
- The tradeoffs: what you gain (and lose) when crypto goes “inside”
- A practical playbook: how to navigate crypto’s insider era
- Common mistakes people make when crypto stops being “outside”
- Bottom line
- Perguntas Frequentes
TL;DR
- Crypto isn’t “disrupting finance” anymore. It’s being absorbed into finance, law, and politics as regulated infrastructure.
- Stablecoins are the clearest example: the U.S. GENIUS Act (signed July 18, 2025) frames stablecoins as a regulated product with reserve, disclosure, and compliance requirements.
- Bitcoin exposure has been normalized through spot Bitcoin ETP approvals (January 10, 2024) that shift access from niche exchanges to brokerage accounts.
- Tokenization (like tokenized Treasury-style funds) is turning blockchains from speculative casino to back-office rails.
- As power concentrates through custodians, regulated issuers and policy, we lose the permissionless ethos and the fight-the-system mindset.
For years, the very concept of “crypto” was outsider energy: opt-out money, pseudoonymous markets, a culture that took it as glorious norm to dodge regulators and laugh at banks or whatever. It’s the stuff of the “F U EU” manifesto.
Sadly, that framing is no longer the truism it once was.
In the U.S. and Europe especially, we’ve moved closer to center of gravity. Rather than osmosis and feature initiatives, digital assets are increasingly molded by legislation and executive action; mainstream investment packaging; and payment-network adoption. In short, they aren’t just fighting the system. They’re becoming a part of it.
What replaced the “outsider play”
This is the easiest way to think of what this all adds up to: crypto’s biggest battleground is less about tech (chains, throughput, wallets), and decidedly more about power. Who gets to issue, custody, list, market, and “turn off” digital value. Three groups now exercise much more power than early crypto envisioned:
- Governments and regulators (laws, enforcement, licenses)
- Wall Street and asset managers (ETFs/ETPs, tokenized funds, custody partnerships)
- Payment networks and banks (settlement rails, deposit tokens, stablecoin distribution)
| Then (outsider play) | Now (power infrastructure) |
|---|---|
| “Be your own bank” with self-custody and exchanges | Brokerage access via regulated products; custody concentrated with regulated entities |
| “Code is law” mindset | Law increasingly defines the operating perimeter (issuers, disclosures, AML, marketing rules) |
| Speculation-first adoption | Payments/settlement and tokenized ’cash’ instruments as core use cases |
| Politics is for the feeble or hostile | Politics a strategy: lobbying, PACs, legislative design |
| Permissionless ideals as messaging | Permissioning/compliance as features for institutional scale |
Power Center #1: Washington Found the On/Off Switches
“Stablecoins became a regulated product category (GENIUS Act)”
On July 18, 2025, the White House announced the signing of the GENIUS Act, describing it as the first federal regulatory system for stablecoins in the United States. Among the points touted: 100% reserve backing with liquid assets (e.g. US Dollars/short term Treasuries), monthly public reserve-composition disclosures, marketing restrictions to avoid fraudent consumers. (whitehouse.gov)
- Why this is a power shift: A stablecoin issuer stops being “a token project” and starts looking like a regulated financial issuer—pulling the industry towards bank-like oversight rather than an anything-goes approach.
- What “control” looks like in practice: The compatible fact sheet gives hints- especially the emphasis on compliance obligations and enforcement coordination (sanctions/AML). (whitehouse.gov)
- “New trust model”: Rather than “trust the code”, the pitch is now “trust the reserves, trust the disclosures, trust the regulator”.
A U.S. Strategic Bitcoin Reserve went from meme to executive order
On March 6, 2025, the White House released an executive order establishing a “Strategic Bitcoin Reserve” alongside a “United States Digital Asset Stockpile”, along with an administrative framework for government-held digital assets (including seized assets!) and reporting requirements to be applied to agencies. (whitehouse.gov)
If you find this crazy (or visionary) this represents a major legitimacy flip of seeing crypto not just as an object of law enforcement, but as an asset class that can be administered at a level up. (whitehouse.gov)
Market structure isn’t just “regulation”—it’s deciding winners
On July 17th, 2025 the U.S. House on consensus passed the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025 (“CLARITY Act”) by a 294–134 vote, aiming to give clearer rules about how digital assets are to be regulated. (dondavis.house.gov)
But “clarity” is hotly contested ground. Consumer advocates argued the CLARITY Act framework could move forward without protections they consider necessary for consumers and investors. (advocacy.consumerreports.org)
That’s the real power story: once market structure gets written, it doesn’t merely “reduce uncertainty.” It can hard-code advantages for certain asset types (and intermediaries) while making other models commercially non-viable.
Power center #2: Wall Street packaged crypto into familiar wrappers
Spot Bitcoin ETP approval normalized “crypto exposure”
On January 10, 2024, the SEC approved 11 spot Bitcoin exchange-traded product (ETP) applications. That’s not just a headline - it’s a distribution revolution: investors can gain bitcoin exposure through traditional brokerage workflows (and with product structures governed by securities-market rules). (congress.gov)
This matters for power because distribution creates gravity. Once exposure is easy for retirement accounts, advisors, and institutions, the industry’s incentive shifts from building alternative systems to competing for a place inside the existing ones.
Tokenization turned blockchains into a new kind of back office
In March 2024, BlackRock announced BUIDL, a tokenized fund issued on a public blockchain (Ethereum), positioning tokenization as a way to modernize issuance, ownership transfer, and settlement - while still relying on recognizable institutional roles (investment manager, custodian, transfer agent). (businesswire.com)
By early 2026, reporting indicated BlackRock was pushing further toward crypto-native venues by connecting BUILL to DeFi trading infrastructure (with guardrails), signaling that “regulated institutional products” and “onchain liquidity” are converging. (finance.yahoo.com)
The old crypto dream: Replace the middlemen. The new institutional approach: Keep the middlemen - upgrade the rails (settlement, interoperability, programmability).
- The quiet power play: If tokenized finance finds traction, it might be that the actors who end up claiming the spoils of victory will be those with control over compliance, whitelists, custody, and issuance – not necessarily the most decentralized protocols.
Power center #3: Payments and banks who made “onchain dollars” the way they always did it. Operational.
- Visa launches U.S. stablecoin settlement, bridging fiat and blockchain. Visa announced it’s launched stablecoin settle in the United States, for select U.S. partners to settle Visa obligations in USDC on supported blockchains. Text frames it out as “expanding our existing settlement windows”, bridging “existing rails with blockchain infrastructure”. Broader access to roll out over 2026. (investor.visa.com)
This is the insider version of crypto adoption. It’s stablecoins as part of operational settlement tools inside existing networks, not trading chips on exchanges. (investor.visa.com)
- “Begin with the end”—there’s banks experimenting with deposit tokens propelling machine economy cash flows. J.P. Morgan last year discussed using Kinexys nameplate for payments and digital money in going deeper to “effectively move funds and support tokenized assets at scale”. (jpmorgan.com). Read it closely between the lines: it’s not abandoning going to the bank, instead focuses on how to make bank money interoperable with tokenized assets and onchain workflows (under control of the bank). (jpmorgan.com)
The political machine: Crypto learned how power actually works. One of those most visible signs that crypto isn’t an outsider play anymore: it started behaving like an entrenched industry. Reporting in 2024 described how a crypto super PAC spent bigger than $130 million in congressional races and spotlighted Coinbase as the top contributor. Then, in January 2026, Axios reported that pro-crypto PAC Fairshake and affiliates had more than $193 million in cash on hand heading into the 2026 midterms, including large contributions from major industry players. (axios.com)
Europe’s parallel shift: MiCA made compliance the default
The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA) created an EU-wide framework with key dates: stablecoin-related provisions took effect June 30, 2024, and MiCA broadly applied from December 30, 2024. (amf-france.org)
Even if you operate primarily in the U.S., MiCA matters because it pressures global exchanges, wallets, and issuers to standardize around compliance-friendly operating models.
So what is the “power grab,” exactly?
“Power grab” doesn’t have to mean a conspiracy. It can simply mean a structural shift: the entities that can credibly offer stability, compliance, and distribution capture the biggest slices of the next wave.
Here are the three practical power shifts happening under the surface:
- From coins to credentials: Licensing, audits/disclosures, and compliance capabilities become competitive moats.
- From permissionless access to curated access: Whitelists, approved counterparties, and sanctioned-address filtering become normal in institutional products.
- From retail narrative to institutional distribution: Brokers, issuers, and networks become the default rails; “crypto-native” becomes a niche segment unless it plugs into those rails.
The tradeoffs: what you gain (and lose) when crypto goes “inside”
| Potential benefits | Potential risks |
|---|---|
| Clearer rules and consumer-facing disclosures for some products | Regulatory capture: rules can be shaped to advantage incumbents |
| Easier access through familiar channels (brokerage, payment networks) | More intermediaries and new single points of failure (custodians, issuers, whitelists) |
| More stable “onchain dollars” and better settlement tooling | Censorship and surveillance concerns (freezing, blacklists, identity gating) |
| Less counterparty risk for some users (depending on the regime) | False sense of safety: “regulated” does not mean “risk-free” |
A practical playbook: how to navigate crypto’s insider era
-
If you use stablecoins, treat them like a financial product (not a meme)
- Identify the issuer and the legal regime: Are they explicitly operating under a U.S. framework (e.g., GENIUS Act) or under EU MiCA, or mostly offshore? (Don’t rely on marketing—look for formal disclosures.) (whitehouse.gov)
- Check reserves and disclosure frequency: The GENIUS Act fact sheet emphasizes 100% reserve backing and monthly public reserve composition disclosures as core trust signals. Verify the issuer actually publishes them on a predictable schedule. (whitehouse.gov)
- Understand control features: Some regimes emphasize the technical capability to freeze/seize/burn when legally required. If censorship-resistance is important to you, then this is a design reality that you want to evaluate upfront. (whitehouse.gov)
- Map your counterparty risk: Your stablecoin exposure exists in the issuer, the custodian/bank partners behind the reserves, and the venues/wallets you use.
- Stress-test your exit: In a market shock, what is your redemption path (direct redemption vs exchange conversion)? What fees, minimums and timelines apply?
Stablecoin due diligence checklist (fast version) Question What to look for Who issues it? Named issuer, jurisdiction, clear legal entity What backs it? Cash + short-term Treasuries (or other disclosed liquid assets) How often are reserves disclosed? At minimum monthly public disclosures (best practice is verify dates and test for consistency!) (whitehouse.gov) Can it be frozen? Published policy + technical capabilities; how this is governed How do redemptions work? Clear process, fees, minimums, time to cash Where do you hold it? Self-custody vs exchange vs custodian (each increases new risks) -
If you invest, separate “price exposure” from “crypto participation”
Spot Bitcoin ETPs have made it easier to get bitcoin price exposure while not having to self-custody (handy). But that convenience is also a significant alteration from what it is that you’re actually doing. If you choose to buy one or the other of those, you are participating in a regulated market product with its own rules, its own fees and its own counterparties – and not using the network – and if your goal is symbolic (self-sovereignty), not financial (exposure), they are two different choices.- Exposure path (ETP/ETF): Easier access, more reliance on others.
- Network path (self-custody): More of your at-risk capital, more operational risk, but potentially closer to crypto’s original ethos.
- Hybrid path: Some exposure through traditional accounts and some self-custody to learn/use. (Still risky—size accordingly.)
-
If you build in crypto, design for compliance realities (even if you hate them)
- Pick your target market: Retail-degen DeFi and regulated institutional DeFi are becoming different product categories.
- What are you optimizing for? Permissionless access vs. institutional adoption. You can’t have both at the same time.
- Bake in “auditability” early: Documentation, smart-contract upgrade policies, incident response, 3rd-party reviews.
- Assume bridges to TradFi will need identity + controls: If you want a piece of that tokenized fund/rails pie, plan for whitelisting and compliance layers.
- Track regulatory dependencies: Market structure / CLARITY Act races can change what’s considered a security / commodity / intermediary and can reshape the product you’re building. (apnews.com)
How to verify big claims in this new era, without suffering influencers
- For looking up US laws/executive stuff: look to the original source (White House releases, website, Congress.gov, agencies). The signing of the GENIUS Act and Strategic Bitcoin Reserve executive order, linked back to transcripts from the Whitehouse! (whitehouse.gov)
- Anything related to ETFs/ETPs? SEC statements! (And strawhat explainers like CRS summaries of their approval process). (sec.gov)
- For EU Compliance? Look here first! (finance.ec.europa.eu)
- For corporate adoption: prefer first-party press releases (e.g., Visa’s settlement announcement) over viral screenshots. (investor.visa.com)
- For “political influence” narratives: check disclosed numbers from credible reporting and filings-driven analysis; don’t rely on partisan summaries. (apnews.com)
Common mistakes people make when crypto stops being “outside”
- Assuming institutional adoption means decentralization is “winning.” Often, it means the opposite: more control points.
- Treating stablecoins as “cash” without reading issuer disclosures and understanding freeze/redemption mechanics.
- Confusing price catalysts (ETFs, executive actions) with long-term fundamentals (security, usability, governance). (congress.gov)
- Ignoring policy because it feels boring. In 2026, policy is product design.
- Overestimating safety: “regulated” does not mean “no blowups,” and “onchain” does not mean “no fraud.”
Bottom line
Crypto’s story is no longer “rebels vs. banks.” It’s a contest over who controls digital value flows: issuance, settlement, custody, listings, compliance.
The outsider era isn’t fully gone—permissionless networks still exist, and innovation is still real. But the momentum is clear: the biggest outcomes will increasingly be set by regulation, institutional product design, and political influence as much as by code.
Perguntas Frequentes
Q: Does this mean crypto is “safe” now?
A: No. Some risks may be reduced for some products (e.g., clearer disclosures or stronger reserve rules), but volatility, liquidity risk, smart-contract risk, fraud, and operational failures still exist. Think of “regulated” as referring to “different risk” vs “no risk”.
Q: Good or bad “power grab”?
A: Tricky. Do you want mainstream adoption access from compliant stablecoins or familiar investor access? Institutionalization helps there. Is censorship resistance and mini-intermediaries the original premise? Then institutionalization screws with that.
Q: What’s the single biggest thing different from 2010-2015?
A: Distribution. When any asset can essentially be held through some regulated wrapper and used inside of a major payment and settlement service, you’re no longer a niche parallel economy; you’re effectively now, financial infrastructure.
Q: How do I keep from not boiling over while also keeping up to speed?
A: Just track a handful of primary sources: SEC and CRS summaries for market products, White House/Congress.gov for US policy, and European Commission for the EU framework. And just follow a few fewer, better analysts/twiiterers who reference these sources.