Weekly Recap: Bitcoin’s Tumble and the SEC’s Retreat
Plus: Bybit fallout, stablecoin wrangling, Ethereum Foundation changes.

Two big themes dominated the crypto news this week: sagging asset prices and the official end of the SEC’s enforcement “mania.”
On the former: Bitcoin, which rose steadily from about $70,000 following November’s election, fell precipitously. In early-hours Feb. 28, the price had dipped below $80,000. CoinDesk’s Market Index, which tracks the broader digital assets market, has fallen 12% in the last five days.
CoinDesk’s Markets Editor Omkar Godbole analyzed the daily price action, tracking ETF outflows, historical analogies, and macro correlations.
On the regulatory front, the SEC dropped major cases against Uniswap, Coinbase, and MetaMask (ConsenSys). It also sought to end a fraud case against TRON and Justin Sun. Our regulatory team of Nik De, Jesse Hamilton and Cheyenne Ligon were all over the news, as usual. Meanwhile, it looks like the SEC will not be treating memecoins as securities, Ligon reported.
Stablecoins were another big theme, as issuers argued over the parameters of a new law covering the most used form of digital assets. Jeremy Allaire, co-founder and CEO of stablecoin issuer Circle, said USD-backed stablecoin issuers should be required to register in the U.S., in a clear tilt at Circle’s biggest rival, Tether (regulatory reporter Camomile Shumba had that). Meanwhile, Bank of America said it planned to launch its own stablecoin, Helene Braun wrote.
In other important news, Ian Allison reported exclusively that BitMEX, an OG trading platform, was up for sale. Bybit passed blame for its $1.5 billion hack (Oliver Knight reported). Ethereum Foundation’s executive director Aya Miyaguchi said she was stepping down (Margaux Nijkerk had the news). And, Sam Reynolds explained on how investors in Mainland China may soon be able to get access to bitcoin.
All these stories looked likely to run into next week’s coverage as crypto continues to provide plenty to write about. Stayed tuned for our continuing reporting. Happy Weekend.
More For You
U.S. government isn't poised to sweep in with bitcoin buys, despite Jim Cramer rumor

President Donald Trump did order a bitcoin reserve, but it doesn't yet exist, even as the CNBC host says the feds will start filling it when bitcoin hits $60,000.
What to know:
- The recent drama over bitcoin's slide was made more puzzling over the weekend as the markets sought to figure out a rumor shared by CNBC's Jim Cramer that President Donald Trump would start filling his bitcoin reserve if the asset drops to $60,000.
- The situation with the reserve, though, is that it hasn't been established, and it probably needs congressional action to do so.
- Trump administration officials have said the government isn't planning on spending taxpayer funds to buy crypto, and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said last week that he has no authority to bail out bitcoin.











