Former Sec Chair Gensler Warns All Cryptos Are Risky
- Former SEC Chairman Gary Gensler told Bloomberg that cryptocurrencies, excluding Bitcoin, represent highly speculative assets with minimal fundamental backing.
- His remarks came as Bitcoin rebounded toward $92,000 following a volatile week marked by bond market turbulence and institutional shifts.
- Gensler drew a sharp distinction between Bitcoin and thousands of alternative tokens, arguing investors face heightened risk beyond the flagship cryptocurrency.
- “Putting aside Bitcoin for a minute, all the thousands of other tokens, not the stablecoins that are backed by U.S.
What Happened
Gensler drew a sharp distinction between Bitcoin and thousands of alternative tokens, arguing investors face heightened risk beyond the flagship cryptocurrency.
Despite Gensler’s caution, institutional adoption accelerated dramatically on Wednesday when Vanguard reversed years of opposition and enabled its 50 million clients to trade Bitcoin, Ethereum, XRP, and Solana ETFs.
Market Context
His remarks came as Bitcoin rebounded toward $92,000 following a volatile week marked by bond market turbulence and institutional shifts.
The $11 trillion asset manager’s policy shift, driven by new CEO Salim Ramji, previously BlackRock’s Bitcoin ETF architect, triggered immediate market response with $1 billion in IBIT volume within 30 minutes of trading.
Eric Balchunas, a Bloomberg ETF analyst, captured the significance, stating Bitcoin jumped 6% around the U.S. market open on the first day after Vanguard lifted its ban.
Markets responded positively across digital assets, with Ethereum rising 8.3% to $3,040, XRP gaining 7.6% to $2.18, and total crypto market capitalization climbing 6.5% to $3.22 trillion.
Markets Stabilize Following Bond Selloff and Liquidity Injection
Japanese government bond moves remained subdued on Wednesday, though yields stayed pressured as markets priced Bank of Japan tightening later this month.
Notably, Gensler also addressed broader market infrastructure during the interview, downplaying concerns about Thanksgiving’s 10-hour outage at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, caused by a data center cooling system failure.
“I think the management team would make a different decision and probably would switch over to the backup data center more quickly,” he said, had the incident occurred during regular trading hours.
Markets also monitored potential succession plans for Fed Chair Jerome Powell, with White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett emerging as a leading contender when Powell’s term ends next year.
Why It Matters
Even conservative allocation scenarios suggest massive potential inflows, with 0.5% of Vanguard’s assets representing $55 billion, exceeding total first-year 2024 ETF cycle flows.
The improvement followed Monday’s turmoil, when Japanese rate-hike expectations triggered global bond selloffs and amplified cryptocurrency declines.
Fed Rate Cut Expectations Drive Risk Asset Sentiment
Attention turned to Friday’s release of the Personal Consumption Expenditures Index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, which could cement expectations ahead of next week’s policy decision.
Details
Former SEC Chairman Gary Gensler told Bloomberg that cryptocurrencies, excluding Bitcoin, represent highly speculative assets with minimal fundamental backing.
“Putting aside Bitcoin for a minute, all the thousands of other tokens, not the stablecoins that are backed by U.S. dollars, but all the thousands of their tokens. You have to ask yourself, what’s the fundamentals? What’s underlying it?” he said, noting these assets generate no dividends or tangible returns.
Regulatory View Shifts as Vanguard Opens Crypto Access
The reversal marks a complete departure from Vanguard’s 2024 stance, which declared that crypto had no place in long-term portfolios. It now offers regulated spot ETFs from BlackRock, Fidelity, Grayscale, VanEck, and Bitwise.
Bitcoin’s V-shaped recovery followed Federal Reserve action that ended quantitative tightening and injected $13.5 billion through overnight funding facilities.
Akshat Siddant, lead quant analyst at Mudrex, noted in an earlier Cryptonews report that Bitcoin exchange reserves fell to multi-year lows of 2.19 million BTC, strengthening buying pressure. The next major resistance sits around $96,000, with support near $87,800.
December historically favors stocks, and prospects of easier U.S. monetary policy supported sentiment following Japan’s shock.
Traders now see over 80% probability of a 25-basis-point Federal Reserve cut at the December meeting, up from 63% a month earlier, according to CME’s FedWatch Tool, despite Fed officials warning against cutting too quickly amid inflation concerns.
On the technical level, Sykodelic, a macro specialist with over seven years in crypto, challenged bearish sentiment heading into 2026.