Gary Gensler may have left the SEC, but his message on crypto hasn't changed. In a recent Bloomberg interview, the former chair doubled down on his view that most digital tokens are highly speculative, volatile assets that retail investors fundamentally misunderstand.
Gensler drew a clear line: Bitcoin (BTC) and dollar-backed stablecoins might have a place in the financial system, but the thousands of other tokens floating around? Not so much. According to him, they lack the basic value drivers that make traditional investments worth holding—things like cash flows, dividends, or actual economic utility.
The key risk, he argues, is that people are confusing political attention with financial substance. Just because crypto is getting more airtime under the Trump administration doesn't mean the underlying assets have suddenly become safer or more valuable. This isn't about partisan politics, Gensler insists—it's about protecting U.S. capital markets from speculation masquerading as innovation.
One particularly interesting observation: Gensler pointed out that Bitcoin ETFs represent a kind of ironic evolution for an asset class that was supposed to be all about decentralization. Financial markets naturally gravitate toward centralized structures, he noted, and crypto is no exception. Investors are treating Bitcoin the same way they approach commodities like gold and silver—through regulated, centralized investment vehicles.
Throughout his SEC tenure, Gensler maintained this consistent stance. Back in September 2024, he warned that somewhere between 5,000 and 10,000 tokens lacked real fundamentals and posed serious risks to uninformed investors. He defended his enforcement-heavy approach by pointing to the frauds his agency uncovered, including the spectacular collapse orchestrated by Sam Bankman-Fried. He also criticized Paul Atkins, the Trump-appointed SEC Chair who dismissed several pending crypto cases after taking over.
In his exit interview this past January, Gensler described Bitcoin as "not a security" but still "highly speculative and volatile." He left the door open slightly, acknowledging that with global demand, Bitcoin's role could evolve over time.
His broader point remains: innovation needs trust to survive. Investor protection and technological progress aren't enemies—they're necessary partners. Whether the market agrees with that philosophy is another question entirely.