Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) is pressing SEC Chair Paul Atkins to explain exactly how the agency plans to protect retirement savers now that President Trump has opened the door for crypto in 401(k) plans. The twist? Trump's family has reportedly made over $1.2 billion from crypto ventures since returning to office.
The Timing Raises Questions
Warren sent her letter Monday as the Senate Banking Committee prepares to negotiate crypto market structure legislation. She's warning that the bill in its current form could weaken SEC authority and expose 401(k) plans to volatile crypto assets—while Trump's newfound enthusiasm for crypto appears conveniently aligned with his own financial interests.
Since January 2025, Trump and his family have pulled in over $1.2 billion from crypto ventures including World Liberty Financial's USD1 stablecoin and the WLFI token. Warren argues this creates an obvious conflict: why is the president pushing crypto into retirement accounts while simultaneously profiting from crypto businesses?
She's also concerned about a potential "tokenization loophole" in the proposed legislation that could allow financial products offered on blockchain to dodge SEC oversight entirely.
Warren Sets a Hard Deadline
The Massachusetts senator gave the SEC until January 27 to answer some pointed questions. She wants to know if the agency has ensured companies are properly valuing crypto assets in public financial statements, whether it's investigating market manipulation in crypto markets, and what educational resources exist to help investors understand these risks.
"For most Americans, their 401(k) represents a lifeline to retirement security rather than a playground for financial risk," Warren wrote. She argues that expanding crypto in retirement plans exposes workers to higher fees, less transparency, and steeper losses during market crashes—all while reducing the SEC's ability to monitor these investments.
How We Got Here
Trump signed an executive order in August 2025 directing the Labor Department to reconsider rules that limited alternative assets in 401(k) plans. The door to crypto in retirement accounts swung wide open when the Department of Labor announced in May it would take a "neutral stance" on crypto in 401(k)s, reversing a 2022 policy that actively discouraged the practice.
Warren has been vocal about her concerns, previously calling Trump's $2 billion deal with the UAE involving the USD1 stablecoin "shady" and warning it could enable corruption.
Industry Pushes Back on Volatility Concerns
Bitwise Chief Investment Officer Matt Hougan fired back Monday, calling restrictions on Bitcoin (BTC) in 401(k)s "ridiculous." His argument? Bitcoin was actually less volatile than some stocks last year.
Nvidia (NVDA) shares swung 120% between an April low of $94.31 and an October high of $207. Bitcoin moved 65% between $76,000 in April and $126,080 in October.
"This is just another asset. Does it go up and down? Absolutely. Is there risk in it? Absolutely. But it's actually less volatile over the last year than Nvidia stock," Hougan said.
What's at Stake
Getting crypto into 401(k)s represents a watershed moment for the industry. It brings crypto to mainstream investors and legitimizes it within the traditional financial system. But Warren's letter signals that Democrats plan to fight the move hard, arguing Trump is using his political power to boost his own crypto investments.
Labor unions AFL and AFT have already opposed the draft crypto legislation. With Thursday's committee markup looming, the battle lines are clearly drawn.




