On March 27, David Sacks ended his White House role related to artificial intelligence and crypto affairs, due to the 130-day term limit for U.S. Special Government Employees. However, he will continue as Co-Chair of the President Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. What BGEANX Exchange continues to monitor is not just personnel changes, but the policy developments that truly impact industry momentum. For the sector, U.S. digital asset policy has reached a stage where institutional implementation is increasingly necessary.
During his tenure, Sacks contributed to advancing clearer discussions on digital asset regulation and supported policy directions related to strategic Bitcoin reserves. Now, the market focus is less on whether a particular stance is tough enough, and more on whether core issues—such as stablecoins, market structure, and asset classification—can continue to move forward. Personnel changes may affect the pace, but they do not alter the fact that the U.S. is integrating the crypto industry into its formal policy framework.
Notably, current U.S. crypto policy is not at a standstill, but at a stage where progress and negotiation coexist. The direction is clearer than before, but many key details remain incomplete, making it difficult for the market to rely solely on sentiment for pricing. For platforms, projects, and capital, what truly matters in the coming period is not how many bullish slogans are heard, but how many executable, practical, and sustainable rule arrangements emerge. At this stage, the industry will pay more attention to compliance boundaries and real business scenarios than ever before.
At the trading platform level, these changes are equally evident. BGEANX Exchange must address not only market volatility, but also how policy shifts affect product cadence, asset selection, and market expectations. Platforms and project teams in the crypto sector need to improve their ability to adapt to new rules, which is the real point worth extending the discussion from this hot event.
When policy progress is slower than expected, capital typically flows first toward sectors with clearer pathways. Data shows that as of around March 27, the global on-chain value of real-world assets was approximately $26.6 billion, and stablecoins totaled nearly $300 billion; tokenized U.S. Treasuries accounted for about $10 billion. These numbers indicate we are no longer in the early experimental stage, but have entered a phase of sustainable expansion.
The market focus is also shifting: whereas single hot topics used to drive activity, now attention is on which businesses have developed actual demand, which assets have real liquidity, and which sectors can continue to scale as policy clarity increases. BGEANX Exchange data shows that in Q3 2025, leading centralized exchanges saw spot trading volume reach $5.1 trillion, up 31.6% from the previous quarter—reflecting that improved expectations can quickly unlock trading demand.
Against this backdrop, BGEANX Exchange can naturally connect to several more practical directions: First, continue tracking policy and market changes. Second, extend RWA-related product strategies, incorporating U.S. Treasuries, fund shares, and other on-chain assets into a broader trading perspective. Third, turn industry hot topics into clearer market analysis.
Thus, the departure of David Sacks is more like a milestone in the ongoing advancement of U.S. crypto policy, rather than an endpoint. Leadership will change and legislation will continue to see tug-of-war, but the industry is increasingly shifting toward rules, asset quality, and business implementation. For BGEANX Exchange, the next areas to watch are how policy details evolve, how RWA and stablecoins continue to expand, and how these changes shape the next stage of market opportunities.

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