The world’s largest Bitcoin gathering kicked off Monday at The Venetian Resort, drawing more than 40,000 attendees and over 500 speakers for three days of policy panels, corporate treasury discussions, and networking under the banner “All In On the Future of Money.”
Bitcoin briefly spiked to an 11-week high of roughly $79,000–$79,400 on opening day before reversing sharply, underscoring both the event’s narrative power and the market’s familiar “sell-the-news” tendencies.
The first day of the event, dubbed as Pro/Industry Day on April 27 emphasized the “Code & Country” theme, spotlighting the intersection of technology, policy, and institutional adoption. The presence of high-level U.S. officials marked a historic shift from past adversarial stances to collaborative dialogue.
Historic regulatory presence
In a first for the conference, sitting SEC Chair Paul Atkins addressed attendees, detailing Project Crypto—a Commission-wide initiative to modernize securities rules for digital assets.
Atkins outlined a new token taxonomy that classifies most digital assets as non-securities, alongside innovation exemptions for on-chain tokenization and securitization. The remarks signaled a clear pivot away from “regulation by enforcement” toward a framework designed to foster U.S. leadership in digital finance, developed in coordination with the CFTC.
Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-WY), a longtime Bitcoin advocate, delivered keynotes and panel appearances pushing her flagship BITCOIN Act, which proposes a strategic U.S. Bitcoin reserve of up to 1 million BTC over five years with a 20-year hold period.
She also highlighted momentum on the CLARITY Act, aimed at resolving SEC/CFTC jurisdictional overlaps and providing long-term market structure. Lummis noted markup could occur in May, framing the legislation as critical for America’s financial future ahead of midterms.
A standout session featured FBI Director Kash Patel and Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche in a fireside chat titled “Code is Free Speech: Ending the War on Bitcoin,” moderated by Coinbase CLO Paul Grewal. The discussion positioned Bitcoin development and related code as protected speech, emphasizing reduced enforcement pressure.
Corporate momentum and market action
Michael Saylor, Executive Chairman of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), spoke on Bitcoin treasury strategies. The firm recently surpassed 818K BTC holdings and continues aggressive accumulation, including via perpetual preferred stock mechanisms.
Japanese Bitcoin treasury adopter Metaplanet maintained a visible presence, including Sphere branding, highlighting global corporate trends.
Bitcoin’s price action reflected conference hype. It climbed to $79,000+ on April 27 amid ETF inflows and optimism but quickly retreated to the $76,700–$77,500 range by early Tuesday. This pattern aligns with historical data: Bitcoin often rallies into the event in anticipation but faces post-event profit-taking.
Meanwhile, broader macro forces, especially geopolitical risks, tempered enthusiasm.
Community divide and long-term outlook
While the event solidified Bitcoin’s institutional legitimacy, it sparked internal debate. Some cypherpunk and early adopters criticized the heavy regulatory and political focus—including appearances by figures like Eric Trump and BlackRock representatives—as drifting from decentralized roots toward “corporate grift.” Others viewed it as necessary maturation.
Despite the muted immediate price reaction, talks around concrete policy follow-through on the BITCOIN Act, CLARITY Act, and Project Crypto innovations could yield longer-term gains for the industry and may attract more capital.
Yet, as history shows, translating high-profile speeches into sustained price momentum requires more than optics—it demands legislative wins and macro tailwinds.
With Bitcoin consolidating near $77,000 as the event continues, the real test lies in whether this week’s optimism translates into lasting adoption or fades into another sell-the-news episode.
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