Friday, December 12

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David Pokima

Part of the Team Since

Jun 2023

About Author

David is a finance journalist and a contributor to Cryptonews.com with a keen interest in breaking comprehensive, accurate, and reliable blockchain news.

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The House Financial Services Committee sent a letter to the SEC on December 12, 2025, urging the regulator to amend existing rules to permit Bitcoin and other digital assets within 401(k) plans. The move seeks to formally integrate crypto into the U.S. retirement system, potentially unlocking a new capital source for the asset class.

House Committee Demands SEC Action on Crypto in Retirement Funds

The letter directly references President Trump’s August 7, 2025, executive order, “Democratizing Access to Alternative Assets for 401(k) Investors.” That order mandated the SEC and the Department of Labor to review and dismantle barriers preventing alternative investments from being included in retirement plans. Bitcoin (BTC), trading at $90,304 (+0.08%), saw a slight uptick following the news.

Legislative support for the initiative is codified in the ‘Retirement Investment Choice Act’ (H.R. 5748), a bill introduced to legally cement the executive order’s directives. Proponents in Congress argue that current regulations are archaic, denying millions of American savers access to modern asset classes.

The Counter-Narrative: Fiduciary Risk and Volatility

Critics immediately pushed back, citing extreme volatility and fiduciary risks. The American Federation of Teachers has voiced strong opposition to similar measures, emphasizing the potential for fraud and the unsuitability of speculative assets for retirement security.

Financial analysts also share these concerns, pointing to the lack of long-term data and regulatory clarity. Warren Buffett has previously stated that Bitcoin produces no cash flow, making it more akin to gambling than a productive investment.

The Institutional Take

While direct retail access is the headline, the institutional impact is greater. This congressional pressure is not merely about adding a Bitcoin ETF to a 401(k) menu. It is about forcing a legal and fiduciary reclassification of digital assets.

If the SEC acts, it could provide legal air cover for plan administrators and asset managers who have been hesitant to touch crypto due to litigation risk under ERISA.

This shifts the conversation from ‘Is it allowed?’ to ‘What is the prudent allocation?’. Expect asset managers to accelerate the development of institutionally-packaged crypto products designed specifically for the defined-contribution market, regardless of the SEC’s immediate response.


https://cryptonews.com/news/bitcoin-92k-house-presses-sec-401k-rules/

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