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Hello: At this writing, a bill to release all unclassified Justice department files about Jeffery Epstein is headed to President Donald Trump’s desk.

Trump, who had been friends with Epstein before he was convicted for sex crimes, had fought hard to suppress the files before abruptly switching his stance this week. Epstein died in prison in 2019.

Recent Epstein document dumps have already blown back on former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, who kept up email correspondence with Epstein through his first conviction and up to his last sex trafficking arrest. Summers apologized, and said he’d withdraw from public life while keeping his teaching position at Harvard. 

We have a lot more Trump news to talk about in today’s newsletter, but first let’s talk about a pillar of his second administration and Trump's family business: Crypto. —  Tony Wagner, newsletter editor

People walk past a cryptocurrency exchange office with a screen featuring US President Donald Trump holding cryptocurrency coins in Hong Kong on March 12, 2025.
Mladen Antonov/AFP via Getty Images
Crypto went mainstream, now it’s tanking
Now that the U.S. government and banks have legitimized cryptocurrencies, a huge drop in value could have real-world consequences. Marketplace’s Matt Levin reports.

Bitcoin has taken a bit of a beating recently. Since reaching an all-time high in early October, the OG cryptocurrency has lost about a quarter of its value and the overall crypto market is down about a trillion dollars.

Until recently, 2025 was a banner year for crypto entering the economic mainstream. Crypto exchange Coinbase joined the S&P 500, Congress passed a law allowing major banks to play with stablecoins, and even crypto holdout JP Morgan announced it would allow clients to use Bitcoin as collateral for loans.

All of those connections between the real economy and the blockchain were happening mostly when crypto was on the upswing. So what happens now? 

Longtime crypto investors, like Leigh Drogan at Starkiller Capital, are used to watching crypto prices fall off a cliff. But he said this most recent nosedive was different, because crypto had reached the top of the cliff just a second ago.

“It's the ferocity of the reversion from a good momentum, new high, straight into basically a crash,” he said.

Bitcoin true believers will tell you the cryptocurrency will ultimately become digital gold — a safe store of value against inflation and rising national debt.

Well, we still have sticky inflation and a rising national debt, but right now investors are viewing Bitcoin less like gold and more like a risky tech stock.

“There are just a lot of different things coming together at the same time that are causing investors to be scared of risk assets in general, and crypto is the risk asset of all risk assets,” Drogen said.

For you non-crypto folks out there, I know what you’re thinking: What do I care if a bunch of crypto bros lose their Lamborghini savings fund? 

Well if your 401(k) is invested in an index fund that tracks the general stock market, you probably own some stock in crypto companies.

”If there’s a downturn in those parts of the markets, the equity markets, the crypto markets, there would be some knock-on effects on spending,” said Todd Baker, a lecturer at Columbia Law School.

And that could hurt the real economy.

READ MORE


 
News you should know

Let’s do the numbers

  • Nvidia is in correction territory, and that brought down Wall Street overall today. The S&P 500 closed 0.8% lower, the Dow dropped 1.1% and the Nasdaq composite lost 1.2%.

  • Shares in Home Depot fell 6% today after blaming uncertainty in the housing market for a disappointing earnings report. 

  • One more thing about crypto: It’s quickly become a cornerstone of the Trump family business, even as it facilitates an estimated $28 billion worth of crime. Much of that money flows through Binance, an exchange whose founder Trump just pardoned.

Tech

  • A federal judge ruled Meta doesn’t have a monopoly on social media, and acquiring its rivals WhatsApp and Instagram was above board.

  • Apple’s hot new item is a sort of sock to hold your iPhone. It costs as much as $230, and it has close ties to the company’s design history.

The Trump administration

  • The President defended Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman against the findings of his own CIA today. The visit comes as the Trump Organization is expanding to Saudi Arabia.

  • The future Trump presidential library projected $50 million in contributions this year, much of it from legal settlements. The foundation earmarked $6.2 million for an expense labeled “other” it wouldn’t explain.

  • New York Attorney General Letitia James and Federal Reserve Gov. Lisa Cook mounted their first defenses against allegations of mortgage fraud from the Trump administration. The attorney representing both women argued the accusations were cobbled together for political purposes.

  • The Yale Budget Lab said the White House’s proposal to send $2,000 “tariff dividends” to Americans would cost $450 billion,  more than the forecast tariff revenue this fiscal year.
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QUOTE OF THE DAY
"Some estimates are that a public supermarket could shave 5% to 10% off the retail price."
—  Nevin Cohen of the CUNY Urban Food Policy Institute

Cohen added military commissaries are able to bring prices down further, as much as 25% below commercial supermarkets. City-owned grocery stores were one plank of the affordability platform that helped Democratic Socialist Zohran Mamdani win New York City’s recent mayoral election. 

Government stores don’t have the same profit motive, the thinking goes. and they have less overhead because they operate on existing public land. Other cities have tried it, and these stores have a mixed savings record. We took a closer look.

An overhead photo of children playing at a daycare center.
Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images
Final note
How much a dollar really cost?

Finally, here’s a story about consumer behavior for you to ponder this evening. The days of every item at dollar stores actually costing $1 are long gone.

Dollar Tree is routinely offering merchandise for as much as $7, and on its recent earnings call the retailer’s CEO said customers don’t seem to mind — maybe because more affluent shoppers who are trading down.
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