University of Michigan economics and public policy Professor Justin Wolfers said he has a fear that the cryptocurrency bubble will burst and that President Donald Trump will use taxpayer dollars to help bail out the crypto market, the way the United States did after the mortgage crisis in 2008.

Trump has profited over $5 billion with his own meme coin and is now opposing any regulation of cryptocurrency.

Wolfers said that the idea of "stablecoin" is a joke, noting that if people want to buy into a truly stable $1 investment, they can go to the bank and get a $1 billion.

"Those stablecoins, the value of those is currently being held up by Binance. The former CEO of Binance is in jail right now, sort of hoping for a bit of a pardon," Wolfers said, though the CEO has since been released. "And so right, there's your conflict of interest. But there's something deeper here. It's quite possible the next financial crisis is a crypto crisis. That all of a sudden the value of these things goes to zero."

He compared it to nothing more than a casino.

"And if Vegas goes bankrupt, we let him go bankrupt. But if the president goes down with it, I have a funny feeling there might be a bailout. And it's a bailout of yours and my money to keep a bunch of grifters rich. And I think it's a very, very big worry for the future of financial stability," Wolfers added.

MSNBC host Katy Tur questioned Wolfers about how Trump's sons making billions off of cryptocurrency compares with Hunter Biden selling artwork. Wolfers sarcastically answered that it's obviously due to Biden being a terrible artist and the Trump sons being geniuses.

The Bulwark's Sam Stein pointed out that the story is an important one that sounds the alarm about outright corruption, but it's being ignored because Trump and his administration are plagued by a firehose of scandal.

"You have a confluence of factors here that is unlike anything we've ever seen in terms of the corruption of the presidency. But with Trump, it's so blatant and so public that it tends to become like the, you know, 23rd or 24th most important story of the day," said Stein.

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