White House Billions Dollar Proposal

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Ahmed Barakat

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Ahmed Barakat

Part of the Team Since

Aug 2025

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Ahmed Balaha is a journalist and copywriter based in Georgia with a growing focus on blockchain technology, DeFi, AI, privacy, digital assets, and fintech innovation.


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CryptoNews Editorial Team

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CryptoNews Editorial Team

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Sep 2018

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The CryptoNews editorial team is composed of seasoned writers specializing in cryptocurrency and blockchain technology. Their expertise ensures comprehensive, accurate, and insightful content for…

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Besides the Clarity Act, the White House’s 2026 budget proposal targets the wash sale loophole that lets crypto traders harvest losses and immediately rebuy. It’s an illegal practice for stock investors, but entirely legal under current digital asset rules.

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The proposal would apply wash sale rules to crypto for the first time, treating digital assets the same as traditional securities for tax purposes. It also includes a 30% excise tax on electricity used for crypto mining via the DAME (Digital Asset Mining Energy) tax, and a FATCA reporting requirement for U.S. taxpayers holding more than $50,000 in foreign crypto accounts.

Key Takeaways

  • White House Budget 2026 proposes applying wash sale rules to crypto, closing a loophole unavailable to equity traders
  • Treasury estimates the change generates $5.4 billion in revenue over 10 years
  • A 30% Mining Tax on electricity costs targets proof-of-work operations directly
  • FATCA reporting would extend to foreign crypto accounts over $50,000
  • The proposal faces a difficult legislative path in a Congress that has been moving toward pro-crypto regulation

What the Wash Sale Rule Does

Under current law, the wash sale rule blocks stock investors from claiming a tax loss if they repurchase the same or substantially identical security within 30 days. Crypto is classified as property, not a security, which means that the rule does not apply.

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Traders have used this gap aggressively, selling a Bitcoin position at a loss to lock in a deduction, then rebuying immediately to maintain exposure. That is tax-loss harvesting, and for crypto holders, it has been completely legal.

The White House proposal closes this gap. If passed, crypto would be subject to the same 30-day restriction as equities.

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Does This Proposal Have a Real Path Through Congress, Just Like the Clarity Act?

The political tension here is direct. The same White House that is pushing the CLARITY Act as a pro-crypto regulatory framework is simultaneously proposing crypto tax rules. That is not a contradiction to the administration; it frames the crypto tax proposal as parity, not punishment. It just lands differently on the Hill.

Congress is currently moving toward crypto-friendly legislation. The CLARITY Act debate in the Senate Banking Committee is already consuming legislative bandwidth, and a crypto tax crackdown runs against the grain of that momentum.

The SEC is simultaneously fielding major regulatory proposals, including an 85-item rule change affecting Bitcoin and XRP ETF listings, and crypto policy is being pulled in multiple directions at once.

To put this into perspective, similar wash sale proposals were floated during the Obama and Biden administrations and never cleared Congress.

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