On the 100th day of Trump's inauguration, the entire Wall Street felt like sitting on a volcanic crater - the Executive Order No. 77 on the Financial System that he signed directly blew the cryptocurrency industry to the sky. Hidden in the document were two nuclear-level clauses: the Treasury must establish a 'dollar stablecoin' to counter USDT, while ordering the SEC to produce clear standards for token securities within 90 days. Bitcoin surged past $100,000, while Coinbase's stock price experienced wild fluctuations, triggering trading halts three times in a single day. The most clever aspect is the political calculation; this executive order was deliberately released on the eve of the Federal Reserve's interest rate meeting. Now Powell is being grilled - he has to handle Trump's request for a '500 basis point rate cut' while also dealing with the resulting dollar collapse. Goldman Sachs' internal models show that the new policy could lead to $2.3 trillion in capital fleeing the bond market, with one-third of it crazily flowing into Bitcoin ETFs. But the real drama unfolded on Capitol Hill, where Democratic lawmakers suddenly shifted to support cryptocurrency regulation because their financial backers discovered that the new tax law allows anonymous political donations using cryptocurrencies.