According to industry officials, the cryptocurrency sector is pushing President-elect Trump's team to launch the promised cryptocurrency policy reforms and issue executive orders to help drive token mainstreaming when he takes office next month.

Reuters reported this month that Trump plans to issue a series of executive orders and directives across various fields, from immigration to energy, on his first day in office, January 20.

During the campaign, Trump promised to be the "cryptocurrency president," and the industry hopes he will deliver on that promise by creating a Bitcoin reserve through executive orders, ensuring the industry has access to banking services, and establishing a cryptocurrency committee.

Two other informed sources said the industry hopes Trump will sign these executive orders within his first hundred days in office, expecting at least one to be issued by January 20.

Rebecca Rettig, Chief Legal and Policy Officer of crypto company Polygon Labs, stated, "Given the themes of the campaign, the executive orders must truly articulate the actual priorities for the first day in office and provide some kind of roadmap."

Brian Hughes, a spokesperson for Trump's transition team, said in a statement, "The bureaucratic morass in Washington has been trying to stifle innovation... but President Trump will deliver on his promise to encourage America to take a leadership role in the cryptocurrency space."

Analysts have differing views on whether Trump can use executive power to establish a Bitcoin reserve or if it must go through Congressional legislation.

The industry organization Bitcoin Policy Institute even drafted a potential executive order text. A draft seen by Reuters shows that the draft would designate Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset and require the Treasury Secretary to accumulate a national Bitcoin reserve at a rate of $21 billion annually.

Zack Shapiro, Policy Director of the Bitcoin Policy Institute, stated that the U.S. should lead in Bitcoin monetization over geopolitical competitors, "rather than letting prices rise without any reserves in the U.S." He declined to disclose whether the organization had shared the draft with Trump's team.