Senator Elizabeth Warren has directed formal congressional scrutiny at MrBeast over his cryptocurrency ambitions, sending a 12-page letter to the YouTube star and his company demanding answers about plans to market crypto products to minors through a recently acquired teen banking app.
Warren sent the letter on March 23, 2026, addressing it to Jimmy Donaldson (MrBeast) and Beast Industries CEO Jeffrey Housenbold. The inquiry centers on Beast Industries’ February 2026 acquisition of Step, a fintech app designed for teenagers, and whether the company intends to push cryptocurrency offerings to its young user base.
“Beast Industries is primarily an entertainment and consumer product company, and any foray into financial services, particularly services aimed at children, must be done with great care and in compliance with the law,” Warren stated.
The letter posed over a dozen questions and set an April 3, 2026 deadline for Beast Industries to respond.
Step Acquisition and the ‘MrBeast Financial’ Trademark
Warren’s concerns are not speculative. Beast Industries filed a trademark for “MrBeast Financial” that lists potential products including cryptocurrency, according to reporting from CryptoTimes. The filing signals a deliberate push into digital asset services under the MrBeast brand.
Step itself had previously published materials encouraging children to pressure their parents toward crypto investing. The app’s earlier roadmap included features allowing teens to buy, sell, hold, and receive crypto with parental oversight. Combined with MrBeast’s audience of over 300 million YouTube subscribers, the potential retail exposure to minors is enormous.
Beast Industries responded by welcoming Warren’s engagement, stating it plans to develop Step “in line with applicable laws and regulatory requirements.” The company has not confirmed or denied specific crypto product launch timelines.

Banking Partner Under Federal Scrutiny
Warren’s letter also flagged Step’s banking partner, Evolve Bank & Trust, which has faced Federal Reserve enforcement actions for anti-money laundering deficiencies. The regulatory issues at Evolve add a second layer of risk to any crypto-adjacent products built on the Step platform.
The move fits a pattern of growing congressional pressure on influencer-driven crypto ventures. Lawmakers have increasingly scrutinized celebrity and influencer token promotions, particularly where retail investors, and now minors, face asymmetric risk. The Federal Reserve has separately ruled out issuing a CBDC, leaving private-sector crypto products as the primary avenue for digital asset exposure.
Warren, a persistent critic of the crypto industry, has previously targeted exchanges, stablecoin issuers, and DeFi protocols. This inquiry marks her first direct challenge to an influencer-led fintech acquisition with crypto ambitions. Recent Bitcoin ETF inflow activity and broader market volatility have kept regulatory attention on crypto’s expanding retail footprint.

The April 3 response deadline will be the next concrete inflection point. Whether Beast Industries provides detailed answers or pushes back could shape how Congress approaches the intersection of influencer marketing, fintech, and crypto asset protection for younger demographics in the months ahead.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.