After Stepping Down as Mayor of New York, He Turned to Selling Cryptocurrency

marsbitPublished on 2026-01-13Last updated on 2026-01-13

Written by: Nicholas Fandos, Debra Kamin

Compiled by: Chopper, Foresight News

Two weeks ago, Eric Adams held one of the most powerful positions in the U.S. government system; today, he stands under the neon billboards of Times Square, peddling a New York City-themed cryptocurrency.

For anyone else, such a shift in identity might be embarrassing, but the former mayor of New York was all smiles, enthusiastically discussing the advantages of blockchain technology and promising not to profit from it for the time being.

"I've missed you all so much, ladies and gentlemen," he said to a group of reporters, before shifting gears to criticize his successor's "major mistakes," talk about business opportunities in foreign capitals, and admit that his experience in municipal services like garbage collection has now become monetizable "expert capital."

This was his first public appearance since leaving office on January 1st, but it ended abruptly because he had to catch a flight. He was headed first to Dallas, then to Senegal, claiming more opportunities awaited him there.

The 65-year-old Adams is one of the most unconventional mayors in New York City's history: from a working-class background, a former police officer, yet federally indicted for his pursuit of a luxurious lifestyle. All signs suggest that his post-mayoral career will continue this "unconventional" approach.

In just the past two weeks, he has met with a Saudi prince in Dubai, visited the President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and repeatedly attacked his successor, Zohran Mamdani, for overturning some of the pro-Israel policies he implemented during his term. This move breaks the unwritten tradition of former mayors showing respect to their successors.

Details of Adams's various business dealings remain shrouded in mystery, including his partnership in the cryptocurrency project. But his post-mayoral core agenda is becoming increasingly clear: restoring his personal reputation, criticizing his successor, and repaying the massive debts incurred from legal battles. The priority among these three, however, remains unclear.

"I won't be looking for a nine-to-five salaried job," Adams said. "I only work for myself."

Adams is not the only one planning his post-office livelihood while targeting Mamdani. Former New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is finalizing a deal to host a weekly show on the conservative talk radio station WABC, where he was a frequent guest during his unsuccessful campaign.

According to the New York Post, the show will provide Cuomo with a platform to promote his centrist Democratic political views, and he will likely use it to criticize Mamdani, whom he has previously called an "extreme left radical."

The station's owner, Republican billionaire John Catsimatidis, said he does not plan to pay Cuomo, but merely wants to help him after his electoral defeat. The broadcast time has not yet been finalized. "We feel sorry for what happened to him, and we love New York deeply," Catsimatidis said. "He wants to maintain public visibility and stay connected with New Yorkers."

But so far, Adams's post-mayoral performance has undoubtedly been more eye-catching.

Just hours after attending Mamdani's inauguration, he boarded an Emirates flight to Dubai with his long-time partner, Tracey Collins. Besides the Saudi prince, he was also photographed meeting with several wealthy Israeli and Uzbek businessmen.

Numerous current and former political figures attended Zohran Mamdani's mayoral inauguration, Adams among them

He had dinner with real estate agent and reality TV star Eleonora Srugo and posted a photo on social media with Amir Marashi, an Iranian-born New York gynecologist and women's health advocate specializing in procedures like vaginal rejuvenation.

Meanwhile, Adams kept a close eye on developments in New York City. He frequently posted on social media to express dissatisfaction with Mamdani's policies: for example, Mamdani's reversal of the city's previously adopted expanded definition of anti-Semitism and his criticism of some of Mamdani's appointments.

"Everyone needs a grace period, but hate allows no one any grace," Adams said at Monday's event.

Mamdani, at another event, declined to respond to Adams's criticism.

Adams's interest in cryptocurrency is not new. During his mayoral term, he chose to receive his first paycheck in cryptocurrency; he is close friends with cryptocurrency billionaire Brock Pierce, who, along with other crypto industry figures, funded his campaign last fall before he dropped his re-election bid.

Having made "supporting Israel and combating anti-Semitism" a core part of his administration, Adams also packaged this new token as a public welfare project, claiming its proceeds would be used to fight anti-Semitism, anti-Americanism, and "teaching children to embrace blockchain technology."

The token's official website states that its total issuance will be 1 billion tokens. Adams said he would donate the proceeds from some of these tokens to non-profit organizations dedicated to the aforementioned causes and stated that he would not receive a salary or any compensation, at least initially.

"NYC Token is a new generation cryptocurrency inspired by the relentless energy and innovative spirit of New York City," the project's website reads. "Leveraging cutting-edge blockchain technology, we are building a decentralized financial ecosystem with ambitions matching those of this city."

Despite this, Adams seemed struggling at times when describing the project's details. At Monday's event and in an interview with Fox News, he repeatedly misnamed the new product as "New York City Coin."

Adams's image is prominently featured on the token's website, which invites visitors to "Buy Now," but as of Monday evening, all purchase links on the site were non-functional.

The former mayor said he is also exploring other business areas, including plans to be advanced during his trip to Africa this week.

"I realize that many services New York City has, even garbage collection, are hard to find in many parts of the world," Adams said. "I plan to provide such help to other cities and countries."

All these actions raise questions about whether Adams will continue to reside in New York in the future. He had previously stated that he hoped to retire in a city overseas rather than return to his home in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.

But two people familiar with the matter revealed that the former mayor plans to keep New York City as his base and intends to rent an apartment in Manhattan, preferably with a view. Adams himself tried to dispel doubts at Monday's event. "I'm not going anywhere," he said.

Related Reads

Google and Amazon Simultaneously Invest Heavily in a Competitor: The Most Absurd Business Logic of the AI Era Is Becoming Reality

In a span of four days, Amazon announced an additional $25 billion investment, and Google pledged up to $40 billion—both direct competitors pouring over $65 billion into the same AI startup, Anthropic. Rather than a typical venture capital move, this signals the latest escalation in the cloud wars. The core of the deal is not equity but compute pre-orders: Anthropic must spend the majority of these funds on AWS and Google Cloud services and chips, effectively locking in massive future compute consumption. This reflects a shift in cloud market dynamics—enterprises now choose cloud providers based on which hosts the best AI models, not just price or stability. With OpenAI deeply tied to Microsoft, Anthropic’s Claude has become the only viable strategic asset for Google and Amazon to remain competitive. Anthropic’s annualized revenue has surged to $30 billion, and it is expanding into verticals like biotech, positioning itself as a cross-industry AI infrastructure layer. However, this funding comes with constraints: Anthropic’s independence is challenged as it balances two rival investors, its safety-first narrative faces pressure from regulatory scrutiny, and its path to IPO introduces new financial pressures. Globally, this accelerates a "tri-polar" closed-loop structure in AI infrastructure, with Microsoft-OpenAI, Google-Anthropic, and Amazon-Anthropic forming exclusive model-cloud alliances. In contrast, China’s landscape differs—investments like Alibaba and Tencent backing open-source model firm DeepSeek reflect a more decoupled approach, though closed-source models from major cloud providers still dominate. The $65 billion bet is ultimately about securing a seat at the table in an AI-defined future—where missing the model layer means losing the cloud war.

marsbit1h ago

Google and Amazon Simultaneously Invest Heavily in a Competitor: The Most Absurd Business Logic of the AI Era Is Becoming Reality

marsbit1h ago

Computing Power Constrained, Why Did DeepSeek-V4 Open Source?

DeepSeek-V4 has been released as a preview open-source model, featuring 1 million tokens of context length as a baseline capability—previously a premium feature locked behind enterprise paywalls by major overseas AI firms. The official announcement, however, openly acknowledges computational constraints, particularly limited service throughput for the high-end DeepSeek-V4-Pro version due to restricted high-end computing power. Rather than competing on pure scale, DeepSeek adopts a pragmatic approach that balances algorithmic innovation with hardware realities in China’s AI ecosystem. The V4-Pro model uses a highly sparse architecture with 1.6T total parameters but only activates 49B during inference. It performs strongly in agentic coding, knowledge-intensive tasks, and STEM reasoning, competing closely with top-tier closed models like Gemini Pro 3.1 and Claude Opus 4.6 in certain scenarios. A key strategic product is the Flash edition, with 284B total parameters but only 13B activated—making it cost-effective and accessible for mid- and low-tier hardware, including domestic AI chips from Huawei (Ascend), Cambricon, and Hygon. This design supports broader adoption across developers and SMEs while stimulating China's domestic semiconductor ecosystem. Despite facing talent outflow and intense competition in user traffic—with rivals like Doubao and Qianwen leading in monthly active users—DeepSeek has maintained technical momentum. The release also comes amid reports of a new funding round targeting a valuation exceeding $10 billion, potentially setting a new record in China’s LLM sector. Ultimately, DeepSeek-V4 represents a shift toward open yet realistic infrastructure development in the constrained compute landscape of Chinese AI, emphasizing engineering efficiency and domestic hardware compatibility over pure model scale.

marsbit1h ago

Computing Power Constrained, Why Did DeepSeek-V4 Open Source?

marsbit1h ago

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片