Lately, there's been some unexpected action from various governments in the U.S. regarding Bitcoin. They seem to be looking at it not just as an investment, but as an asset for strategic reserves.
I heard that the federal government is working on a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) framework. The idea is to keep some of their seized digital assets and any future Bitcoin they acquire as reserves instead of selling them off right away. Plus, Texas is moving forward with a plan for a state-level bitcoin reserve to safeguard its treasury from inflation and diversify its assets.
These changes got me thinking about a few things:
1. Are we really starting a new phase where countries and U.S. states see Bitcoin as a strategic reserve, just like gold or foreign currency?
2. Governments usually play it safe with their reserves. Is it wise to hold BTC with all its price swings, or is that just reckless gambling?
3. Does this mean Bitcoin is getting closer to being a recognized global reserve asset? Or is there a chance it could get too politicized and heavily regulated?
This is definitely something to think about.
The Genuis Act made provisions for the establishment of Bitcoin strategic reserves. Unlike the last administration that auctioned confiscated Bitcoin, Trump wants to keep all the coins. The government has not made any attempt to increase its holding true acquisition which means they are depending solely on seizures.
Bitcoin volatility has its benefits. Nations will end up making a good profit if they hold for a long time. El Salvador and Bhutan are typical examples of how nation-states can benefit from volatile assets like Bitcoin.
For now, the only the rich and powerful nations that have made moves to make Bitcoin a reserve is the US. But others might follow since the United States is a role model to different countries.
There are a lot of big claims from Trump and he has alluded to support for cryptocurrency, but I think he's really only interested in how it can benefit his own "Trumpcoin". He got a lot of people to spend a lot of money on it, so he comes out with these pronouncements occasionally in an attempt to rally support and push back claims he is just self enriching. If the democrats get in next time, it is highly likely that they will unwind a lot of the things that took place in these four years, but if it can pass a few different changes of government then maybe it'll survive. You might say that there is too much concentrated risk that would be easy to steal unlike gold, if someone was able to crack the public and private key combo they could take all reserves without any ability to get it back - that is too big a risk for a government to seriously invest in long term.
Bitcoin reserve bills are mostly a result of lobbying efforts by the crypto industry. Politicians are trying to please their donors. A national Bitcoin reserve has not officially been implemented, although the current administration has also not sold any of the BTC they already possess.
Asset forfeiture laws in the United States are frequently abused and having Bitcoin reserves at the state and federal level might encourage this further. I would rather not have a Bitcoin reserve at all if any portion of it is made up of arbitrarily confiscated funds.
Let me say yes, however, this does not change anything about the bitcoin in the past and present with what to hope for in the nearest future, nothing changed.
This is more of how we have decided to go about it, we can choose to invest and hold as the choice may comes for us to make personally, because at the end, everything works for the growth of the network and for our own profiting as well.
Already bitcoin has been seen as a global reserve asset, just that many countries have been inconsistent about making their decisions for adoption, only few did it and more are still getting onboard.
Bitcoin IS already a recognized global asset. Only very few countries are banning it. Bitcoin is being traded more freely than ever in regulated exchanges across the world.
This SBR framework is actually good, the US recognize the value of bitcoin and not just outright dump the confiscated bitcoin, it's also a good signal that US treat bitcoin like gold.
Other country will follow but as always it gonna takes sometime.
I believe that it's not that those countries that still ban Bitcoin actually want to ban it. It's probably those countries, because of Bitcoin's decentralized/censorship-resistant nature, they DON'T actually know how and/or where to begin in accepting, and regulating Bitcoin.
El Salvador and the United States will be written as the countries that truly changed the political landscape to accept Bitcoin.
This phenomenon indicates that Bitcoin is moving up from a risk asset to an alternative reserve asset in the experimental stage, but not yet on par with gold or conventional foreign exchange. Bitcoin could be a long-term risk management instrument as long as it is treated like digital gold, not a technology stock. Bitcoin is undergoing a dual institutionalization phase. On the one hand, it is being adopted as a reserve instrument, and on the other, it is being tightly regulated to prevent threats to the global fiat system. If it successfully navigates this phase without major repression, Bitcoin could occupy a unique position as a stateless, state-sanctioned global reserve asset.
The integration of Bitcoin as a reserve asset component allows sovereign nations to leverage digital innovation without abandoning conservative principles of reserve management. Gold remains a pivotal factor for stability, while BTC serves as a diversification instrument and a potential strategic digital asset. Although still in the experimental phase, and Bitcoin's allocation is small as a pilot reserve asset, it could serve as a test of integration with national reserve infrastructure. If integration is successful, its allocation in reserves could potentially be increased to the point of digital commodity standardization. While gold reserves remain dominant, new reserve instruments, such as bonds, swap lines, and gold-BTC-based CBDCs, could emerge. A digital commodity standard could become a future reserve framework, balancing tradition (gold) and innovation (Bitcoin) in an increasingly multipolar global economy.
Discussing the issue of global economic structure is incomplete without considering the role of the network of institutional actors with structural interests (the global elite). Although they do not form a single conspiracy, they share similar interests: maintaining system stability, minimizing the risk of disruption, and maintaining a dominant position in the global economic architecture. Will they frame Bitcoin as a digital commodity in the hope of maintaining systemic control even if adopted as a reserve? Will Bitcoin become a legitimate institutional asset, while remaining under the structural control of dominant actors?
Bitcoin really is in that experimental phase of institutional acceptance and the main deal, to is how its being tested alongside gold rather than against it, which shows maturity in global monetary thinking. If this balance between innovation and conservative reserve strategy works, we could see Bitcoin gradually becoming a standard digital reserve component. The real test will be whether governments can integrate it without losing the essence of decentralization that gives it value in the first place.
Well governments always had gold and other currencies as a reserve, it's a way to protect themselves and create a leverage, so bitcoin will of course be added to almost all of them as well, it is not really a new thing.
We should be able to see this as a great detail and should not be focusing on something that would not be all that crazy.
I understand what we are seeing here as something that will take a while, focus on the part where you are making some great return and for that reason if we can make some good return then we wouldn't be bothered. Way too many people react as if we are seeing the end of bitcoin or start of bitcoin just yet, none of it is true, this would be just yet another good thing but also another regular Tuesday type of news.
I agree with much of what you say but I think it goes deeper than just regular Tuesday type of news because accepting Bitcoin as a reserve asset, like gold or foreign currencies, is not just about diversification, additionally it could redefine what financial independence is. Many countries are using Bitcoin because they understand that digital assets can help them build a place in where they will not need to be dependent on traditional central banks.
And of course, for this process time will need but it is very important because Bitcoin is now a part of the conversation among policymakers and economists, beyond the daily fluctuations of the market. So I would call this not a small piece of news but the beginning of a long-term transformation.
Bitcoin is its own asset class and it doesn't matter how it's being treated, whether it's some sort of "Digital Gold", or a technology stock. Because as long as the Federal Reserve and all of the Central Banks around the globe continue to print and devalue fiat, then Bitcoin will keep on surging and surging until they stop.
From another viewpoint, it's fiat that's changing its value lower, not Bitcoin going higher.
But, I agree with this viewpoint for gold and NOT with bitcoin. It is gold which gets its value higher when fiat loses. As of now, bitcoin is gaining value due to its fundamentals. I mean to say that bitcoin is not yet consider as a hedge against dollar or inflation. What you are saying may be true when bitcoin would be a primary hedge but as of now gold is the only asset which benefits out of uncontrolled printing of fiats.
Back to era of bitcoin sovereignty, is definite going to happen. Governments started accumulating bitcoin (without fully believing into bitcoin or fully realizing the fundamentals of bitcoin) so with the plans of beta testing and when bitcoin proves itself with 10x or 20x growth, government will move forward from beta phase. So, we can assume that bitcoin reserve will replace gold reserves of central banks or will occupy the maximum portion of reserve. So, now we can assume about we are at the beginning of era of Sovereign Bitcoin Reserves.
I'm merely trying to imagine if instead of us looking at the "BTC/USD" market, we start looking at the "USD/BTC" market. Bitcoin's supply is stable, it's fiat's supply that's changing because of the Federal Reserve and other Central Banks pivots from QT to QE, then QE to QT.
I believe that, because of sanctions, Russia has fully realized the value of Bitcoin's decentralized and censorship-resistant nature.
The world is becoming more and more absurd.
Years ago, I would've never believed that countries would start buying BTC and keeping it as a reserve asset. This is becoming the new reality.
And I still believe that this is absurd, because BTC/crypto is just electricity, that has been turned into a currency. Maybe fiat money are no better than cryptocurrencies, but we are so used to them, that we actually believe that those pieces of paper have real value.
What do you mean by BTC being "politicized"? I think that BTC is politically neutral and it will remain political neutral. Gold isn't "politicized", despite being the most popular reserve asset.
?
From a viewpoint of an individual who spend all his time in BitcoinTalk without actually understanding the technical fundamentals of Bitcoin, then YES, it's absurd.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
People before the automobile was invented were also used to riding horses and carriages, no? Or the people who were used to telegrams before the telephone was invented.
this sounds like a PR move more than actual risk management. A few confiscated coins or small reserves dont make BTC a sovereign asset. Politicians love to play with crypto hypecould end up overregulating it instead of legitimizing it.
It is possible for some countries to put some money aside, but I honestly think that they are not going to buy them, they are just going to seize from criminals and then not sell those. That's quite possible and some nations are already doing it, for example USA has hundreds of thousands of bitcoins right now and they are not selling it, so I am guessing that will be the same for many nations.
Many nations made a mistake of selling, namely Germany and England ended up selling and that wasn't easy at all, because they lost a lot of money from that mistake, if they waited and sold at the top they would have made a lot more money but for some reason they decided not to wait. I think next time, governments will wait some more.
Im really curious how far this goes. Is this just states like Texas being proactive, or will others follow quietly? Also wondering if this is more about optics and politics than actual conviction. Would be interesting to see how much BTC theyre actually willing to hold long term.
We entered this new era when Japan accepted bitcoin as a legal means of payment (2017) and the biggest move came a couple of years alter with El Salvador when they accepted bitcoin as legal tender (2021) which was a much bigger step for bitcoin adoption.
Governments deciding to store bitcoin as reserve is smaller moves in my opinion because it does not have the same adoption-effect as regulating it as a legal tender can do to it.