A key policy signal has recently emerged. During the Davos Forum, the U.S. Treasury Secretary announced that the government will establish a strategic Bitcoin reserve, including all Bitcoin held by the Department of Justice and the Treasury—this effectively reverses the previous "confiscate and auction" approach.
What exactly has changed? Previously, Bitcoin obtained through law enforcement was regularly auctioned off. Now, these assets will be permanently retained and no longer subjected to routine auctions. The U.S. currently holds over 200,000 Bitcoins. This decision explicitly designates these assets as a long-term national store of value to hedge against fiat currency fluctuations. The Secretary emphasized that this is to "prevent the outflow of sovereign digital wealth."
More interestingly, the expansion of the strategic reserve will be conducted in a "budget-neutral" manner—no taxpayer money will be spent on increasing holdings in the open market, relying solely on law enforcement confiscations to replenish the reserve. The Federal Reserve will be responsible for custody of these assets, and unless there is an extreme national economic crisis, they will remain untouched.
From a market perspective, this is a major turning point. The U.S. government has long been a "selling pressure" on Bitcoin, frequently auctioning confiscated assets. Now, it shifts to long-term holding and strategic reserves—this subtly weakens the historical market pressure exerted by government sales. More importantly, this could set an example for other major economies, prompting more countries to reconsider the role of digital assets on their national balance sheets.
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PoetryOnChain
· 3h ago
Wait, has the US government finally woken up? Instead of auctioning, they are stockpiling coins. This thing might really become digital gold.
Oh my god, 200,000 coins directly frozen. They must be very bullish on Bitcoin.
Damn, this is a clear message to the world that digital assets are worth national-level allocation. Can other countries sit still?
Honestly, this move is brilliant. It doesn't spend taxpayers' money and can appreciate long-term. Anyone would want it.
The Federal Reserve acting as a vault? That's interesting, it really shows long-term planning.
They used to suppress prices through auctions, now they are stockpiling coins. This turnaround... lucky I didn't know in advance.
Finally, the government is no longer our opponent; they are starting to be on our side.
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WalletDoomsDay
· 6h ago
Wow, so the US really isn't selling anymore? 200,000 tokens, that must be a huge stake.
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SatoshiSherpa
· 19h ago
Whoa, 200,000 BTC directly stored? This move by the US is really impressive.
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MechanicalMartel
· 19h ago
Wow, has the US finally figured it out? Not selling 200,000 BTC anymore, how much selling pressure does that save?
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ETHmaxi_NoFilter
· 19h ago
Whoa, the US government suddenly backtracked and won't be buying Bitcoin anymore? Are they really going to hoard coins? This cracked me up.
Wait, 200,000 coins? Now the government selling pressure is gone, and the market can breathe a sigh of relief.
As expected from the US, they attack first and hold later, just like us retail investors, huh.
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notSatoshi1971
· 19h ago
The US move has really shifted now; the days of those crazy sell-offs are over.
A key policy signal has recently emerged. During the Davos Forum, the U.S. Treasury Secretary announced that the government will establish a strategic Bitcoin reserve, including all Bitcoin held by the Department of Justice and the Treasury—this effectively reverses the previous "confiscate and auction" approach.
What exactly has changed? Previously, Bitcoin obtained through law enforcement was regularly auctioned off. Now, these assets will be permanently retained and no longer subjected to routine auctions. The U.S. currently holds over 200,000 Bitcoins. This decision explicitly designates these assets as a long-term national store of value to hedge against fiat currency fluctuations. The Secretary emphasized that this is to "prevent the outflow of sovereign digital wealth."
More interestingly, the expansion of the strategic reserve will be conducted in a "budget-neutral" manner—no taxpayer money will be spent on increasing holdings in the open market, relying solely on law enforcement confiscations to replenish the reserve. The Federal Reserve will be responsible for custody of these assets, and unless there is an extreme national economic crisis, they will remain untouched.
From a market perspective, this is a major turning point. The U.S. government has long been a "selling pressure" on Bitcoin, frequently auctioning confiscated assets. Now, it shifts to long-term holding and strategic reserves—this subtly weakens the historical market pressure exerted by government sales. More importantly, this could set an example for other major economies, prompting more countries to reconsider the role of digital assets on their national balance sheets.