91天堂原創

US Introduces Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, Clarifies Rules On Crypto Activity

March 11, 2025
Back
Alongside an executive order creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency has issued new guidance on the crypto-asset activities permissible in the federal banking system.

Alongside an executive order creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) has issued new guidance on the crypto-asset activities permissible in the federal banking system.

The , which President Trump issued last week, also authorises the creation of a US Digital Asset Stockpile, consisting of 鈥渄igital assets other than Bitcoin鈥.

The US "will not sell鈥 the Bitcoin in the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, the order notes.

The Treasury secretary will develop a strategy for the US Digital Asset Stockpile, which may include potential sales, but this has yet to be confirmed.

The order does not commit the US government to investing public money into Bitcoin, but this idea has not been rejected.

Instead, the Treasury and Commerce Department secretaries have been authorised to develop 鈥渂udget-neutral鈥 strategies for acquiring additional Bitcoin, provided they impose 鈥渘o incremental costs鈥 on taxpayers.

With more than 200,000 Bitcoin to its name (currently worth about $16bn), the US government is one of the world鈥檚 largest holders of the cryptocurrency.

But, as noted in the executive order, the US previously had 鈥渘o clear policy鈥 for managing these assets, leading to a lack of accountability and inadequate exploration of options to maximise their value.

David Sacks, the US AI and crypto czar, pointed out that, over the past decade, the country has acquired around 400,000 Bitcoin, but has lost about $17bn in value from selling much of it prematurely.

鈥淲e want to have a long-term strategy to maximize the value of these holdings,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e decided that Bitcoin is scarce, it鈥檚 valuable, and it is strategic for the United States to hold on to this as a long-term reserve asset.鈥

Developing crypto policy

One day after the executive order was issued, President Trump hosted the inaugural White House Crypto Summit, which was attended by Sacks, as well as Treasury secretary Scott Bessent and commerce secretary Howard Lutnick.

It also featured more than a dozen crypto industry leaders, including several other of the world鈥檚 largest Bitcoin holders (either in their own right or on behalf of their companies).

These included Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, co-founders of the Gemini exchange; Michael Saylor, executive chair of MicroStrategy; and Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase.

Little came of the summit itself, aside from  from White House staff to use Bitcoin, digital assets and blockchain to 鈥渄rive America forward鈥 and 鈥渞emain the leader in the global economy鈥.

However, on the same day as the summit, the OCC issued  clarifying the range of crypto-asset activities that are permissible in the federal banking system.

In an , the OCC confirmed that crypto-asset custody, certain stablecoin activities and participation in independent node verification networks are permissible for national banks and federal savings associations.

The letter also rescinds the requirement for OCC-supervised institutions to receive supervisory non-objection and demonstrate that they have adequate controls in place before they can engage in these activities.

鈥淭he OCC expects banks to have the same strong risk management controls in place to support novel bank activities as they do for traditional ones,鈥 said acting comptroller of the currency Rodney Hood.

鈥淭oday鈥檚 action will reduce the burden on banks to engage in crypto-related activities, and ensure that these bank activities are treated consistently by the OCC, regardless of the underlying technology.鈥

The American Bankers Association (ABA) welcomed the OCC鈥檚 action, noting that it had opposed the agency鈥檚 鈥渁typical鈥 oversight of digital asset activities under the Biden administration.

鈥淏anks have a critical role to play in the digital asset ecosystem, which has the potential to be a catalyst for change in traditional financial markets, and the OCC鈥檚 actions today are an important step toward enabling that success," it .

Our premium content is available to users of our services.

To view articles, please Log-in to your account, or sign up today for full access:

Opt in to hear about webinars, events, industry and product news

Still can鈥檛 find what you鈥檙e looking for? Get in touch to speak to a member of our team, and we鈥檒l do our best to answer.
No items found.