All Posts

Strategic bitcoins

Share

Greg Cipolaro

March 7, 2025

IN TODAY'S ISSUE:
  • The implications of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve.
  • Dispelling popular myths about stablecoins.

Trump Orders Strategic Bitcoin Reserve

On Thursday evening, President Trump signed an Executive Order creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) and a digital asset stockpile.

Like many of the administrative initiatives, this one went through a couple of iterations before the final version - initially a SBR floated at the Bitcoin 2024 conference, then a “digital asset stockpile” in the initial crypto EO issued after inauguration, then a social post last Sunday from the president stipulating a “US Crypto Reserve” including BTC, ETH, XRP, SOL, and ADA to now the recent EO, which stipulates both a SBR and a digital asset stockpile.

The order stipulates that the SBR and the stockpile would be formed from digital assets already controlled by the US government through civil forfeitures from various criminal cases over the years. For bitcoin, these stem from Silk Road and related forfeitures and the hack of Bitfinex. We did some analysis around this before - it hasn’t changed. No coins have been sold recently and nearly half the US government’s bitcoins come from the hack of Bitfinex.

No net purchases of other digital assets would occur, except potentially for bitcoin if it could be done in a budget-neutral way. The digital asset stockpile would consist of other digital assets obtained by civil forfeiture that could be held or earmarked for disposal. According to Arkham Intelligence, the US presently controls no XRP, SOL, or ADA, making Sunday’s social post, which sent prices skyrocketing (ADA was up over 60%) a bit perplexing. The US currently controls USDC ($122M), ETH ($121M), WBTC ($66M), BNB ($24M) as well as smaller amounts of other coins.

The fact this came through an EO rather than a law, like the BITCOIN Act from Senator Lummis, makes it much less permanent. EOs can be easily undone by the next administration, making the next election something of a sword of Damocles hanging over the price of bitcoin. We won’t have to worry about the US government selling its bitcoin stash, but only in the next 4 years. Still, we see the EO as supportive of the broader digital asset industry, and it gives bitcoin a special place within the ecosystem.

Dispelling Stablecoin Myths as Issuers Jockey for Position

With stablecoin regulation actively in the works by legislators, issuers are jockeying for position. Sparring in the press are the issuers of the two largest stables coin, Circle, issuer of the USD Coin (USDC) and recently Tether, issuer of the tether (USDT) stablecoin. Circle is a US based company, while Tether recently incorporated in El Salvador.

Stablecoins Are All the Same

Stablecoins come in a variety of styles, the most popular of which is off-chain reserved. Both USDC and USDT are of this style - their backing is in assets held in bank and brokerage accounts and coins are issued on a per dollar basis. On-chain reserve style is the second most popular, like DAI. Assets, like ETH, are locked up in a smart contract and a synthetic stablecoin issued against that asset. Algorithmic is the final category where a stablecoin’s value is typically balanced by another token endogenous to the system, which is minted and burned. UST (backed by LUNA) was a leading example of an algorithmic stablecoins, but the category has fallen out of favor with its collapse.

Stablecoins are Pegged

We saw this error in the stablecoin legislation and it’s a big one. There’s no “peg” typically for stablecoins, just a market price. It’s kept near $1.00 because of market forces. Arbitrageurs can buy the token at a discount and put it back to the issuer for the exact dollar value. They can also short it at a premium to $1.00, take the cash proceeds to the issuer, and have it issue a commensurate number of coins, covering the short. Again, to call it a “peg” is false and misleading for most stablecoins.

Stablecoins are a Single Asset

Even though we call the stablecoins “USDC” or “USDT” they are really a collection of digital assets issued on different blockchains. USDC is a set of 18 assets on different networks while USDT is 17 tokens on different networks. Calling them one digital asset, while helpful in describing the broad set of assets under one issuer, is not correct.

Stablecoins are Decentralized

There’s nothing decentralized about on-chain reserve stablecoins like USDT and USDC. They have a central issuer, Tether and Circle, which have the authority to mint, burn, and freeze tokens. This is very different from something like Bitcoin, which has no central operator.

Market Update

Bitcoin rallied 6.8% in a week that was not without its volatility. Bitcoin and the digital asset markets got a significant lift on Sunday morning with President Trump’s social posts about the strategic crypto reserve but did a 180 on Monday as markets sold off with the jockeying around tariffs. News of the White House crypto roundtable lifted prices later in the week culminating with the Executive Order on the SBR and the crypto stockpile.

With the SBR catalyst behind us now, the next major catalysts are legislative and regulatory developments. The OCC came out today clarifying statements around banks and crypto related activities as a prime example. Many of the rest of the changes will be evident in the coming weeks and months, which all should be supportive of the industry.

Important News This Week

Investing:

Mexican Billionaire Ricardo Salinas Says He Has 70% Bitcoin-Related Exposure - CoinDesk

Dealmaker Michael Grimes Expected to Lead New US Sovereign Wealth Fund, Sources Say - Reuters

Regulation and Taxation:

President Donald J. Trump Establishes the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile - White House

OCC Clarifies Bank Authority to Engage in Certain Cryptocurrency Activities - OCC

Trump’s Crypto Czar David Sacks Says He Sold Crypto Holdings Before Administration Began - The Block

World Liberty Financial Amasses Millions in ETH, WBTC and MOVE Ahead of White House Crypto Summit - The Block

SEC Crypto Task Force to Host Roundtable on Security Status - SEC

Companies:

Safe Releases Analysis on Bybit Hack - X

Bybit Update on Stolen Funds - X

Upcoming Events

Mar 12 - CPI release
Mar 19 - FOMC interest rate decision
Jul 2 - Final SEC deadline for decision on GDLC ETF conversion
Jul 22 - EO Working Group report deadline

Start Reading
Start Reading
IN TODAY'S ISSUE:
  • The implications of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve.
  • Dispelling popular myths about stablecoins.

Trump Orders Strategic Bitcoin Reserve

On Thursday evening, President Trump signed an Executive Order creating a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) and a digital asset stockpile.

Like many of the administrative initiatives, this one went through a couple of iterations before the final version - initially a SBR floated at the Bitcoin 2024 conference, then a “digital asset stockpile” in the initial crypto EO issued after inauguration, then a social post last Sunday from the president stipulating a “US Crypto Reserve” including BTC, ETH, XRP, SOL, and ADA to now the recent EO, which stipulates both a SBR and a digital asset stockpile.

The order stipulates that the SBR and the stockpile would be formed from digital assets already controlled by the US government through civil forfeitures from various criminal cases over the years. For bitcoin, these stem from Silk Road and related forfeitures and the hack of Bitfinex. We did some analysis around this before - it hasn’t changed. No coins have been sold recently and nearly half the US government’s bitcoins come from the hack of Bitfinex.

No net purchases of other digital assets would occur, except potentially for bitcoin if it could be done in a budget-neutral way. The digital asset stockpile would consist of other digital assets obtained by civil forfeiture that could be held or earmarked for disposal. According to Arkham Intelligence, the US presently controls no XRP, SOL, or ADA, making Sunday’s social post, which sent prices skyrocketing (ADA was up over 60%) a bit perplexing. The US currently controls USDC ($122M), ETH ($121M), WBTC ($66M), BNB ($24M) as well as smaller amounts of other coins.

The fact this came through an EO rather than a law, like the BITCOIN Act from Senator Lummis, makes it much less permanent. EOs can be easily undone by the next administration, making the next election something of a sword of Damocles hanging over the price of bitcoin. We won’t have to worry about the US government selling its bitcoin stash, but only in the next 4 years. Still, we see the EO as supportive of the broader digital asset industry, and it gives bitcoin a special place within the ecosystem.

Dispelling Stablecoin Myths as Issuers Jockey for Position

With stablecoin regulation actively in the works by legislators, issuers are jockeying for position. Sparring in the press are the issuers of the two largest stables coin, Circle, issuer of the USD Coin (USDC) and recently Tether, issuer of the tether (USDT) stablecoin. Circle is a US based company, while Tether recently incorporated in El Salvador.

Stablecoins Are All the Same

Stablecoins come in a variety of styles, the most popular of which is off-chain reserved. Both USDC and USDT are of this style - their backing is in assets held in bank and brokerage accounts and coins are issued on a per dollar basis. On-chain reserve style is the second most popular, like DAI. Assets, like ETH, are locked up in a smart contract and a synthetic stablecoin issued against that asset. Algorithmic is the final category where a stablecoin’s value is typically balanced by another token endogenous to the system, which is minted and burned. UST (backed by LUNA) was a leading example of an algorithmic stablecoins, but the category has fallen out of favor with its collapse.

Stablecoins are Pegged

We saw this error in the stablecoin legislation and it’s a big one. There’s no “peg” typically for stablecoins, just a market price. It’s kept near $1.00 because of market forces. Arbitrageurs can buy the token at a discount and put it back to the issuer for the exact dollar value. They can also short it at a premium to $1.00, take the cash proceeds to the issuer, and have it issue a commensurate number of coins, covering the short. Again, to call it a “peg” is false and misleading for most stablecoins.

Stablecoins are a Single Asset

Even though we call the stablecoins “USDC” or “USDT” they are really a collection of digital assets issued on different blockchains. USDC is a set of 18 assets on different networks while USDT is 17 tokens on different networks. Calling them one digital asset, while helpful in describing the broad set of assets under one issuer, is not correct.

Stablecoins are Decentralized

There’s nothing decentralized about on-chain reserve stablecoins like USDT and USDC. They have a central issuer, Tether and Circle, which have the authority to mint, burn, and freeze tokens. This is very different from something like Bitcoin, which has no central operator.

Market Update

Bitcoin rallied 6.8% in a week that was not without its volatility. Bitcoin and the digital asset markets got a significant lift on Sunday morning with President Trump’s social posts about the strategic crypto reserve but did a 180 on Monday as markets sold off with the jockeying around tariffs. News of the White House crypto roundtable lifted prices later in the week culminating with the Executive Order on the SBR and the crypto stockpile.

With the SBR catalyst behind us now, the next major catalysts are legislative and regulatory developments. The OCC came out today clarifying statements around banks and crypto related activities as a prime example. Many of the rest of the changes will be evident in the coming weeks and months, which all should be supportive of the industry.

Important News This Week

Investing:

Mexican Billionaire Ricardo Salinas Says He Has 70% Bitcoin-Related Exposure - CoinDesk

Dealmaker Michael Grimes Expected to Lead New US Sovereign Wealth Fund, Sources Say - Reuters

Regulation and Taxation:

President Donald J. Trump Establishes the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile - White House

OCC Clarifies Bank Authority to Engage in Certain Cryptocurrency Activities - OCC

Trump’s Crypto Czar David Sacks Says He Sold Crypto Holdings Before Administration Began - The Block

World Liberty Financial Amasses Millions in ETH, WBTC and MOVE Ahead of White House Crypto Summit - The Block

SEC Crypto Task Force to Host Roundtable on Security Status - SEC

Companies:

Safe Releases Analysis on Bybit Hack - X

Bybit Update on Stolen Funds - X

Upcoming Events

Mar 12 - CPI release
Mar 19 - FOMC interest rate decision
Jul 2 - Final SEC deadline for decision on GDLC ETF conversion
Jul 22 - EO Working Group report deadline

Start Reading
Start Reading

This report has been prepared solely for informational purposes and does not represent investment advice or provide an opinion regarding the fairness of any transaction to any and all parties nor does it constitute an offer, solicitation or a recommendation to buy or sell any particular security or instrument or to adopt any investment strategy. Charts and graphs provided herein are for illustrative purposes only. This report does not represent valuation judgments with respect to any financial instrument, issuer, security or sector that may be described or referenced herein and does not represent a formal or official view of New York Digital Investment Group or its affiliates (collectively NYDIG).It should not be assumed that NYDIG will make investment recommendations in the future that are consistent with the views expressed herein, or use any or all of the techniques or methods of analysis described herein. NYDIG may have positions (long or short) or engage in securities transactions that are not consistent with the information and views expressed in this report. The information provided herein is valid only for the purpose stated herein and as of the date hereof (or such other date as may be indicated herein) and no undertaking has been made to update the information, which may be superseded by subsequent market events or for other reasons. The information in this report may contain forward-looking statements regarding future events, targets or expectations. NYDIG neither assumes any duty to nor undertakes to update any forward-looking statements. There is no assurance that any forward-looking events or targets will be achieved, and actual outcomes may be significantly different from those shown herein. The information in this report, including statements concerning financial market trends, is based on current market conditions, which will fluctuate and may be superseded by subsequent market events or for other reasons. Information furnished by others, upon which all or portions of this report are based, are from sources believed to be reliable. However, NYDIG makes no representation as to the accuracy, adequacy or completeness of such information and has accepted the information without further verification. No warranty is given as to the accuracy, adequacy or completeness of such information. No responsibility is taken for changes in market conditions or laws or regulations and no obligation is assumed to revise this report to reflect changes, events or conditions that occur subsequent to the date hereof. Nothing contained herein constitutes investment, legal, tax or other advice nor is it to be relied on in making an investment or other decision. Legal advice can only be provided by legal counsel. NYDIG shall have no liability to any third party in respect of this report or any actions taken or decisions made as a consequence of the information set forth herein. By accessing this report, the recipient acknowledges its understanding and acceptance of the foregoing terms.

Featured Research & Insights

Stone Ridge 2024 Investor Letter

Stone Ridge 2024 Investor Letter

Stone Ridge 2024 Investor Letter

Read Now
Report
Bitcoin's Protection under the First Amendment

Bitcoin's Protection under the First Amendment

Bitcoin's Protection under the First Amendment

Read Now
Report
Stone Ridge 2023 Investor Letter

Stone Ridge 2023 Investor Letter

Stone Ridge 2023 Investor Letter

Read Now
Report
Let's Connect

Want to learn more about NYDIG?

Please complete the contact form, and we will help you find the right person to learn more.