The Perils of Trump's Proposed Bitcoin Strategic Reserve
In 2021 Trump called bitcoin a "scam" but he seems to have realized his political coalition includes cryptocurrency enthusiasts.

Fourteen years ago, bitcoin was an experimental obscurity mainly popular among cypherpunks and libertarians, trading for less than a U.S. dollar. Since then, it has proven its success as a mostly swift and affordable way to move value globally, while experiencing unprecedented leaps in exchange value for dollars—as well as massive volatility. (Bitcoin first broke $100 in April 2013 and as of this writing is above $54,000.) Former President Donald Trump recently suggested that it's time for the United States to form a bitcoin strategic reserve.
"The government has violated the cardinal rule that every bitcoiner knows by heart: Never sell your bitcoin," said Trump, speaking to the Bitcoin Conference in Nashville in July. He vowed if he's president again that the U.S. will "keep 100 percent of the bitcoin [it] currently holds or acquires into the future" instead of, as it now does, occasionally auctioning it off through the U.S. Marshals service that confiscated much of it from accused criminals who, in some cases, stole the bitcoin. The government already possesses around 200,000 bitcoin.
This boosterism was a change of heart: In 2021 Trump called bitcoin a "scam" and a danger to the dollar's international dominance, but he seems to have realized his political coalition includes cryptocurrency enthusiasts.
Sen. Cynthia Lummis (R–Wyo.) has introduced a bill to make that strategic reserve real, working toward government ownership and stewardship of a million bitcoin—nearly 5 percent of the total amount that will ever exist, via purchases of 200,000 bitcoins a year for five years. The cost of that yearly purchase as this is being written would be $11.2 billion.
To finance these purchases, Lummis suggests revaluing Federal Reserve gold certificates to current market value (rather than the $42 an ounce established decades ago) and requiring the Fed to kick back to the Treasury in newly created cash money the amount of the increase in value of the certificates.
A previous huge and important U.S. strategic reserve was for petroleum, founded in 1975 as a response to price and supply disruptions after the 1973 Arab oil embargo. (The federal government also stockpiles medical supplies, foreign currencies, materials of military manufacturing importance, grains, and gold.) The way the U.S. has handled the petroleum reserve doesn't indicate it'd be a smart steward of any future bitcoin one.
As economist Alan Reynolds explained on the Cato Institute's blog in 2022, the government has mostly continued to buy more petroleum even at higher prices (which made the reserve, Reynolds concludes, "in the early 1980s….in effect, a price support program for OPEC oil") and to sell, when it does, at lower prices than the petroleum was bought for.
Bitcoin devotees have a strong incentive to go gaga over this idea, and many have. It would directly push prices upward by increasing demand, put billions of government dollars (taxpayer dollars) a year into the hands of private sellers, and signal to the world's big money powers, sovereign and private, that bitcoin is officially ratified by the world's richest and most powerful government.
Some concerns in the bitcoin community over the idea are about vibes: Wasn't this bitcoin experiment supposed to be about a financial system outside government control, not something for the state to co-opt for its own economic goals? Lummis sells the idea as a way to reduce future debt, which depends on bitcoin continuing to rise in value—something that is not guaranteed. Her bill would require the government to hold the bitcoin it buys for 20 years except for sales to reduce national debt.
But the government being a buyer and holder of the coin doesn't inherently give it any more control over your use of the coin than it already has. (The feds have proven in criminal investigations that bitcoin's pseudonymity can be highly porous.)
A more concrete worry is the government making market-disrupting moves at any time. The scheme could also turn bitcoin holders and miners into one more politically powerful rent-seeking force pushing the government to pursue policies to benefit them.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "The Perils of a Bitcoin Strategic Reserve."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Bitcoin first broke $100 in April 2013 and as of this writing is above $54,000.
Bitcoin, as of this writing, is above $71,000.
Bitcoin first broke $100 in April 2013 and as of this writing is above $54,000.
And, any day now, it's going to finally topple the Maduro Regime... or the Military Junta in Myanmar... or KJU's leadership in North Korea... or even China's Communist Dictatorship... or *even* the WEF and their globalist ESG-policies... any. day. now.
Bitcoin, as of this writing, is as likely to be $33,000 as $66,000. Fun stuff. Not something the government should be investing in methinks. In fact, lets decrease the amount of dollars the government is spending and/or "investing" maybe.
Nope still 71,000. This article was probably written on Sept 7 or 8.
And I agree US gov probably shouldn't be buying it. But they should be smart about selling it, and possibly hold onto some of it.
Nope still 71,000.
That was a simple joke about Bitcoin's volatility. Way to ruin it. 🙁
I have $0 in Bitcoin (or any crypto). I have a million plus in real assets. This is on purpose. Maybe someday I can afford to gamble with ethereal items.
If the democrats win (cheat successfully) next week, or Trump wins and they start insurrecting, there will be many opportunities for the well armed conservative/libertarian to fortify their hard asset reserves through democrat attrition.
What’s next? Loading up on NFT?
From Hunter?
Those apes have got to be _really_ bored at this point
Here's a crazy idea. How about a national currency that people have to "work" to obtain? And with a total number of units that is fixed so the government can't create more and devalue the existing units?
That would the gold standard for combatting mischievous fiscal policy.
Gold & Silver - One of the many [D]-pitched (Federal Reserve Act) violated provisions of the US Constitution.
Hey, none of those crazy Ron Paul ideas are welcome here. This is Reason, the Leftbertarian magazine.
Some concerns in the bitcoin community over the idea are about vibes:
As of this writing, 'vibes' is the most annoying word in English language journolisming.
The funniest thing is how the vibes should make one weep for the whole idea of crypto.
The government didn't exercise some nefarious supply-chain attack on networking infrastructure via the deep state and the FCC to throttle all bitcoin traffic on network hardware clenching a strangling Stalin-esque fist or putting up a Great Chinese Firewall or something. Just straight up "Yeah, we kept what thieves stole and we recovered, you know, stuff we would normally recover anyway, and we were thinking that we were maybe gonna buy some more."
Bitcoin was bailed out starting with Silicon Valley Bank. No surprise at all that that will continue.
A 'government strategic reserve' for bitcoin is not even remotely the same as monetizing a commodity.