Trump Declines Creating A Strategic Reserve For Bitcoin
Former President Donald Trump refrained from making any firm commitments on the creation of an official U.S. bitcoin strategic reserve currency, during his keynote address on Saturday at the largest bitcoin conference of the year.
TakeAway Points:
- In his keynote address at the 2024 Bitcoin Conference, Donald Trump refrained from pledging to create an official U.S. bitcoin strategic reserve currency.
- Trump’s commitment was to only preserve the amount of bitcoin that the United States currently possesses as a result of obtaining assets from financial criminals.
- In comparison to RFK Jr.’s proposal to match the government’s present holding of gold with a strategic reserve of 4 million bitcoins, Trump’s idea was noticeably less dramatic.
Trump refrained from promising Bitcoin reserve currency
Instead, the Republican presidential nominee pledged simply to maintain the current level of bitcoin holdings that the U.S. has amassed from seizing assets from financial criminals.
“For too long our government has violated the cardinal rule that every bitcoiner knows by heart: Never sell your bitcoin,” Trump said at this year’s Bitcoin Conference in Nashville.
“If I am elected, it will be the policy of my administration, United States of America, to keep 100% of all the bitcoin the U.S. government currently holds or acquires into the future,” he said.
Trump’s strategy of permanently holding your bitcoin stake, through both bull and bear markets, is strongly encouraged within crypto circles, though it is not the U.S. government’s present approach.
Currently, the U.S. Marshals Service regularly auctions off bitcoin as well as other cryptocurrencies held in the country’s coffers such as ether and litecoin. These sell-offs can sometimes trigger drops in crypto prices, like earlier this month when Germany began to liquidate hundreds of millions of dollars worth of bitcoin it had seized.
In a closed-door round table held with a mix of donors ahead of Trump’s remarks on Saturday, the former president didn’t talk about the mechanics of his plan, but he did say he thought it would make sense for the government to hold bitcoin.
The gathering included investors Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, musician Kid Rock, Republican Senators Cynthia Lummis, Bill Hagerty and Marsha Blackburn, along with others, according to two people who were in the room.
Trump’s proposal comes short of expectation
Trump’s proposal was less revolutionary than some crypto enthusiasts had expected, and it failed to match the more sweeping pitch of third-party presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
“I understand that tomorrow President Trump may announce his plan to build a bitcoin Fort Knox and authorize the U.S. government to buy a million bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset,” Kennedy said during his own Bitcoin Conference speech on Friday.
Kennedy went further than Trump, promising to establish a 4 million bitcoin strategic reserve to match the country’s current stake in gold, some of which is held near the military base at Fort Knox. The independent presidential candidate said he would sign an executive order directing the U.S. Treasury to purchase 550 bitcoin a day, an act that would starkly alter how the cryptocurrency is regulated and valued.
As bitcoin becomes a more central issue on the campaign trail, spurred in large part by the growing presence of the crypto lobby in Washington, Trump’s reluctance to match Kennedy’s “bitcoin Fort Knox” commitment is notable.
But Trump’s reservation speaks to the complications of promising a bitcoin strategic reserve on par with the gold standard.