
Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset: the economic rationale
9 min read
In an era of economic uncertainty, with rising national debts, inflation pressures, and geopolitical tensions, governments are rethinking the composition of their strategic reserve assets. Traditionally, gold, foreign currencies, and commodities like oil have served as buffers to stabilize economies and hedge against crises. Enter Bitcoin, a decentralized, finite-supply digital asset launched in 2009, is now gaining traction. The United States’ establishment of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve in March 2025 marks a pivotal moment, sparking a global debate about Bitcoin’s role in national reserves. We explore the economic rationale for Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset, weighing its benefits against its risks and drawing on recent developments, academic research, and global trends.
Strategic reserve assets are held by central banks to ensure economic stability, manage balance of payments, and provide resilience during crises. Gold, valued at $2.2 trillion in global central bank reserves as of Q1 2024, and foreign exchange reserves, totaling $12.3 trillion, are cornerstones of this system. These assets hedge inflation, diversify risk, and signal economic credibility. Bitcoin, with its fixed supply of 21 million coins and censorship-resistant blockchain, is emerging as a candidate to complement these traditional assets. Countries like El Salvador, Brazil, and now the US are pioneering this shift, driven by Bitcoin’s unique properties and the evolving global financial landscape.
We have also seen individual states in the US such as New Hampshire enacting HB 302, establishing the nation’s first Bitcoin & Digital Assets Reserve with a similar initiative in Arizona which was recently approved by the state governor, demonstrating improving appetite for bitcoin amongst state officials. Texas, as a country that would be the 8th largest in the world, has also recently signed a strategic bitcoin reserve officially established as a fund outside the state treasury through Senate Bill No. 21.
Why are governments, typically cautious by nature, beginning to consider Bitcoin alongside traditional assets like gold and foreign currencies? The answer lies in structural dynamics rather than speculative enthusiasm.
What makes Bitcoin different
Scarcity That Cannot Be Manipulated - Bitcoin has a capped supply of 21 million coins. This fixed ceiling is not subject to political decisions, unlike fiat currencies or even gold. It provides predictability at a time when balance sheets continue expanding.
Since its inception in 2009, Bitcoin’s annualized inflation rate has decreased from 50% to ~0.83% post-2024 halving, compared to global fiat inflation rates averaging 2-5% annually (or higher in hyperinflationary economies like Venezuela). Bitcoin’s price has appreciated 165% annually on average from 2009 to-date, outperforming traditional assets like gold (7.6% annual returns) during the same period.
A Credible Hedge Against Inflation - Between 2020 and 2024, US inflation rose by roughly 20 percent. In the same period, Bitcoin increased in value by more than 1,000 percent. This is not just correlation. It reflects increasing demand for assets that resist monetary dilution.
Genuine Portfolio Diversification - Bitcoin’s low correlation with traditional assets makes it a useful tool for diversification - written extensively here. Even with its volatility, a modest 4% allocation improves the overall Sharpe ratio of reserve portfolios. Central banks are already modeling these benefits.
Resilience Against Sanctions - Bitcoin cannot be seized or frozen. In a world where access to global financial infrastructure is sometimes restricted for political reasons, Bitcoin offers sovereign flexibility. It helps protect countries that face geopolitical constraints.
Strategic Advantage: Bitcoin provides a globally accepted, borderless asset that can be transferred instantly without reliance on intermediaries like banks or SWIFT. This is valuable for international trade, remittances, or reserves in countries with unstable financial systems.
A Signal of Technological Credibility - Owning Bitcoin signals that a country is engaging with financial innovation. It demonstrates both awareness and intent. This is about more than monetary hedging. It is also about showing leadership in a changing financial landscape.
A Signal of Innovation - Adopting Bitcoin positions a country as a leader in the digital economy, attracting investment and fostering innovation. The US’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve signals forward-thinking policy. This mirrors El Salvador’s 2021 adoption, which boosted its global tech profile. In a world shifting toward digital finance, Bitcoin aligns with the technological evolution of money, unlike static traditional reserves.
Crisis Resilience - Bitcoin’s decentralized nature insulates it from traditional financial system failures, such as bank defaults, sovereign debt crises, or currency collapses. Its cryptographic security ensures trustless value storage.
The Silicon Valley Bank collapse (March 2023): Bitcoin rose 40% from $20,000 to $28,000 in two weeks, while US bank stocks fell 25%, with many of our clients expressing the need for an asset unassociated with the financial system.
During the 2022 Russia-Ukraine conflict, Bitcoin was used to bypass financial sanctions and capital controls. Ukrainian NGOs and individuals received over $100 million in Bitcoin donations, demonstrating its utility in crisis scenarios where traditional financial systems were restricted (source: Chainalysis, 2022).
In a world of rising sovereign debt (US at 115% of GDP), Bitcoin offers a non-sovereign alternative that is immune to default risk or quantitative easing.
Technological Resilience
Bitcoin’s network has operated with 99.98% uptime since 2009, with no successful hacks of the core protocol. Its hash rate (computational power securing the network) reached ~900 EH/s in 2025, making it the most secure blockchain by computational standards.
Bitcoin’s resilience against cyberattacks and its global distribution of nodes makes it a robust long-term store of value compared to centralized systems vulnerable to single points of failure.
Its hash rate growth reflects increasing security, rising from 1 EH/s in 2016 to 900 EH/s in 2025.
Understanding the risks
Volatility - Bitcoin is still volatile. This is a result of its relatively early stage and supply constraints. That said, its volatility makes reserve management more complex but has recently for the first time declined to below that of gold.
Limited Adoption for Settlement - While Bitcoin is widely recognised, it is not yet widely used for trade settlement. This limits its immediate utility unless supported by broader infrastructure, such as stablecoins or payment platforms.
Regulatory Uncertainty - Not every jurisdiction has clearly defined its stance on Bitcoin. This can introduce complications for reserve managers, especially in international arrangements.
Inflexibility During Crises - Bitcoin’s fixed supply means it cannot be increased during emergencies. This constraint is part of its appeal, but it also limits its use as a counter-cyclical instrument, unlike fiat currencies.
Comparing Bitcoin and traditional reserves
Central banks should hold Bitcoin
Bitcoin offers a forward-thinking option for nations seeking economic resilience in the digital age. Its ability to hedge inflation, diversify portfolios, and navigate geopolitical risks makes it a compelling complement to gold and forex reserves. The US’s 2025 move, driven by a $35 trillion national debt and bipartisan support, signals growing acceptance, though skepticism persists among economists wary of its speculative nature.
The global financial system is under strain—rising debts, persistent inflation, and geopolitical fractures demand new tools. The US’s 2025 reserve move, Brazil’s RESBit proposal, and Russia’s exploration reflect a game-theoretic race to secure Bitcoin’s finite supply. Central banks already hold US$2.2 trillion in gold and US$12.3 trillion in forex, yet these assets face limitations: gold’s physical constraints and forex’s exposure to centralized policies. Bitcoin’s US$2 trillion market cap and growing institutional adoption make it a viable complement.