According to data from Arkham Intelligence, the U.S. government currently holds over 183,000 Bitcoin, valued at approximately $12 billion, making it the largest governmental holder of the cryptocurrency.

Additionally, the government possesses 50,000 Ether, $121 million in Tether, 40,000 Binance tokens, and over 10 million Circle’s USD Coin.

Recent data shows that the government’s latest transaction involved 29,800 Bitcoin to an unidentified wallet on July 29, underscoring the recent trending strategic management of its crypto assets.

At the Bitcoin 2024 conference in Nashville, Tennessee, Senator Cynthia Lummis introduced a bill to designate Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset. She proposed that the U.S. should acquire 5% of Bitcoin’s total supply to reduce national debt and fight inflation.

Former President Donald Trump, during his keynote address at the conference, supported retaining the government’s Bitcoin holdings. Trump emphasized his desire to foster a robust Bitcoin industry in the U.S., free from excessive regulation.

Moreover, residential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. also proposed a similar idea and vowed to transfer the government’s Bitcoin to the Treasury and acquire 500 Bitcoin daily until the U.S. held 4 million Bitcoin if elected as president.

Despite this support, skepticism remains as Ari Paul, CIO at BlockTower Capital, estimates only a 10% chance of adopting Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset by 2028. He argues that informal political promises are insufficient to establish an official Bitcoin reserve.

As the U.S. government’s crypto holdings grow, the debate over Bitcoin’s role in national economic strategy heats up, potentially reshaping the future of digital assets on the geopolitical stage.

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