White House Says U.S. Is Structuring Bitcoin Reserve And Crypto Stockpile


The White House says the U.S. government is still working to structure its Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and separate digital asset stockpile, keeping federal crypto holdings inside the policy debate as market-structure legislation moves through Congress.

President Donald Trump created the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve in March through an executive order that directed the Treasury to hold forfeited BTC as a reserve asset. The same order created a United States Digital Asset Stockpile for non-Bitcoin crypto assets held by the Treasury through criminal or civil forfeiture.

A White House official later said Treasury was “working diligently” on the infrastructure for the Bitcoin reserve, with additional details expected after the administration’s broader digital-asset policy report left out reserve recommendations. That report focused on market structure, stablecoins, banking access, taxation and illicit finance rather than operational rules for the reserve.

The reserve structure still starts with government-held Bitcoin rather than taxpayer-funded buying. Treasury and Commerce officials were directed to develop budget-neutral strategies for acquiring additional BTC, while non-Bitcoin assets in the digital asset stockpile are governed separately.

Bitcoin Gets Separate Treatment From Other Tokens

The March order splits federal crypto holdings into two categories. Bitcoin receives reserve-asset treatment, while other forfeited digital assets sit in a stockpile that can be managed under Treasury control.

BTC deposited into the reserve cannot be sold unless required by law. The order also calls for federal agencies to review whether they hold Bitcoin or other digital assets that can be transferred into the new accounts.

That distinction has shaped the policy debate around future acquisitions. Bitcoin supporters have pushed for active accumulation, while the current framework remains limited to forfeited assets and budget-neutral strategies unless Congress gives the administration broader authority.

The White House reserve update also lands beside a fresh legislative push. The CLARITY Act is still moving through Senate negotiations after missing its July 4 signing target, with lawmakers working on SEC-CFTC market-structure language before the August recess window.

Reserve Policy Stays Tied To Legal Authority

Treasury still needs to define custody, account structure, reporting controls and management rules for both the Bitcoin reserve and the digital asset stockpile.

A larger purchase program would require a clearer legal path. The executive order allows budget-neutral acquisition strategies, but it does not create an open-ended mandate to buy BTC in the market with taxpayer funds.

The reserve debate has become one of the administration’s highest-profile crypto policy themes. Vice President JD Vance recently described Bitcoin as a strategically important asset for the United States over the next decade, tying BTC to U.S. financial competitiveness and China’s opposition to crypto.

The active framework remains the March executive order: forfeited Bitcoin goes into the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, non-Bitcoin forfeited crypto goes into the United States Digital Asset Stockpile, and future BTC acquisition work is limited to budget-neutral strategies.