Nick Begich’s Bitcoin Reserve Bill Goes Live With 20-Year Holding Rule
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Congressman Nick Begich’s Strategic Bitcoin Reserve bill has now moved from announcement to public legislative text, giving the market a clearer look at how lawmakers want to turn federal Bitcoin holdings into a long-term Treasury reserve.
The proposal, H.R. 8957, is titled the American Reserve Modernization Act of 2026. Begich introduced the bill on May 21 with Democratic co-lead Jared Golden and a group of Republican original co-sponsors, framing it as a way to establish a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and modernize federal digital asset management.
The bill remains at the committee stage and has not passed the House. Its importance is still obvious: the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve debate is no longer only an executive-order policy or campaign talking point. It now has a formal House bill with reserve mechanics, custody rules, transparency requirements and a long holding period.
Treasury Would Control Bitcoin And Other Digital Assets Separately
ARMA would create a secure Strategic Bitcoin Reserve inside the U.S. Department of the Treasury. It would also create a separate Digital Asset Stockpile for non-Bitcoin assets held by the federal government.
That distinction matters because the bill treats Bitcoin differently from the rest of the government’s crypto holdings. Bitcoin would be isolated as the strategic reserve asset, while other forfeited or federally held digital assets would sit in a separate structure with different management rules.
The framework builds on the March 2025 Strategic Bitcoin Reserve executive order, which directed the Treasury to establish reserve and stockpile accounts for federally held crypto assets. ARMA would push that structure into statute, making it harder for a future administration to reverse the policy without Congress.
The bill would also require federal agencies to provide a full accounting of digital assets currently held or controlled by the government. That is a key operational step because U.S. crypto holdings are spread across agencies through forfeitures, penalties and law-enforcement proceedings.
20-Year Hold Turns Seized BTC Into Strategic Supply
The strongest market detail is the 20-year holding rule. Bitcoin placed into the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve would be maintained for at least two decades, turning seized or forfeited BTC into a long-duration sovereign asset instead of inventory that can be auctioned off during each administration.
That would mark a major change in how federal Bitcoin is treated. Previous government auctions often returned seized BTC to the market. ARMA moves in the opposite direction by turning federal holdings into locked strategic supply.
The timing is notable because Bitcoin is under heavy market pressure. BTC recently traded near $60,700 after falling sharply during a broader crypto drawdown. ETF flows have also weakened, with a record 13-day Bitcoin ETF outflow streak removing one of the market’s strongest passive demand channels.
A federal holding rule would not fix short-term price weakness. It would, however, add a long-term political signal at a moment when more than half of Bitcoin supply has moved underwater and traders are watching whether public-sector reserve demand can become a real structural theme.
Proof Of Reserve Becomes A Federal Requirement
ARMA also leans heavily into transparency. The bill would require quarterly public proof-of-reserve reporting, independent third-party audits and congressional oversight around federal digital asset custody.
That matters because a U.S. Strategic Bitcoin Reserve would be politically sensitive from day one. The government would need to prove what it holds, where it is held, how assets are secured and whether any transfers or disposals are taking place.
The proposal also includes protection for lawful digital property rights, including the right to own, transfer and self-custody digital assets. That language is important because it separates a federal reserve framework from a custodial-control model over private users.
The reserve push is also no longer only federal. Texas has already moved its own Bitcoin reserve into an operational phase with custody planning and an advisory committee, showing that Bitcoin reserve policy is spreading across both state and federal levels.
The Bill Is Not A Market Buy Order Yet
The important caveat is that H.R. 8957 is not law, and it does not mean the Treasury is immediately buying Bitcoin on the open market. The bill still needs committee action, House passage, Senate passage and a presidential signature before becoming binding law.
Its budget-neutral language also matters. ARMA directs study work on lawful ways to expand reserves without increasing taxes, deficit spending or the national debt. That keeps the proposal politically framed around existing federal assets, forfeitures and neutral acquisition strategies rather than a simple taxpayer-funded BTC purchase program.
Even with those limits, the publication of the bill text gives Bitcoin reserve supporters a stronger policy anchor. The debate is now about the mechanics: who controls the keys, how holdings are audited, how long BTC must be held, whether non-BTC assets can be sold, and how Congress prevents the reserve from becoming another discretionary political account.
For Bitcoin markets, the near-term price still depends on ETF flows, liquidity, leverage and macro risk. For policy, H.R. 8957 turns the reserve idea into something more durable: a proposed federal asset-management framework built around Bitcoin as strategic property.
The post Nick Begich’s Bitcoin Reserve Bill Goes Live With 20-Year Holding Rule appeared first on Crypto Adventure.
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