logo
New Hampshire enacts law allowing state treasurer to invest in Bitcoin

New Hampshire enacts law allowing state treasurer to invest in Bitcoin

Boston Globe07-05-2025
'The whole point,' Ammon said, 'is the federal government is not managing fiscal policy, monetary policy well, and I don't expect them to do any better. It's going to get worse.'
Advertisement
This legislation will give the treasurer more options to diversify the state's investment portfolios and pursue returns that beat inflation, Ammon said.
Get N.H. Morning Report
A weekday newsletter delivering the N.H. news you need to know right to your inbox.
Enter Email
Sign Up
'We'll see what she does with it,' he added.
While several other states are
New Hampshire is once again First in the Nation! 🎉
Just signed a new law allowing our state to invest in cryptocurrency and precious metals.
— Governor Kelly Ayotte (@KellyAyotte)
Dennis Porter, co-founder and CEO of Satoshi Action Fund — a Bitcoin policy group that produced model legislation that Ammon used to craft the version that New Hampshire adopted — said in a statement the state had just '
This law authorizes the state treasurer to invest up to 5 percent of public funds in digital assets held by a 'qualified custodian' that meets certain criteria spelled out in the law.
Advertisement
New Hampshire State Treasurer Monica I. Mezzapelle told The Boston Globe that her office may consider using money from certain state funds that have 'a more aggressive or long-term strategy' to invest in digital assets, but the volatility of such investments makes them unsuitable for funds the state uses to cover its ongoing expenses.
Mezzapelle said the funds that might be a good fit for such aggressive investments currently total about $30 million, which means the state could invest up to about $1.5 million in digital assets — that said, there are no plans to buy cryptocurrency immediately. This law just adds digital assets and precious metals to an 'extensive' menu of authorized options, she said.
Notably, a digital asset must have a market capitalization that averaged at least $500 billion in the preceding calendar year to qualify for state investment. That means Bitcoin, which has a market cap of roughly
While proponents of the legislation cited the market cap threshold as a guardrail to ensure taxpayers won't be suckered by fad-fueled 'memecoins' and other especially risky investments, skeptics like Democratic Senator Cindy Rosenwald said the state was effectively 'picking winners and losers' by selecting the arbitrary threshold.
Rosenwald told colleagues last week they shouldn't authorize the state treasurer to 'gamble' taxpayer money on a notoriously volatile digital currency.
'At a time when we're going to be making very difficult budget decisions driven by a shortage of available funds … I do not believe it is prudent to authorize legislation that could expose state and local finances to this level of risk and unpredictability,' she said.
Advertisement
But a couple of her GOP colleagues said they have full faith in Mezzapelle to consider the available options and make prudent investment decisions.
'I absolutely trust our treasurer … she's done such a great job investing our current funds,' said Senator Timothy P. Lang Sr.
Senator Daniel E. Innis — who is also a professor at the University of New Hampshire Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics — said he doesn't personally invest in Bitcoin and wouldn't advise others to do so.
'However, I think we need to trust the treasurer to do the right thing,' he said. 'These are folks who understand markets. They understand assets. They understand how to invest for the best return.'
This article first appeared in Globe NH | Morning Report, our free newsletter focused on the news you need to know about New Hampshire, including great coverage from the Boston Globe and links to interesting articles from other places. If you'd like to receive it via e-mail Monday through Friday,
Steven Porter can be reached at
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Project 2025 author Paul Dans will challenge Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina
Project 2025 author Paul Dans will challenge Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina

San Francisco Chronicle​

time5 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Project 2025 author Paul Dans will challenge Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina

WASHINGTON (AP) — A chief architect of Project 2025, Paul Dans, is launching a Republican primary challenge to Sen. Lindsey Graham in South Carolina, joining a crowded field that will test the loyalties of President Donald Trump and his MAGA movement in next year's midterm election. Dans told The Associated Press the Trump administration's federal workforce reductions and cuts to federal programs are what he had hoped for in drafting Project 2025. But he said there's 'more work to do,' particularly in the Senate. 'What we've done with Project 2025 is really change the game in terms of closing the door on the progressive era," Dans said in an AP interview. 'If you look at where the chokepoint is, it's the United States Senate. That's the headwaters of the swamp." Dans, who is set to formally announce his campaign at an event Wednesday in Charleston, said Graham has spent most of his career in Washington and 'it's time to show him the door.' Challenging the long-serving Graham, who has routinely batted back contenders over the years, is something of a political long shot in what is fast becoming a crowded field ahead of the November 2026 midterm election that will determine control of Congress. Trump early on gave his endorsement of Graham, a political confidant and regular golfing partner of the president, despite their on-again-off-again relationship. Graham, in announcing he would seek a fifth term in the Senate, also secured the state's leading Republicans, Sen. Tim Scott and Gov. Henry McMaster, to chair his 2026 run. He has amassed millions of dollars in his campaign account. Other candidates, including Republican former South Carolina Lt. Gov. André Bauer, a wealthy developer, and Democratic challenger Dr. Annie Andrews, have announced their campaigns for the Senate seat in an early start to the election season, more than a year away. Graham, in an appearance Sunday on NBC's 'Meet the Press,' did not discuss his reelection campaign but fielded questions on topics including his push to release 'as much as you can' from the case files on Jeffrey Epstein, something many of Trump's supporters want the government to do. Dans, an attorney who worked in the first Trump administration as White House liaison to the office of personnel management, said he expects to have support from Project 2025 allies, as well as the ranks of Trump's supporters in the state who have publicly tired of Graham. After Trump left the White House, Dans, now a father of four, went to work at the Heritage Foundation, often commuting on weekdays to Washington as he organized Project 2025. The nearly 1,000-page policy blueprint, with chapters written by leading conservative thinkers, calls for dismantling the federal government and downsizing the federal workforce, among other right-wing proposals for the next White House. 'To be clear, I believe that there is a 'deep state' out there, and I'm the single one who stepped forward at the end of the first term of Trump and really started to drain the swamp,' Dans said, noting he compiled much of the book from his kitchen table in Charleston. Among the goals, he said, was to 'deconstruct the administrative state,' which he said is what the Trump administration has been doing, pointing in particular to former Trump adviser Elon Musk's work at the Department of Government Efficiency shuttering federal offices. Dans and Heritage parted ways in July 2024 amid blowback over Project 2025. It catapulted into political culture that summer during the presidential campaign season, as Democrats and their allies showcased the hard-right policy proposals — from mass firings to budget cuts — as a dire warning of what could come in a second Trump term.

Mike Collins launches Georgia Senate bid
Mike Collins launches Georgia Senate bid

Politico

time6 minutes ago

  • Politico

Mike Collins launches Georgia Senate bid

Mike Collins participates in Georgia's 10th Congressional District republican primary election runoff debates on June 6, 2022, in Atlanta. | Brynn Anderson/AP Photo By Nicole Markus 07/28/2025 08:50 AM EDT Rep. Mike Collins (R-Ga.) on Monday announced his bid for the Senate in next year's midterms, joining a now-contested GOP primary of hopefuls attempting to unseat Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff. 'We need a Senator who works for Georgia, not the California crazies or New York nutjobs,' Collins said in the announcement, posted to X . 'I don't know who Jon Ossoff really works for, but it sure as heck isn't Georgia.' Collins is the second Republican to hop in the party's primary, joining Rep. Buddy Carter. Both Carter and Collins are courting President Donald Trump's endorsement, with Collins including clips of Trump singing the representative's praises in his announcement.

PayPal to Roll Out ‘Pay With Crypto' Feature for Merchants
PayPal to Roll Out ‘Pay With Crypto' Feature for Merchants

Bloomberg

time6 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

PayPal to Roll Out ‘Pay With Crypto' Feature for Merchants

PayPal Holdings Inc. will soon allow businesses to accept more than one hundred cryptocurrencies at checkout. The option is going live in the coming weeks and will allow merchants to accept crypto such as Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tether's USDT and Circle's USDC, from wallets including Coinbase, OKX, Phantom, MetaMask and Exodus. When a consumer pays with crypto, the funds are automatically converted into fiat or PayPal's PYUSD stablecoin for deposit in the merchant's account.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store