logo
Reserve managers overwhelmingly reject digital assets

Reserve managers overwhelmingly reject digital assets

Business Times05-07-2025
THAT the US will inevitably devalue or renege on its sovereign debt, probably through inflation and money-printing, found easy consensus at a recent private dinner for family offices and sovereign funds attended by the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF).
A furious and intractable row broke out, however, about whether gold or Bitcoin was the better alternative to the US dollar, while the renminbi and the euro went unmentioned. If a reserve manager were also present it would perhaps have swung the argument.
OMFIF's Global Public Investor (GPI) 2025 found that not a single central bank surveyed holds any digital assets, and 93 per cent have no intention of doing so. Of the institutions in question, representing US$5 trillion of global reserves, there were outliers in the Middle East plus a lone voice in Europe. The pronounced conservativism extended beyond distributed-ledger technology assets to the technology itself: 82 per cent of respondents neither use it nor intend to in future, even though some of their central bank digital currency teams are getting ready to do so.
What is holding the vast majority of reserve managers back from the crypto party, at a time when the same survey found 58 per cent looking for diversification?
Even though they resemble reserve-like money more than they resemble securities, the main reason not to hold stablecoins is very simple. Regulators – including central banks – are mostly intent on preventing them from paying a yield (which is also why their operators are incredibly profitable). As Larry Hathaway, global investment strategist at Franklin Templeton, explained at the launch of the GPI report, there wouldn't be many takers for this kind of 'negative carry', and reserve managers might as well directly hold the kind of government money market instruments that sit in stablecoins' collateral pools.
Daniela Klingebiel, who helped manage the Reserve Advisory and Management Partnership for the World Bank, added a host of other factors militating against stablecoins as a reserve asset, rather than as a means of payment. These include legal and counterparty risk, custodial complexity, regulatory ambiguity, technical risk, credit risk (of the coin issuer) and the risk of de-pegging, which for example both USDC and USDT have done, and happens occasionally to money market funds, which somewhat resemble stablecoins.
BT in your inbox
Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox.
Sign Up
Sign Up
What about digital assets that more resemble securities or commodities, such as Bitcoin? Some observers refer to it as the 'new gold', primarily on the basis of its programmatic scarcity. Similar ecosystem obstacles exist to those for stablecoins, Klingebeil explained, in addition to the nature of the asset itself, which is volatile, illiquid and harder to trade compared to typical reserve assets. Nor is Bitcoin (yet, at least) used for cross-border trade and capital flows, both of which also significantly determine a national reserves managers' allocation strategy.
What of the 7 per cent of reserve managers at least keeping an eye out? At the GPI launch, Jan Kubicek, board member of the Czech National Bank, said 'we can pretend there is no such thing as Bitcoin or gain some hands-on experience with it', adding that this does not immediately equate, say, to 2 per cent of reserves. The ecosystem differences to other types of assets, including auditing and accounting treatment, posed major challenges, 'but still we are open to experimenting with it'.
The CNB has also explored the potential benefits of (non-)correlation, but 'not discovered any miraculous stabilising force' through a portfolio holding of Bitcoin, though all these factors may significantly change 'as it becomes more financialised'.
Public pension and sovereign funds, whose allocation objectives are more return-focused and less complex and systemic than central banks, are more adventurous. In the same survey, 7 per cent of those respondents already hold digital assets, and a further 20 per cent intend to.
Facts on the ground march on. US President Donald Trump has announced that the US would set up a strategic bitcoin reserve. The Genius Act, presaging the mainstream adoption of stablecoins in the US, has been passed by the Senate and awaits approval in the House of Representatives. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac may soon treat cryptoassets as legitimate collateral for housing finance.
The future path of stablecoins remains intriguing. They lack the value creation of programmatic scarcity and, for the most part, have no yield. They are not backed, for now, by central bank reserves, merely government debt and fiat cash. They have de-pegged in the past. OMFIF has heard that hedge funds are waiting to test them in a market dislocation. So why bother?
Stablecoins are saving counterparties material sums on payments. At an off-record event convened by a global universal bank and some of its key wholesale customers as well as OMFIF, a major consulting firm said that it is already using stablecoins for internal cross-border payments. The bank in question, a major transactions services player for whom this could be an existential headache, could afford to relax a little, though.
A leading multilateral development bank in attendance said that it did not wish to take on the theoretical risks of using stablecoins even for a short time, and would prefer to use the service in development by the bank, which uses stablecoins in the background to remit more quickly and cheaply.
If, in the end, the stablecoin and distributed ledger technology boom make the regulated financial sector faster and cheaper, it will have ended up at a version of the regulated Liability Network, thanks to the advancing threat of the opposite, which will leave the financial system broadly as it is. OMFIF
The writer is chairman of the Digital Monetary Institute at the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bitmine shares soar as billionaire Thiel reveals 9.1% stake
Bitmine shares soar as billionaire Thiel reveals 9.1% stake

CNA

time12 hours ago

  • CNA

Bitmine shares soar as billionaire Thiel reveals 9.1% stake

Bitmine Immersion Technologies shares jumped nearly 15 per cent in early trading on Wednesday after tech billionaire Peter Thiel disclosed a 9.1 per cent stake in the crypto mining and services company. Thiel has publicly praised bitcoin, a currency based on blockchain technology, and his Silicon Valley venture capital firm Founders Fund was among the early investors in the digital currency. The stake, which would make the Palantir co-founder the biggest investor in Bitmine based on the latest data, was revealed in a regulatory filing after markets closed on Tuesday. Bitmine shares were trading at $46.07, also boosted by bitcoin hovering near record highs and ether hitting a five-and-a-half month high. The stock has gained more than five-fold so far this year through last close, compared with the nearly 27 per cent gain in bitcoin. The company held about 154 bitcoins as of June 6 and 163,142 ether as of July 14 on its balance sheet, collectively worth about $535.5 million at current prices. In June, Bitmine announced a $250 million private placement to start an ethereum treasury strategy and said Fundstrat Global Advisors head of research, Thomas Lee, would serve on its board. The $2 billion market value firm engages in proprietary bitcoin mining and provides hosting services for third-party digital asset mining equipment. A few other small-cap companies such as SharpLink , Bit Digital and BTCS have added ether to their corporate treasuries, mirroring MicroStrategy's high-profile bitcoin strategy.

Bitcoin falls after major crypto bills backed by Trump hit snag in US Congress
Bitcoin falls after major crypto bills backed by Trump hit snag in US Congress

Straits Times

timea day ago

  • Straits Times

Bitcoin falls after major crypto bills backed by Trump hit snag in US Congress

Find out what's new on ST website and app. US President Donald Trump had hailed 'Crypto Week' during a post on his Truth Social site and urged all House Republicans to vote 'yes' on the measure. WASHINGTON - The fate of long-awaited cryptocurrency legislation in the US Congress was cast into doubt on July 15, as a procedural vote to consider the measures was shot down by lawmakers from both parties. The failure is a blow to the crypto industry, which was hoping for a series of legislative wins this week that would provide clarity and long-sought legitimacy to the digital asset industry. US President Donald Trump had hailed 'Crypto Week' during a post on his Truth Social site and urged all House Republicans to vote 'yes' on the measure. Bu several conservative Republicans joined with Democrats in blocking a procedural vote to allow consideration of three crypto bills as part of a dispute over how the measures should be packaged and considered. Shortly after the vote, House Speaker Mike Johnson told reporters that he planned to continue discussing the matter with members and hoped to vote on it again shortly. Bitcoin tumbled to US$115,222 on July 16, dropping 4 per cent in just minutes. Its price was last down 2.8 per cent at US$116,516.00, according to Coin Metrics. That marks a pullback from the day's high of US$120,481.86. Shares of crypto-related stocks including Circle Internet and Coinbase Global dropped on the news but then pared losses. Circle Internet fell over 4 per cent while Coinbase was down 1.5 per cent. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Las Vegas Sands' new development part of S'pore's broader, more ambitious transformation: PM Wong Singapore 'Kpods broke our marriage, shattered our children': Woman on husband's vape addiction Business US tariffs may last well after Trump; crucial for countries to deepen trade ties: SM Lee World Trump says Indonesia to face 19% tariff under trade deal Multimedia Telling the Singapore story for 180 years Life Walking for exercise? Here are tips on how to do it properly Singapore CDL's long-time director Philip Yeo to depart after boardroom feud Singapore 'Nobody deserves to be alone': Why Mummy and Acha have fostered over 20 children in the past 22 years The House was attempting to pass a series of crypto-related bills, most notably a bill that would establish a regulatory framework for stablecoins. Stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a constant value, usually a 1:1 dollar peg, are commonly used by crypto traders to move funds between tokens. Their use has grown rapidly in recent years, and proponents say they could be used to send payments instantly. That bill – and another the House is considering that would define when a crypto token is a commodity – would be a huge win for the crypto industry. The House also was set to consider a bill that would prohibit the United States from issuing a central bank digital currency. Republicans say there is a risk this could give the government too much control over Americans' personal finances. That bill has not been considered in the Senate and the Federal Reserve has not indicated a desire to develop a central bank digital currency. REUTERS

Standard Chartered launches Bitcoin, Ether spot trading for institutional clients
Standard Chartered launches Bitcoin, Ether spot trading for institutional clients

Business Times

time2 days ago

  • Business Times

Standard Chartered launches Bitcoin, Ether spot trading for institutional clients

[HONG KONG] Standard Chartered will allow institutional clients to trade Bitcoin and Ether through its UK branch, the bank said on Tuesday (Jul 15), becoming what it said was the first global systemically important bank to offer such crypto services. Some financial institutions have said they are seeing more client demand for crypto products as the price of Bitcoin hits record highs, helped by US President Donald Trump's pro-crypto stance. Institutional clients around the world, including corporates, investors and asset managers, will be able to conduct spot crypto trading through Standard Chartered's existing platforms, and will soon be offered non-deliverable forwards trading, the bank said in a statement. Standard Chartered already offers crypto products, including trading, via two independent subsidiary companies: Zodia Markets and Zodia Custody. Zodia Markets allows clients to trade more than 70 crypto assets, a spokesperson for Standard Chartered said. 'As client demand accelerates further, we want to offer clients a route to transact, trade and manage digital asset risk safely and efficiently within regulatory requirements,' chief executive bill Winters said in the statement. Crypto asset markets have gradually recovered in recent years, after a series of crypto company bankruptcies in 2022 revealed widespread misconduct across the nascent industry and left millions of investors out of pocket. The US House of Representatives is set to pass a series of crypto-related Bills this week, which the Republican majority has dubbed 'crypto week'. Some US banks are holding internal discussions about expanding into crypto, a sector many had previously avoided, and France's Societe Generale last month became the world's first major bank to launch a US dollar-pegged stablecoin. REUTERS

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