7 April 2025
US federal agencies are expected to disclose their cryptocurrency holdings to the Department of the Treasury by April 7, following an executive order signed by President Donald Trump earlier this year.
Citing an unnamed White House official, journalist Eleanor Terrett reported that the deadline for federal agencies to report their crypto holdings to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is April 7.
However, the disclosures will remain confidential for now. “Unclear as of now if and when the findings could be made public,” Terrett wrote.
Source: Eleanor Terret
Crypto disclosure follows Bitcoin Reserve establishment
The reporting requirement follows an executive order signed on March 7 that directed the creation of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a broader Digital Asset Stockpile. The Bitcoin (BTC) reserve will be seeded with BTC forfeited to federal agencies through civil or criminal asset seizures.
White House AI and crypto czar David Sacks described the reserve as a “digital Fort Knox for the cryptocurrency,” saying that the US will not sell any BTC held in the reserve. “It will be kept as a store of value,” Sacks added.
Sacks previously lamented the US government’s selling of 195,000 BTC for $366 million. The official said the BTC sold by the US government could’ve gone for billions if it had only held on to the assets.
The reserve will initially be seeded by the BTC kept by the Treasury, while the other federal agencies would “evaluate their legal authority” to transfer their BTC into the reserve.
Regarding the digital asset stockpile, Sacks said it would promote “responsible stewardship” of the government’s crypto assets under the Treasury. This includes potential sales from the stockpiles.
On March 2, Trump said that the crypto reserve would include assets like XRP (XRP), Solana (SOL) and Cardano (ADA). The US President later added Ether (ETH) and Bitcoin (BTC) to his crypto reserves list.
Related: 10-year Treasury yield falls to 4% as DXY softens — Is it time to buy the Bitcoin price dip?
Crypto plunges as Trump tariffs shock global stocks
While Trump’s election may have positively impacted crypto markets, the US president’s next move resulted in a market crash.
On April 5, the Trump administration hit all countries with a 10% tariff. Some countries were given higher rates, including China at 34% and Japan at 24%. The European Union was also hit with a 20% tariff.
Following Trump’s move, the overall crypto market capitalization declined by over 8%, slipping to $2.5 trillion.
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