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Cryptocurrency News Articles

The UK Treasury Doesn't Want a Bitcoin Reserve and It's Making Sure We Get That

May 06, 2025 at 11:24 pm

The UK Treasury doesn't want a Bitcoin reserve and it's making sure we get that. Speaking at the Financial Times Digital Asset Summit in London, Emma Reynolds, the Economic Secretary for the Treasury, said on record that the UK won't be copying the United States government's crypto hoarding.

The UK Treasury Doesn't Want a Bitcoin Reserve and It's Making Sure We Get That

The UK Treasury has no interest in copying the U.S. government’s Bitcoin reserve and made that clear.

Speaking at the Financial Times Digital Asset Summit in London, Emma Reynolds, the Economic Secretary for the Treasury, said the country won’t be copying the U.S. crypto agenda.

“We don’t think that’s appropriate for our market. We understand that’s what they’re planning to do. But that’s not the plan for us.”

The U.S., now under President Donald Trump, has taken a very different turn on crypto policy. Emma pointed out that Washington has made “a big change from the previous administration” and is now moving aggressively toward storing Bitcoin at the national level.

But the UK isn’t buying into that logic. The country has other priorities and doesn’t see a reserve fitting into its financial framework.

“The U.S. administration is planning to take a different approach and perhaps hold some Bitcoin at the national level. But we’re not planning to follow suit.”

Instead of stockpiling Bitcoin, the UK wants to work closely with the U.S. on broader crypto regulation. Emma emphasized that cooperation still matters.

“We think it’s really important to have that collaboration and cooperation.”

Emma also confirmed that Chancellor of the Exchequer and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent have already met, and a formal working group has been formed. The “senior official level working group” will meet this June to discuss how both governments can tackle crypto oversight together.

The idea isn’t to follow the same path but to coordinate where it makes sense. The UK wants to stay in sync with Washington in areas like regulation but without mimicking the U.S. playbook line-for-line. When it comes to launching a Bitcoin reserve, Emma made it clear there’s no interest. The UK’s focus is elsewhere.

One of those focus areas is government bonds. Emma said the Treasury is currently looking into issuing sovereign debt using distributed ledger technology. She said the procurement process is already moving forward, and a tech supplier could be selected by late summer.

This doesn’t mean the UK is avoiding crypto tech—it just means the government is only interested in areas where it fits its goals.

Emma also shut down the idea that the UK will adopt the European Union’s strict approach to crypto. She dismissed the MiCA regime as too rigid.

“We decided not to go down that particular road. We’re engaging closely in the U.S. on crypto-assets regulation. We’re planning to cooperate closely with the U.S. administration on this subject.”

Unlike the EU, which Emma said prefers to “have a legal template in mind,” the UK is more focused on outcomes than legal templates. She said the UK’s legal style is “much less like that of the EU.”

The government wants crypto regulation to fall inside existing rules used for regular finance.

“Same risk, same regulatory approach. So if you’re a crypto firm providing payments services, then you’ll be regulated by the Bank of England under the Payment Services Regulations.”

But Emma didn’t pretend the government can control everything. She admitted that some parts of the crypto world are out of reach. Bitcoin was her example. Its decentralized structure makes it hard for any government to pin down.

“There’s only so much the government can do in that regard. We understand that some of this stuff is a little bit amorphous, and the decentralized stuff is particularly difficult.”

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Other articles published on May 07, 2025