Colorado City Mayor Is Looking To Hold Capital Reserves In Bitcoin

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 12:14

Colorado City Mayor Is Looking To Hold Capital Reserves In Bitcoin

Bitcoin’s role as a reserve asset gains traction in - Cointelegraph

U.S. Bitcoin Reserve May Be Coming, But States Are Winning the

Bitcoin Reserves Are Reshaping Legislation: Why States and Cities

Discover how cities

Bitcoin as a Strategic Reserve

Discover how cities, states, and nations are adopting Bitcoin as a strategic reserve to hedge against inflation, enhance economic resilience, and shape global financial

Bitcoin Reserve Race: Which Countries Will Join?

Bitcoin is on track to

Countries that are planning for a strategic Bitcoin reserve 1. United States. As of, progress on the US Bitcoin reserve remains mostly in the proposal

Bitcoin is on track to “becoming a mainstream reserve asset” thanks to growing institutional and national-level adoption, according to Isaac Joshua CEO of crypto

Its mayor has passed a motion to Vancouver's council to make the city Bitcoin-friendly. It advocates using Bitcoin as a reserve asset and accepting it for tax

Currently

On November 28, Neil Jacobs, host of the podcast Inside Bitcoin, tweeted that the mayor of Colorado Central City mentioned at Clubhouse that he is proposing to invest 20% of his capital

Currently, five statesTexas, Pennsylvania, Ohio, New Hampshire and North Dakotaare actively considering proposals to incorporate Bitcoin into their financial

Sixteen states are considering active legislation to put public money into digital assets, and three others are potentially poised to join them, weighing a range of

While their state government is

5 US States Mulling Bitcoin Reserves as Trump Pushes for National

The Five Countries Planning For A Bitcoin Reserve In 2025

While their state government is still debating what a blockchain is, they have already built a Bitcoin reserve, incentivized local businesses to adopt BTC payments, and attracted

Colorado City Mayor Is Looking to Hold Capital

The mayor of Colorado's central city proposed putting 20% of its