ARMA Bill Revives US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Push

U.S. Representatives Nick Begich and Jared Golden introduced the American Reserve Modernization Act of 2026 on May 21, putting forward legislation that would establish a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve within the Department of the Treasury and set a minimum 20-year holding period for any Bitcoin held in it.

What the ARMA bill proposes

The ARMA bill would create two distinct pools of federally held digital assets. The first is a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve housed at the Treasury. The second is a separate Digital Asset Stockpile for non-Bitcoin digital assets already in government possession.

A strategic Bitcoin reserve, in plain terms, is a government-managed stockpile of BTC treated as a national asset, similar in concept to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Under the bill, Bitcoin deposited into the reserve would be maintained for a minimum of 20 years, preventing any near-term liquidation by future administrations.

The proposal also mandates quarterly public Proof of Reserve reports, independent third-party audits, and formal congressional oversight of all taxpayer-owned digital assets. It would additionally direct a study on budget-neutral acquisition strategies, meaning ways the government could accumulate more Bitcoin without increasing taxpayer costs.

This is a legislative proposal, not an executive action. It must clear committee markups, floor votes in both chambers, and a presidential signature before any of its provisions take effect.

Why the reserve debate is back on the agenda

The push is described as “renewed” because the concept already has executive backing. On March 6, 2025, the White House ordered the creation of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve and a United States Digital Asset Stockpile, stating that government-held BTC shall not be sold. That same order directed the Treasury and Commerce departments to develop budget-neutral strategies for acquiring additional Bitcoin.

ARMA would move that policy from executive order onto statutory footing. Executive orders can be reversed by a successor president with a signature. Legislation is harder to undo, giving the reserve framework durability that an order alone cannot provide.

The bipartisan sponsorship, with Begich, a Republican from Alaska, and Golden, a Democrat from Maine, signals that the Bitcoin reserve concept has supporters on both sides of the aisle. Lawmakers are framing BTC as a strategic national asset rather than a speculative instrument, a positioning that distinguishes this effort from broader digital asset regulation.

Still, bipartisan introduction does not guarantee bipartisan passage. The bill faces the same procedural hurdles as any other legislation, and its progress will depend on committee interest, leadership scheduling, and the broader political calendar.

What this means for Bitcoin markets and policy watchers

Bitcoin traded at $77,706 at the time of research, down 0.42% over 24 hours. The muted price action suggests markets have not yet priced in any legislative outcome from the bill.

Bitcoin spot price
$77,706
24-hour change: -0.42%. This frames the ARMA story against the current BTC market backdrop.

The Fear & Greed Index sat at 28, classified as “Fear,” reflecting cautious sentiment across the crypto market. Legislative proposals of this nature tend to act as longer-term sentiment signals rather than immediate price catalysts.

Crypto Fear & Greed Index
28
Current label: Fear. This supports the article’s live sentiment context without relying on a raw API endpoint.

For crypto policy watchers, the bill’s transparency requirements are its most distinctive feature. Quarterly proof-of-reserve reports and independent audits would set a new standard for government accountability over digital asset holdings, a framework that could influence how other nations approach sovereign Bitcoin reserves.

The 20-year minimum holding period is also notable. It would effectively remove reserve Bitcoin from the market for two decades, a structural supply constraint that long-term holders and institutional investors may view as bullish if the bill advances. Even figures like Mark Cuban, who recently disclosed selling most of his BTC, have acknowledged Bitcoin’s evolving role in institutional and government strategy.

Meanwhile, the broader crypto ecosystem continues to shift. Platforms are shutting down or restructuring as regulatory clarity becomes a competitive advantage. ARMA’s progress, or lack of it, will be one of the clearest indicators of whether the U.S. government’s Bitcoin strategy survives beyond a single presidential term.

The next milestones to watch are committee referral and any scheduled hearings. Until the bill moves past introduction, its primary impact remains as a policy signal: the bipartisan appetite for a legislatively backed Bitcoin reserve exists, even if the votes to pass it have not yet been counted.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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