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Arizona Goes Full Crypto Cowboy: Second State to Hoard Bitcoin Like Digital Gold

Arizona Goes Full Crypto Cowboy: Second State to Hoard Bitcoin Like Digital Gold

Author:
Bitcoinist
Published:
2025-05-08 22:00:07
16
2

Arizona just flipped the script on traditional reserves—passing a bill to stash Bitcoin in its treasury vaults. Move over, gold bars; the Wild West of finance just got a blockchain upgrade.

Why it matters: While Wall Street hedgies fret over inflation, states are quietly building their own crypto moats. Arizona’s play? Treat Bitcoin like a strategic asset—not just a speculative toy for Elon Musk tweetstorms.

The cynical twist: Because nothing says ’sound money’ like volatile crypto parked next to taxpayer dollars. At least they’re not buying NFTs... yet.

Arizona Becomes Second In Bitcoin Race Among US States

HB 2749 passed both chambers with bipartisan support and was sponsored by Rep. Jeff Weninger, the Republican chair of the House Commerce Committee. In announcing the law, Weninger framed the legislation as a practical response to an economic reality that has already arrived. “Digital assets aren’t the future—they’re the present,” he said.

“This law ensures Arizona doesn’t leave value sitting on the table and puts us in a position to lead the country in how we secure, manage, and ultimately benefit from abandoned digital currency.” He added that the statute “protects property rights, respects ownership, and gives the state tools to account for a new category of value in the economy.”

Under the new statute, a digital asset is deemed abandoned if its owner fails to respond to three years of outreach. Once that threshold is met, the holder must remit the tokens—Bitcoin, Ether or any other cryptocurrency—directly to the Arizona Department of Revenue. The law authorizes qualified custodians to stake proof-of-stake assets, collect airdrops and harvest any other on-chain distributions generated by the unclaimed wallets.

All such revenue flows, together with any seized coins whose owners later emerge, are deposited into the bitcoin and Digital Assets Reserve Fund, an account overseen by the State Treasurer and subject to ordinary legislative appropriation. Nothing in the text permits an appropriation from the state’s general fund or any other taxpayer-supported pool; in that respect, the measure is “budget-neutral,” as its backers emphasize.

The nonprofit Satoshi Action Fund, which provided technical assistance during the legislative drafting, hailed the enactment as a blueprint for other jurisdictions. “Arizona just showed the country how to turn forgotten assets into a fortress against inflation,” said Dennis Porter, the group’s chief executive. “With HB 2749, lawmakers converted dormant dollars into digital gold—without touching the taxpayer’s pocket. It’s a win for fiscal responsibility and for every Arizonan who believes in sound money.”

Not Like New Hampshire

Governor Hobbs’ approval comes four days after she vetoed Senate Bill 1025, a broader proposal that WOULD have allowed the state to deploy existing public funds and seized property into Bitcoin investments. In her veto message, the governor expressed reservations about channeling public money into “untested assets.”

The narrower scope of HB 2749—restricted to property that the state already holds in trust for missing owners—apparently addressed those concerns. Observers now turn to Senate Bill 1373, waiting on Hobbs’ desk, which would authorize the Treasurer to allocate up to 10% of Arizona’s Budget Stabilization Fund to Bitcoin.

Arizona’s MOVE follows New Hampshire’s entry into the Bitcoin race just one day earlier. Notably, the New Hampshire bill approved a Bitcoin Strategic Reserve allowing the state to invest up to 5% of total funds.

At press time, BTC traded at $99,348.

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