Florida Hits Pause on Bitcoin Treasury Strategy as Feds Drag Feet on Crypto Clarity
Florida’s bold plan to hold BTC in state reserves gets shelved—another casualty of Washington’s regulatory paralysis. Meanwhile, Wall Street still charges 2% fees for shuffling paper bonds.
Why the cold feet? The Sunshine State’s treasury team cites ’uncertain federal guidance’ as the killer. No state wants to be the test case when the SEC’s enforcement hammer is swinging wildly.
Key takeaways: 1) This was never about tech—Florida’s blockchain infrastructure works fine. 2) The real roadblock? A federal government that can’t decide if crypto is a security, commodity, or existential threat to the dollar.
Closing thought: When even tax-haven Florida won’t touch your asset class, maybe the problem isn’t the technology—it’s the suits who still think ’blockchain’ is a type of ski resort accident.

Meanwhile, the entire nation is awaiting clarity from the federal level. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was expected to deliver a report on a nationwide Bitcoin reserve strategy following an executive order issued by President Trump in March 2025. Though the May 5 deadline has passed, no public update has been provided. The report is expected to detail how such reserves could be managed, what legal adjustments might be necessary, and whether Bitcoin is suitable for inclusion in national accounts.
With Bitcoin currently trading near $94,000, any green light from the Treasury could have major market implications—possibly even pushing the asset toward new record highs.