The U.S. government’s strategic Bitcoin reserve has shed roughly $5 billion in paper value during the recent sell-off, reflecting how closely sovereign crypto exposure now tracks broader market structure rather than political intent.
The scale of the drawdown becomes clear once valuation, not price, is examined.
At current levels, the reserve is valued near $13.8 billion, down from an estimated peak of $18.5 billion, marking a decline of approximately 45%.
The valuation hit coincided with Bitcoin’s sharp pullback during the early-2026 market shock, when price briefly traded near $60,000, a level not seen since late 2024.
Because the reserve has not actively traded its holdings, the losses remain unrealized, driven entirely by mark-to-market repricing rather than disposals.
From a structural standpoint, this exposes the reserve to the same volatility dynamics faced by large corporate treasuries that treat Bitcoin as a balance-sheet asset rather than a trading position.
The Bitcoin reserve was established in 2025 under the administration of Donald Trump, as part of a broader pivot toward pro-crypto fiscal policy. The rationale framed Bitcoin as a long-term strategic hedge against inflationary pressure and rising national debt, rather than a short-term speculative allocation.
That framing has not changed following the drawdown. Officials have continued to characterize the reserve as a multi-cycle asset, explicitly rejecting any need to respond to short-term price volatility.
The government’s posture mirrors strategies already visible in the private sector. Firms such as Strategy Inc. and Metaplanet have also absorbed deep unrealized losses during the downturn while maintaining accumulation or holding strategies.
In each case, the bet is not on near-term recovery, but on Bitcoin’s ability to reassert long-term scarcity value over multiple cycles. The difference, in this instance, is scale and symbolism: losses are no longer confined to corporate balance sheets, but are now visible at the sovereign level.
The reserve’s drawdown unfolded during what many market participants have labeled a broader “Great Crash,” a period marked by forced deleveraging, risk-off flows, and declining liquidity across digital assets. In that environment, paper losses become more visible, even if they do not alter underlying holdings.
Importantly, there has been no indication of liquidation or rebalancing. The reserve’s exposure remains intact, leaving its future valuation fully dependent on Bitcoin’s next structural phase rather than policy intervention.
The current losses underscore a fundamental shift: Bitcoin volatility is no longer just a market issue, but a fiscal one when held at sovereign scale.
While the drawdown is significant, it remains unrealized, and its long-term relevance will depend on whether Bitcoin ultimately fulfills its role as a strategic hedge, or whether prolonged volatility begins to challenge the political and economic tolerance for holding it on a national balance sheet.
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