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I do not actually know what the Basel Committee is. So I read about it: the Basel committee is a standards body for banking. Individual countries adopt standards promulgated by the Basel Committee and enforce them through local laws and regulations.

So when the Basel Committee recently put Bitcoin in its most risky category of assets for banks to hold, it means most of the world's banks are going to have to hold more reserve capital if they want to hold Bitcoin.

A 1,250% risk weight, multiplied by the 8% minimum capital ratio, produces a capital requirement equal to 100% of the exposure: dollar for dollar. With buffers and internal targets, the effective requirement exceeds the exposure. A bank holding $100 million in Bitcoin must allocate $100 million or more in capital against a position that generates no yield. Under any reasonable hurdle rate, this is functionally equivalent to a capital deduction: the business case for regulated-bank Bitcoin intermediation is dramatically harmed, if not eliminated entirely.

The way they are treating Bitcoin is...different:

The Bitcoin Policy Institute recommends three reforms for the Basel Institute:

Immediate — clarify that pure agency custody is capitalized under the operational risk framework and provide a supervisory pathway for limited Bitcoin intermediation.

Medium-term — replace the fixed 1,250% default with a conservative FRTB-based market-risk approach plus operational-risk add-ons, and substitute graduated concentration limits for the binary 2% cliff.

Long-term — create a "non-issuer digital commodity" category with capital determined by measurable risk dimensions rather than technology labels.

I interpret this as: Bitcoin banking MUST be full reserve? I think that that makes sense? Any lower value would allow for paper Bitcoin, and any higher value would require banks to hoard Bitcoin.

Meet the team of parasites behind this push for fractional reserves that affinity scams their fiat maxi mindset with Bitcoin

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This BPI should not even exist !

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Agree. Remember why bitcoin was created. I'm rethinking that visit I planned to DC PubKey

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I'm rethinking that visit I planned to DC PubKey

Why?

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I'm kind of joking. The events seem slanted towards policy stuff.

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Ignoring it is possible if you aren't governed by it (or have another way to resist it.)

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Yes. That's why I'm still going

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I wonder how Jack feels about being the top zap on an org that advocates for paper Bitcoin 😂

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With so many nostr bots, all those zaps could even be from same individual, using multiple accounts and create a bandwagon of zaps and make others to zap too.

It's easy to manipulate people on nostr.

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It's easy to manipulate people because they don't follow that with great power (client-side filtering) comes great responsibility (actually configuring and maintaining your client-side filters.)

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basel 3 nsfr (net stable funding ratio) bitcoin vs gold (google gemini, llmv)

#1409097

Banks will eventually lobby / force basel to make the nsfrs for bitcoin and gold the same. Will take a few years though. Really bitcoin nsfr should be even better than gold due to superior auditability of bitcoin in custody and impossibility to counterfeit bitcoin vs quite possible to bamboozle large quantities of gold if you compromiae the assay team.

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the business case for regulated-bank Bitcoin intermediation is dramatically harmed

Won't somebody please think of the banks?

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Another factor.

I think basel being a bunch of nontechnical old dudes, puts bitcoin and overall crypto in same bucket, probably along with stablecoins and nfts. Honestly I don't blame them, it's treacherous out there.

If so, then until bitcoin gets its own bucket these exageratedly bad nsfrs are probably justified if only to protect banking system from getting looted by crypto rug pulls.

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