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Thanks for the correction. That means the SBR would actually end up holding more than one million bitcoin.
172 sats \ 2 replies \ @freetx OP 20h
Yes, reading the bill the idea is that after 20 years the SBR could sell up to 10% per year.
However I think that is a naive take....I think by the time we reach that point, the SBR would better be used a collateral for fiat loans. Or possibly better, is US Treasury issues "redemption certificates" using SBR as backing. We could wind up with a situation where US Treasury starts issuing its own money again, backed by SBR. (This is probably unlikely, but theoretically possible).
As an aside, Texas currently has a state Gold Depository bank. The idea is you deposit gold into Texas State controlled vaults and they issue you a "redemption certificate" for you to come redeem the physical gold at a later time. Clearly the idea was constructed with the idea that Texas State could become a "currency issuer" of sorts if people were to trade the certificates.....
A similar thing could happen via US Treasury / SBR.
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Twenty years from now will likely be a much different world. We could easily be in a scenario of bitcoin being legal tender. In which case, that reserve would basically act as a buffer to smooth out imbalances between revenues and expenditures.
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