US won’t start Bitcoin reserve until other countries do: Mike Alfred

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The US government is unlikely to start accumulating Bitcoin for its strategic reserve until other nations make the first move, says crypto entrepreneur Mike Alfred.

Alfred said in a podcast published on Tuesday that the US government will start putting Bitcoin (BTC) into its reserve created earlier this year “when there is enough pressure externally.” 

“Once the US government recognizes that others are taking action before them, that’ll probably catalyze additional action in the future,” he said, adding that the timeline for the US government’s action is up in the air.

Mike Alfred speaking on the Coin Stories podcast released on Tuesday. Source: Natalie Brunell

It comes as other industry executives have been pushing for the US government to step up its pace of accumulating Bitcoin to avoid the stockpile’s size falling behind other nations.

Most governments will have Bitcoin when it’s worth $1 million

Alfred said that he was confident that Bitcoin would be worth $1 million a coin by 2033, a more conservative estimate compared to ARK Invest CEO Cathie Wood and Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, who anticipate Bitcoin will be worth seven-figures by as early as 2030.

“I think by the time that happens, almost every government will have some direct or indirect exposure to the asset, and it will be viewed as a common strategic reserve type of asset,” Alfred said.