VanEck proposes Bitcoin-linked Treasury bonds to offset $14 trillion in US debt (2025)

VanEck proposes Bitcoin-linked Treasury bonds to offset $14 trillion in US debt (1) VanEck proposes Bitcoin-linked Treasury bonds to offset $14 trillion in US debt Gino Matos · 1 day ago · 3 min read

NewsUSBitcoinDebt

Matthew Sigel described the proposal of a bond with 10% exposure to Bitcoin as “an aligned solution for mismatched incentives.”

3 min read

Updated: Apr. 16, 2025 at 1:32 am UTC

Share

Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content.

VanEck’s head of digital assets research, Matthew Sigel, has proposed the introduction of “BitBonds,” a hybrid debt instrument combining US Treasuries with Bitcoin (BTC) exposure, as a novel strategy for managing the government’s looming $14 trillion refinancing requirement.

The concept was presented at the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Summit and aims to address sovereign funding needs and investor demand for inflation protection.

BitBonds would be structured as 10-year securities consisting of 90% traditional US Treasury exposure and 10% Bitcoin, with the BTC component funded by bond sale proceeds.

At maturity, investors would receive the full value of the US Treasury portion, which would be $90 on a $100 bond, plus the value of the Bitcoin allocation.

Additionally, investors would capture 100% of Bitcoin’s upside until their yield-to-maturity reaches 4.5%. Government and bondholders would split any gains beyond that threshold.

This structure intends to align the interests of bond investors, who increasingly seek protection from dollar debasement and asset inflation, with the Treasury’s need to refinance at competitive rates.

Sigel said the proposal was “an aligned solution for mismatched incentives.”

Investor breakeven

According to Sigel’s projections, the investor breakeven for BitBonds depends on the bond’s fixed coupon and Bitcoin’s compound annual growth rate (CAGR).

For bonds with a 4% coupon, the breakeven BTC CAGR is 0%. However, for lower-yielding versions, breakeven thresholds are higher: 13.1% CAGR for 2% coupon bonds and 16.6% for 1% coupon bonds.

If Bitcoin CAGR remains between 30% to 50%, modeled returns rise sharply across all coupon tiers, with investor gains reaching up to 282%.

Sigel said BitBonds would be a “convex bet” for investors who believe in Bitcoin as the instrument would offer asymmetric upside while retaining a base layer of risk-free return.However, their structure means investors bear the full downside of Bitcoin exposure.

Lower coupon bonds could produce steep negative returns in scenarios where BTC loses value. For example, a 1% coupon BitBond would lose 20% to 46%, depending on Bitcoin’s underperformance.

Treasury benefits

From the US government’s perspective, the core benefit of BitBonds would be lower borrowing costs.Even if Bitcoin appreciates modestly or not at all, the Treasury will save on interest payments compared to traditional 4% fixed-rate bonds.

According to Sigel’s analysis, the government’s breakeven interest rate is approximately 2.6%. Issuing bonds with coupons below that level would reduce annual debt service, generating savings even in flat or declining Bitcoin scenarios.

Sigel projected that issuing $100 billion in BitBonds with a 1% coupon and no BTC upside would save the government $13 billion over the bond’s life. If Bitcoin reaches a 30% CAGR, the same issuance could yield over $40 billion in additional value, primarily from shared Bitcoin gains.

Sigel also pointed out that this approach would create a differentiated sovereign bond class, offering the US asymmetric upside exposure to Bitcoin while reducing dollar-denominated obligations.

He added:

“BTC upside just sweetens the deal. Worst case: cheap funding. Best case: long-vol exposure to the hardest asset on Earth.”

The breakeven BTC CAGR for the government rises with higher bond coupons, reaching 14.3% for 3% coupon BitBonds and 16.3% for 4% coupon versions. In adverse BTC scenarios, the Treasury would lose value only if it issued higher-coupon bonds while BTC underperformed.

Trade-offs on issuance complexity and risk allocation

Despite the potential benefits, VanEck’s presentation acknowledges the structure’s shortcomings. Investors take on Bitcoin’s downside without full upside participation, and lower-coupon bonds become unattractive unless Bitcoin performs exceptionally well.

Structurally, the Treasury would also need to issue more debt to compensate for the 10% of proceeds used to purchase Bitcoin. Every $100 billion in funding would require an additional 11.1% to offset the BTC allocation.

The proposal suggests possible design improvements, including downside protection to shield investors from sharp BTC declines partially.

Mentioned in this article

Bitcoin VanEck

Posted In: Bitcoin, US, Adoption, Crypto, Debt, Featured

Author

Gino Matos Reporter at CryptoSlate

Gino Matos is a law school graduate and a seasoned journalist with six years of experience in the crypto industry. His expertise primarily focuses on the Brazilian blockchain ecosystem and developments in decentralized finance (DeFi).

@pelimatos LinkedIn Email Gino

Editor

Assad Jafri

Editor & Reporter at CryptoSlate

AJ, a passionate journalist since Yemen's 2011 Arab Spring, has honed his skills worldwide for over a decade. Specializing in financial journalism, he now focuses on crypto reporting.

@Saajthebard LinkedIn Email Editor

Ad Messari Reports Strong Q1 for TRON with Record Revenue, $19B Daily USDT Volume

Ad

CryptoSlate on X x.com/cryptoslate Follow us on X for your essential dose of daily crypto news and deep dives. Follow @cryptoslate
Latest US Stories
VanEck’s Onchain Economy ETF ‘NODE’ cleared for May 14 launchETF 2 mins ago
Fed Chair Powell advocates for stablecoin regulation, signals openness to crypto innovationStablecoins 3 hours ago
World Liberty Financial eyes global expansion as DWF Labs acquire $25 million of its tokenDeFi 7 hours ago
Oklahoma exits Bitcoin reserve race as Senate rejects billLegislation 11 hours ago
Latest Bitcoin Stories
Panama City council greenlights crypto payments for tax, public servicesAdoption 47 mins ago
Family offices show stronger preference for Ethereum ETFs over BitcoinETF 2 hours ago
China debates $50B in seized crypto policy shift, urged to create national reserveCrypto 8 hours ago
Latest Alpha Market Report
Available exclusively viaThe Trump administration’s deregulation of crypto enforcement Andjela Radmilac · 10 hours ago CryptoSlate's latest report dives deep into the policy reversal that has reshaped the relationship between the US federal government and the crypto industry.
Press Releases

View All

FFGI Announces FFG Token: A New Chapter in Blockchain-Based Film Finance Chainwire 7 hours ago
DWF Labs Announces U.S. Expansion with New Office as Part of Growth Strategy, Unveils $25M Strategic World Liberty Financial (WLFI) Token Purchase Chainwire 9 hours ago
AB DAO and Bitget Launch Dual Reward Campaign, Distributing $2.6M Worth of $AB Globally Chainwire 13 hours ago
MIT-Incubated Optimum Raises $11M to Build Web3’s Missing Memory Layer Chainwire 1 day ago

Disclaimer: Our writers' opinions are solely their own and do not reflect the opinion of CryptoSlate. None of the information you read on CryptoSlate should be taken as investment advice, nor does CryptoSlate endorse any project that may be mentioned or linked to in this article. Buying and trading cryptocurrencies should be considered a high-risk activity. Please do your own due diligence before taking any action related to content within this article. Finally, CryptoSlate takes no responsibility should you lose money trading cryptocurrencies.

VanEck proposes Bitcoin-linked Treasury bonds to offset $14 trillion in US debt (2025)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Dan Stracke

Last Updated:

Views: 6436

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (43 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Dan Stracke

Birthday: 1992-08-25

Address: 2253 Brown Springs, East Alla, OH 38634-0309

Phone: +398735162064

Job: Investor Government Associate

Hobby: Shopping, LARPing, Scrapbooking, Surfing, Slacklining, Dance, Glassblowing

Introduction: My name is Dan Stracke, I am a homely, gleaming, glamorous, inquisitive, homely, gorgeous, light person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.