The structural debate surrounding the modernization of sovereign wealth custody has reached the highest echelons of the Taiwanese government. In a landmark legislative turn, prominent legislator Dr. Ko Ju-Chun formally presented an extensive policy report from the U.S.-based Bitcoin Policy Institute (BPI) directly to Premier Cho Jung-tai and Central Bank of China (CBC) Governor Yang Chin-long during an active interpellation session in the Legislative Yuan. The delivery of the BPI report has successfully broken a multi-year policy bottleneck, forcing Taiwan’s executive branch and financial regulators to officially re-evaluate the strategic inclusion of Bitcoin within the nation’s massive sovereign balance sheet.

The high-stakes legislative push represents a direct reaction to an increasingly volatile macroeconomic and regional reality. Taiwan currently commands roughly $602 billion in total foreign exchange reserves, making it one of the largest sovereign asset holders on the globe. However, independent audits reveal an extreme concentration risk, with more than 80 percent of those state assets currently parked in U.S. dollar-denominated vehicles and American Treasury bonds. BPI’s specialized policy framework argues that this heavy reliance leaves Taiwan deeply exposed to structural dollar debasement while failing to provide adequate financial flexibility during a severe cross-strait crisis.

Overcoming the Blockade Vulnerability via Non-Physical Portability

The core argument driving the Bitcoin Policy Institute’s research—authored by BPI fellow Jacob Langenkamp—centers heavily on national security and geopolitical insurance. The framework notes that in a catastrophic scenario where the People’s Republic of China implements a total physical naval and airspace blockade or an outright invasion of the island, Taiwan’s legacy reserve assets face immediate operational restrictions. Under a prolonged blockade, the nation’s physical gold reserves would be effectively stranded and unable to be shipped globally to fund vital supply chains, while its electronic U.S. dollar balances could face severe liquidity bottlenecks or clearing delays through centralized Western banking infrastructure.

Uniquely for Taiwan, a decentralized digital commodity addresses these specific sovereign vulnerabilities simultaneously. Because Bitcoin exists purely as an immutable cryptographically secured ledger distributed across a global network of independent nodes, it can be seamlessly accessed, verified, and transacted without requiring physical transport or relying on a single foreign clearing house. This structural portability guarantees that even under total geographic isolation, Taiwan’s leadership would maintain direct control over a globally liquid, un-seizable reserve pool to clear cross-border trade, secure essential foreign inputs, and preserve domestic monetary sovereignty.

Turning Seized Criminal Subsidies into a Dedicated Regulatory Sandbox

The legislative strategy proposed to initialize this strategic reserve focuses on co-opting existing state-managed assets rather than deploying fresh taxpayer funds into volatile spot markets. Under continued pressure from pro-crypto lawmakers, the Ministry of Justice publicly disclosed that Taiwanese law enforcement currently holds at least 210 BTC—valued at roughly $14 million—confiscated during major domestic criminal and anti-fraud investigations. While sovereign agencies traditionally auction off seized crypto assets for fiat currency, lawmakers are successfully pushing a “hold steady” strategy to use these existing tokens as seed funding to launch a state-backed digital asset sandbox.

This incremental blueprint closely mirrors successful sovereign accumulation frameworks pioneered by the United States Strategic Bitcoin Reserve executive orders, allowing regulators to build vital institutional expertise before scaling up corporate allocations. While the CBC originally dismissed Bitcoin as a reserve asset in late 2025 citing valid concerns regarding short-term price volatility and custody execution, the bank has officially reversed its absolute refusal, committing to use the 210 seized tokens to actively test multi-signature institutional custody arrays and liquidity-routing networks. As the Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) simultaneously moves to finalize a comprehensive Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) law, Taiwan’s methodical policy pivot demonstrates how a high-tech economy can build an ironclad digital moat to protect its wealth from both economic debasement and kinetic geopolitical shocks