Update Jan. 22, 3 am: This article has been updated to include a response from the El Salvador Bitcoin Office.
El Salvador has bought 12 Bitcoin for its reserve in the past day, despite an earlier deal with the International Monetary Fund to dial back some of the country’s crypto policies.
In a Jan. 19 X post, the country’s National Bitcoin Office said it bought another 11 Bitcoin (BTC) for its Strategic Bitcoin Reserve worth over $1 million. It also purchased 1 Bitcoin on Jan. 20 for $106,000.
The Bitcoin Office’s portfolio tracker shows El Salvador’s holdings stand at 6,044 BTC, worth nearly $610 million with the cryptocurrency trading at around $101,000, according to CoinGecko.
El Salvador’s total stash is now 6,044 Bitcoin, worth over $617 million. Source: El Salvador National Bitcoin Office
Speaking to Cointelegraph, a Bitcoin Office spokesperson said the country intends to keep buying Bitcoin, with plans to “intensify in 2025.”
“We have achieved not only the greatest rebrand in history, but we are now an actual case study for a winning country strategy,” the spokesperson said.
“The race is on for all countries, companies and individuals to accumulate as much bitcoin as possible. We are in it to win, too. This is just the beginning. Get ready,” they added.
Bitcoin briefly surged above $109,000 on Jan. 20, breaking its previous all-time high of $108,000, which it hit on Dec. 17.
Bitcoin’s new high came hours before Trump was sworn in as the 47th US president at 4:00 pm UTC.
President Nayib Bukele’s government struck a $1.4 billion financing agreement with the IMF last month in which it agreed to wind down some of its Bitcoin activities as part of the deal.
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Some of the changes made by the country included making private sector acceptance of Bitcoin voluntary and unwinding government involvement in the Chivo crypto wallet.
However, the day after making that deal, El Salvador bought $1 million worth of Bitcoin. National Bitcoin Office Director Stacy Herbert said in an X post that the country’s Bitcoin plans had not changed.
The Bitcoin Office spokesperson told Cointelegraph that their Bitcoin Country strategy has allowed El Salvador to accumulate the sixth largest government holdings of Bitcoin and have no plans to slow down.
“We are the first nation in the world to establish a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, a policy that now even the most powerful economy in the world intends to follow,” they said.
“Why would we alter our course and give up our advantage?” the spokesperson added.
In September 2021, El Salvador became the first country in the world to adopt Bitcoin as legal tender, following the announcement of the Bitcoin law.
Various US states have proposed legislation to establish a Bitcoin strategic reserve, while US President Donald Trump is also possibly considering it.
According to the Nayib Bukele portfolio tracker, El Salvador’s Bitcoin stockpile had a profit of $179 million as of Jan. 20.
EEl Salvador’s stockpile has a current profit of $179 million, thanks to the explosion in value of Bitcoin. Source: Nayib Bukele portfolio tracker
An October survey of Salvadorans found that 92% don’t make transactions using Bitcoin, an increase from a 2023 survey that found 88% didn’t use crypto for transactions.
El Salvador isn’t the only country that has made serious moves to accumulate more Bitcoin.
The South Asian country of Bhutan has been quietly mining Bitcoin for years.
In September, blockchain analytics firm Arkham Intelligence revealed that Bhutan held about $780 million in digital assets.
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