Bitcoin mining is no longer controlled by the private companies. Governments are intervening unobtrusively instead. Based on the information posted by VanEck, several nation-states have become direct participants in the mining of Bitcoin. This trend is an indication of change in passively regulating to participation.
In the first place, there are energy economics. Mining is regarded as an effective means of monetizing countries that have surplus hydropower, geothermal power, or idle electricity. Second, Bitcoin mining enables governments to build strategic digital reserve without having to buy the assets on open markets. Due to this, mining presents economic and geopolitical benefits.
Bitcoin as Strategic Infrastructure
More to the point, Bitcoin mining is starting to resemble more of an infrastructure than a speculation. The governments will not have to depend on foreign mining pools because they support domestic hash rate. This enhances the resilience of the network and provides more visibility of the system to the states.
This would eventually redefine the intersection of sovereignty and digital objects. In a recent media interview, Matthew Sigel pointed out that the sovereign participation is a sign of confidence in the stability of Bitcoin in the long term. The governments are not responding to the price fluctuations but trying to project predictable issuances and energy conversion. This attitude is the opposite of short-term retail trading behavior.
Market Impact
Although the volatility of prices is the headline news, the effect is elsewhere. State-sponsored mining controls the increase in hash rate and decreases the abrupt termination of miners. As a result, the security model of Bitcoin increases. This structural support is more important than short term candles in a chart. These developments when combined, represent a new adoption phase. Governments are no longer posing questions on whether Bitcoin would survive or not. They are rather placing themselves in the system. This is similar to the previous trends where internet infrastructure has been adopted by states in advance without total regulation.
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