Home » Arizona Senate Advances Digital Assets Reserve Fund (SB 1649)

Arizona Senate Advances Digital Assets Reserve Fund (SB 1649)

by Terron Gold
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The Arizona Senate has moved forward with Senate Bill 1649, which would create a Digital Assets Strategic Reserve Fund — a state-managed crypto reserve to hold, invest, and loan digital assets that have been seized, confiscated, or surrendered to the state. The bill passed the Senate Finance Committee with a 4–2–1 vote and was cleared by the Senate Rules Committee, so it now heads to a full Senate floor vote.

Fund administration & use:

  • The Arizona State Treasurer would administer the reserve.

  • Digital assets would be held through qualified custodians like banks, trust companies, special-purpose depositories, or regulated exchange-traded products.

  • Assets could be invested or loaned to generate returns so long as doing so does not increase financial risk to the state.


What Digital Assets Are Eligible

Rather than just Bitcoin, the bill’s definition of “digital assets” includes:

  • Bitcoin (BTC)

  • XRP

  • DigiByte

  • Stablecoins

  • Non-fungible tokens (NFTs)

  • And other tokens that meet a defined “cryptocurrency fair value score” benchmark.

This broader definition marks a notable expansion beyond earlier Bitcoin-only proposals and explicitly puts assets like XRP on a potential state reserve list.


Political Context & Past Vetoes

This bill comes amid ongoing legislative efforts in Arizona to formalize crypto-related financial structures — but many past proposals have stalled or been vetoed by Governor Katie Hobbs:

  • In 2025, near-identical crypto reserve proposals were vetoed over concerns about market volatility and financial risk to state funds.

  • Bills allowing state agencies to accept crypto for payments or invest general fund dollars in crypto were also vetoed.

SB 1649 will need to pass both chambers of the Arizona Legislature and survive potential executive pushback to become law.


Why It Matters in Crypto Policy

If enacted, Arizona could become one of the first U.S. states with a legislative framework for a state-controlled digital asset reserve that includes a range of tokens beyond Bitcoin. It reflects a broader trend of subnational governments exploring formal roles for crypto within public finance

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