The New Hampshire Business Finance Authority has moved to authorize up to $100 million in Bitcoin-backed bonds, a structure that would make New Hampshire the first U.S. state to issue a municipal bond collateralized by Bitcoin. Bloomberg first flagged the planned issuance, which still faces additional government approvals before any bonds are sold.
What Bloomberg Says About New Hampshire's Bitcoin Bond Plan
Bloomberg attributed the report to the New Hampshire Business Finance Authority, the state entity responsible for issuing conduit financing. The planned size is approximately $100 million, and the financing is described as Bitcoin-backed, though the headline did not specify the exact debt structure or timeline.
On November 17, 2025, NHBFA directors passed a resolution under New Hampshire RSA 162-I authorizing up to $100,000,000 in bonds for a project to acquire and hold digital currency. The approval was conditioned on receiving counsel's opinion that the bond had been duly authorized and was permitted under the state statute.
The official NHBFA announcement described the financing as an inaugural issuance intended to position New Hampshire as the first state to issue a municipal bond backed by Bitcoin. BitGo Trust Company was named as custodian, with collateral to be held in regulated cold storage.
Law firm Orrick, which served as counsel to the transaction, independently confirmed the conduit bond structure. Orrick noted that certain transaction fees and gains in the digital currency would be redirected to a Bitcoin Economic Development Fund intended to support New Hampshire business growth.
Independent reporting on the bond structure indicated it would require 160% Bitcoin overcollateralization, with liquidation triggered if the collateral fell below 130% of bond value. Those thresholds would provide a buffer against Bitcoin's price volatility, though a severe drawdown could still force liquidation.
"We're proud to help develop new tools that allow companies in the digital-asset ecosystem to access capital safely and effectively."
— James Key-Wallace, via NHBFA announcement
Confirmed Facts vs. Open Details
The NHBFA announcement stated that the bond issuance was still subject to approval by the Governor and Executive Council. As of the available evidence, it has not been confirmed whether that approval was granted or whether any bonds have actually been issued.
The board resolution authorized bonds "up to" the stated ceiling, meaning the final issuance could be smaller depending on market conditions, regulatory outcomes, or counterparty negotiations. Many summaries of this story have treated the bond as already issued, which flattens the sequence of approvals still required.
Why a State-Level Bitcoin Bond Would Reshape Crypto Finance
A state business finance authority issuing Bitcoin-collateralized debt would represent a meaningful expansion of how public-sector entities interact with digital assets. Municipal bonds are a cornerstone of U.S. public finance, and attaching Bitcoin as collateral introduces cryptocurrency into a market traditionally defined by tax-exempt, low-risk instruments. The move is qualitatively different from private-sector institutional blockchain partnerships that operate outside the public finance framework.
New Hampshire had already positioned itself as a crypto-friendly jurisdiction. The state became the first in the U.S. to authorize the purchase and custody of Bitcoin at the state level, a policy backdrop that made the NHBFA proposal possible under existing law.
The 160% overcollateralization requirement signals an attempt to bridge the gap between Bitcoin's volatility and the stability expectations of bond investors. Whether that ratio proves sufficient across a full market cycle is an open question, particularly as Bitcoin's price dynamics continue to evolve alongside the broader expansion of crypto-native financial products.
The involvement of established institutional participants, including BitGo as custodian and Orrick as legal counsel, lends the structure credibility that a purely crypto-native arrangement might lack. For institutional investors, regulated cold storage custody and a recognized law firm's opinion letter address two common objections to Bitcoin-linked financial products.
What Investors and Observers Should Watch Next
The most immediate question is whether the Governor and Executive Council granted final approval. Without that step, the board resolution remains an authorization rather than an active issuance.
If the bond proceeds, observers will focus on the collateral management mechanics: how the 160% ratio is maintained, who triggers liquidation at 130%, and how proceeds from any forced Bitcoin sales are distributed. The redirect of transaction fees to a state economic development fund also introduces a fiscal dimension worth tracking.
Regulatory scrutiny from federal agencies remains a wildcard. A Bitcoin-backed municipal bond could draw attention from the SEC, the IRS, or both, depending on how the instrument is classified and taxed. Other states considering similar structures, and the wider debate around digital asset governance frameworks, will likely be shaped by how New Hampshire's approach is received.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.