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Something interesting just caught my attention about Bhutan's Bitcoin strategy, and it's honestly pretty wild when you see the full picture.
So here's what's happening: the Himalayan kingdom went from holding around 13,000 BTC back in October 2024 down to just 3,954 BTC now. That's a 70 percent collapse in their reserves in basically 18 months. This week alone they moved 319.7 BTC (roughly $22.7 million), with 250 going to addresses tied to fund sales and another 69.7 going somewhere new entirely.
What makes this even more striking is the timing. While Bhutan's dumping, institutional players are loading up hard. Last week some major strategy firm grabbed 4,871 BTC in five days. U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs added around 50,000 coins just in March. Even the Ethereum Foundation decided to double down rather than sell. Meanwhile most governments globally are either accumulating or holding steady. Bhutan's basically the only one heading the opposite direction.
The deeper issue here is that their Bitcoin mining operation, which was supposed to be this brilliant play on cheap hydropower, is getting squeezed from all angles. With BTC now trading around $76.3K and network difficulty hitting record levels, those block rewards down to 3.125 BTC per block don't move the needle anymore. The math has flipped—exporting electricity might actually generate more revenue than mining Bitcoin at this point. Plus mining hardware depreciates constantly as difficulty climbs, making state-level operations look less and less attractive financially.
What's also telling is the silence. Druk Holding and Investments, the entity managing this whole thing, hasn't said anything publicly about these transfers or what's actually happening with their mining rigs. According to Arkham Intelligence data, there haven't been any major deposits over $100K to their monitored wallets in over a year, which suggests mining operations might have already scaled back or stopped entirely.
It's a pretty sharp reversal for a country that was genuinely pioneering government-backed Bitcoin mining. Now their remaining 3,954 BTC is less than what some U.S. corporate buyers accumulate in a week. Worth watching how this plays out, especially as institutional adoption keeps accelerating while state actors seem to be reconsidering their positions in the space.