Crypto in the Boardroom: How CFOs Are Rethinking Treasury Management

“Bitcoin is no longer speculation — it’s strategy.” – DNA Crypto Knowledge Base.

Not long ago, Bitcoin was dismissed as “internet money.” Today, it’s appearing in boardrooms from London to Abu Dhabi. With sovereign wealth funds holding billions, BlackRock’s ETF shattering records, and corporate treasuries outperforming peers, CFOs are facing a clear choice: act early or let competitors seize the advantage.

Learn more: Future of Bitcoin in Corporate Finance

From Scepticism to Strategy

Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock, once called himself a “proud sceptic” of Bitcoin. Today, he suggests the asset could reach $700,000 if just 5% of global portfolios adopt it.

  • – BlackRock’s spot Bitcoin ETF grew to $63B AUM in 18 months, the fastest growth ever recorded.

  • – MicroStrategy turned a $33B bet into $70B.

  • – Sovereign wealth funds from Norway to Abu Dhabi are building quiet but strategic positions.

The debate is no longer if Bitcoin belongs in treasuries — it’s how.

Related: Institutional Bitcoin Adoption

Lessons from Governments and Global Players

Governments are no longer passive observers:

  • – National authorities now control 463,000 BTC (2.3% of supply).

  • – Bhutan’s stockpile equals nearly one-third of GDP.

  • – El Salvador’s Bitcoin bet is up $610M in profit.

  • – The U.S. has built a strategic reserve of 200,000 BTC.

Explore: Bitcoin Sovereign Reserves

For corporates, this is precedent: Bitcoin is not retail speculation — it’s statecraft.

The UK’s Corporate Blueprint

British firms are already moving:

  • The Smarter Web Company raised funds to acquire 2,395 BTC, lifting its valuation to $1.2B.

  • Coinsilium Group and miners like Hamak Gold are adding Bitcoin to balance sheets.

London’s regulatory clarity and financial infrastructure give the UK a unique edge as a European hub for Bitcoin adoption in treasury.

Risk, Custody, and Succession Planning

Roughly 30% of the Bitcoin supply is lost due to mishandling — unacceptable at the corporate level.

Solutions are evolving:

  • – Custody providers now insure up to $250M.

  • – Multi-sig inheritance planning prevents key loss.

  • – Bitcoin hedges against ransomware (average demands now $3.8M).

Read: How to Secure and Inherit Your Digital Assets

Why CFOs Need to Act Now

  • – Bitcoin’s Sharpe ratio > 3.0, beating the S&P 500 and gold.

  • – Volatility is now lower than that of many S&P 500 stocks.

  • – BlackRock research shows a 1–2% allocation drives asymmetric returns.

Execution is simple:

  • – ETFs for regulated exposure

  • – Dollar-cost averaging for steady entry

  • – Convertible debt for efficient accumulation

More: Why Bitcoin Wallets Are Surging in 2025

The Boardroom Conversation Has Shifted

The question is no longer whether Bitcoin is real — sovereigns and central banks have answered that. It’s no longer a question of whether it belongs in portfolios — the numbers prove it does.

For CFOs, the only question left is tactical: How will your organisation gain exposure before competitors?

The revolution isn’t on the horizon. It’s already here — in the boardroom.

Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal, tax, investment, or financial advice.