Latvia’s Minister of Economics, Viktors Valainis, is doubling-down on his forecast that the Baltic nation will soon place a portion of its sovereign balance sheet into Bitcoin. Speaking on the UN:BLOCK podcast, he insisted that “a national strategic Bitcoin reserve is only a matter of time,” adding that Latvia’s small, export-oriented economy could reap oversized gains by moving first.
Grass-roots momentum already exists. A citizen petition on the Manabalss.lv platform asks the government to create a Bitcoin reserve, arguing that early movers “gain financially and reputationally.” Valainis backs the proposal: “When I was first asked to comment, I was very supportive. I don’t see any significant risks. It’s a way to symbolically show that you believe in this sector, that you believe in the future of everything related to Web3, and that you’re actively engaging with it.”
He even cited the United States — “I think it’s something the U.S. has just done—Trump made that decision” — as proof that large jurisdictions are formalising crypto holdings, though Washington has not yet published details of any such programme.
Valainis frames crypto openness as a competitive play. “If we allowed taxes to be paid in crypto, I think we’d instantly get global attention… Honestly, we’ve got nothing to lose. We can only gain.” Riga has already abolished the 3 percent withholding tax on crypto-asset disposals by non-residents for a three-year trial beginning 1 January 2025, a measure the minister championed to draw exchanges and custodians.
“We have a variety of regulatory and security mechanisms in place that would allow us to react promptly if something went wrong or any risks emerged,” he said. “People still drive cars even though there’s a risk of accidents. The benefits far outweigh the risks.”
The minister linked a prospective Bitcoin allocation to Latvia’s second-pillar pension system, whose assets reached €8.78 billion at end-2024, less than a tenth of it invested domestically. “That’s serious money… Most of it is already outside Latvia—invested in other economies.” Redirecting even a fraction into alternative assets such as Bitcoin, he argued, would align the fund with “major US pension funds” that are already buying crypto.
Latvia’s crypto-curious posture rests on a maturing start-up scene. Last November the country’s two print-on-demand giants merged, creating a combined “mega-unicorn” valued well above $1 billion. Riga-based market-maker Gravity Team, meanwhile, says it handles about 1% of global spot-crypto volume.
“If more crypto companies emerge, the level of scientific knowledge will rise, and we’ll have much more highly qualified labour,” Valainis said, noting that the 2025 state budget earmarks “a few hundred thousand euros” for ecosystem grants.
Valainis stresses Latvia’s freedom to experiment: “It’s not like we have to protect something sacred—like the Swiss banking system with all its deep traditions… We have a chance to be among the first—to go and do it.”
Whether the Saeima turns that rhetoric into a line item in the 2026 budget — or sooner, if the petition garners 10,000 signatures and forces debate — will determine how quickly Latvia joins the small but growing club of governments treating Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset.
At press time, Bitcoin changed hands at about $102,419, down roughly 1.3% on the day.