By Anastasia Dellaccio, Executive Director, Digital Chamber State Network
The states that move early and with intention will attract capital, talent, and infrastructure that underpins the next generation of financial systems.
Arizona has advanced one of the most comprehensive state-level digital asset reserve frameworks in the country. The legislature recently passed SB 1649 and SB 1042, sending them to Governor Katie Hobbs’ desk, but whether they will be signed into law still remains uncertain.
SB 1649 establishes a Digital Assets Strategic Reserve Fund managed by the State Treasurer, seeded with seized and forfeited digital assets at no new cost to taxpayers. The Treasurer is authorized to hold, invest, and where appropriate, lend those assets to generate returns. The bill proposes this effort be governed by a “cryptocurrency fair value” framework that evaluates assets on measurable criteria like market capitalization, network activity, and ecosystem development.
SB 1042 would complement the reserve by enabling Arizona to diversify a small portion of public funds beyond traditional assets into high-potential digital assets.
Why This Matters for Arizona’s Fiscal Future
As state debts and unfunded pension liabilities grow, governments face mounting pressure to protect long-term purchasing power without burdening taxpayers. Traditional portfolios have a mix of bonds, cash, and Treasuries. Digital assets offer states a new diversification opportunity, and Arizona’s framework is designed to capture that upside responsibly.
The digital asset industry has grown from roughly $10 billion in total market capitalization a decade ago to between $2 and $3 trillion today and shown increasing stability alongside sustained growth. Critically, SB 1649’s weighted, metrics-based framework for determining eligible assets means Arizona is not relying on a concentrated position on any single token. It is building a diversified digital asset allocation governed by principled, measurable criteria. That is the same discipline we expect from any well-managed public fund, now applied to an asset class most state treasuries haven’t yet had the tools to access.
Good Policy Built Right
Passing the legislation is step one. Implementation is the bigger challenge, and Arizona has the opportunity to set an example for state governments across the country
Diversify thoughtfully within the framework. SB 1649’s fair value framework was designed to allow Arizona to invest across a diversified mix of assets rather than concentrating exposure in a single token. As the Treasurer’s office operationalizes the fund, it should establish clear, repeatable processes for evaluating asset eligibility, reviewing portfolio composition regularly, and resisting any pressure to treat the fund as a single-asset vehicle. Diversification across digital assets with different use cases, network characteristics, and market dynamics is what transforms this reserve from a novelty into a durable fiscal tool.
Go beyond periodic attestation and build out the full reserve stack. As Arizona moves into the next phase of digital asset innovation, it should anchor its framework in transparency and durability. Across unclaimed assets, strategic reserves, and state stablecoin regulation, Arizona should aim for the ceiling in its digital asset administration. Traditional monthly audits show what was true at a single point in time, while programmatic, on-chain proof of reserves can show what is true continuously, every block, every second. But proof of reserves is only the foundation. Proof of composition provides transparency into the makeup of reserve assets to guard against concentration and tail risk, while proof of solvency can continuously demonstrate that total assets exceed liabilities.
Together, these layers distinguish a durable financial system from a compliance checkbox. This framework is ultimately about more than compliance; it’s about building enduring financial infrastructure and services that strengthen Arizona’s long-term fiscal stability. This also offers assurance to regulators that they can cover their bases by leveraging technology to hedge against risk.
Use the custodial flexibility the bill provides. SB 1649’s amended language recognizes secure custody solutions as qualified custodians, and the bill preserves the Treasurer’s ability to self-custody assets directly using technology providers. This is a wise choice, as it is typically more cost-effective, secure, and less exposed to third-party risk than relying exclusively on institutional custodians.
The Bigger Picture
Arizona’s move is not just about reserves. It is a signal. A signal that states are beginning to treat digital assets as a strategic asset class, a legitimate investment opportunity, and a clear message to innovators that Arizona is open for business.
The Digital Chamber State Network stands ready to help ensure what comes next matches the ambition of what has just been achieved.