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2026-04-01 21:05:15 UTC

TFTC on Nostr: The first bitcoin-backed bond just got a credit rating from Moody's. That's the door ...

The first bitcoin-backed bond just got a credit rating from Moody's. That's the door opening to the $140 trillion fixed income market.

New Hampshire's $100 million issuance received a provisional Ba2 rating, speculative grade, but that's not the point. The point is that bitcoin collateral just entered the credit ratings system for the first time.

The structure: a borrower posts roughly 160% in bitcoin, held in custody by BitGo, through New Hampshire's Business Finance Authority as a conduit. No taxpayer money backs it. If collateral levels drop, liquidation triggers kick in. Repayment is tied to the bitcoin itself.

Moody's evaluated it using traditional credit frameworks, the same ones applied to the global bond market. They rated it based on collateral risk, structural risk, and operational risk, with bitcoin's volatility being the primary factor keeping it in speculative territory.

That distinction matters because institutional allocators, pension funds, endowments, insurance companies, can't buy what they can't rate. A Moody's rating, even a speculative one, gives compliance departments something to work with. It puts bitcoin-backed debt into a category that portfolio managers can actually evaluate using existing frameworks.

The timing lines up. The same week, the US Labor Department proposed a rule to allow alternative assets including bitcoin in 401(k) retirement accounts. Arizona advanced two bills through its House Rules Committee, one allowing state funds to invest up to 10% in bitcoin, another creating a digital assets reserve fund.

The walls between bitcoin and traditional fixed income are coming down one rating at a time.