• Bitcoin is surviving this year.

  • It’s also being stockpiled by major companies — and soon possibly even governments.

  • The same can’t be said for most other cryptocurrencies.

Most cryptocurrencies haven’t escaped unscathed from the market’s chaos and economic disruptions of 2025 so far. But, at least up until now, Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) is holding together reasonably well.

And that’s just one of the ways that it is proving that it has staying power. Let’s take a look at a few of those in detail.

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When governments buy or otherwise procure Bitcoin, they support the idea that it’s an asset that’s going to be valuable for a while. That’s doubly true when governments are doing so after changing their tune about whether to allow the asset to be legally held and exchanged at all. And it’s this exact situation that shows Bitcoin is proving that it has staying power.

The biggest development is the planned U.S. Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR) policy, which mandates the government to retain coins it acquires via asset forfeitures and other methods rather than liquidating them for cash. While the U.S. SBR is not yet implemented, and it may never be — or it might be, and then reversed by a future administration — the gist of the situation is that the U.S. will aspire to hold the coins it obtains indefinitely rather than selling them. Other countries may soon follow with similar policies, given that they’re investigating the merits of doing so currently.

Once players with a lot of financial heft make the move to hold the coin, smaller ones are likely to follow, as the risk of retaining assets for which there isn’t a buyer of sufficient size becomes much lower. And that will simply accelerate this trend, cementing Bitcoin’s position as an asset that governments like to hold for the long term.

Much like how nations holding Bitcoin encourages others to do the same, when big companies like Tesla buy and hold it, the asset becomes more legitimate in the eyes of other big companies, increasing their chance of buying it. This year wasn’t the first time that Tesla or others purchased Bitcoin, but so far it has been a continuation and expansion of the trend.

Another critical new type of holder are banks and other financial institutions. Whereas before the regulatory picture was too unclear for these players to buy in with gusto, that problem is rapidly receding thanks to a new set of leaders at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), who are viewed as being very pro-crypto. Soon enough, big banks might be both allowed and willing to hold vast sums of Bitcoin on their balance sheets to capture some of its upside over time.