The Czech National Bank’s recent move to include bitcoin in a small $1 million digital asset portfolio is attracting attention across Europe, according to Coinbase’s John D’Agostino.
The bank’s initiative is not aimed at generating profit, but rather at studying how bitcoin and other digital assets function within a central bank environment.
Legal framework enables pilot
By keeping these assets separate from its official reserves, the Czech central bank is able to bypass direct European Central Bank (ECB) restrictions.
This approach is possible because of the Czech Republic’s “derogation status,” which allows it to be part of the European System of Central Banks but not the euro-using Eurosystem.
Five other EU countries—Hungary, Poland, Romania, Sweden, and Bulgaria—share this legal position and could theoretically conduct similar pilots without needing formal ECB approval.
Coinbase highlights potential EU ripple effect
John D’Agostino, Coinbase’s Head of Institutional Strategy, emphasized the significance of the move, regardless of the small sum involved.
He stated in a recent interview that the action taken by the Czech central bank could have a contagious effect on other European countries. D’Agostino explained:
“The Czech national bank chose very well in their service providers, (the institution) is putting bitcoin on their national treasury and they are experimenting with and learning in real time using Bitcoin for payments.”
Professionalism and policy implications
What sets this pilot apart, D’Agostino noted, is the official and methodical approach—issuing requests for proposals, selecting vendors, and establishing internal guidelines—as would be done for any major project.
He also highlighted the Czech Republic’s economic stability, contrasting it with previous state-level bitcoin adoption efforts.
While D’Agostino mistakenly referred to the Czech Republic as a “Eurozone country,” its status as an EU member with access to EU funding makes the experiment particularly notable for European policymakers.