- The Arizona Digital Assets Strategic Reserve Fund (SB1307) has received approval and is now in its last examination.
- This development intervenes in the midst of the continuous vetos of Governor Katie Hobbs of bipartite invoices.
The Arizona Digital Assets Strategic Reserve Fund (SB1307) received the support of the Committee of the Chamber of the Ensemble, where 60 members voted on the bill, the front advanced in the final voting phase.
This final phase implies that the full chamber decided whether the bill should be approved or rejected. If it is approved, it would only be promulgated if Governor Hobbs grants final approval.
The proposed strategic fund would be managed by the state treasurer and consist mainly of assets seized by the State, as well as funds approved by the Legislative Assembly.
The treasurer would not be authorized to allocate no more than 10% of the fund each year in digital assets.
In addition, part of the fund could be loaned to generate yields, provided that it does not include financial or significant burden.
Obstacles to approval
That said, SB1307 could still hit a wall.
Governor Hobbs has threatened the bills of bills unless the legislator gives priority to the financing of disability. In fact, she rejected 15 invoices last week, firmly sticking to this request.
If SB1307 is adopted before the legislators deal with its state for the approval of the bill, the creation of a strategic Crypto reserve fund may not materialize.
However, the interest of American investors has increased in the last day. Bitcoin purchases have increased, the premium coinbase index showing a slight increase, signaling increased interest in the asset.


Source: cryptocurrency
Arizona aims to direct the adoption of bitcoin and crypto assets in the United States
Arizona continues to conduct digital assets among the 50 states. Similar to SB1307, the Arizona Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Act (SB1025) was also transferred to the full chamber for a final vote.
This proposed bitcoin reserve is separate from the strategic reserve of digital assets. It intends to allocate 10% of public funds specifically to Bitcoin.
This allowance aims to diversify state assets in other value reserves.


Source: Bitcoin laws
Elsewhere, New Hampshire and Texas have progressed with their cryptographic initiatives, both entering the second reviews of the Committee.
Oklahoma, however, failed to make a similar proposal to his third reading.
This legislative moment reflects increasing confidence in digital assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum, pushing them closer to consumer financial legitimacy.