The Czech National Bank just did something unusual for a central bank: it bought Bitcoin. Not a lot—just $1 million worth—but enough to get some actual experience with how digital assets work in practice. Governor Aleš Michl explained on Nov. 25 that the purchase is meant to "touch reality" rather than build fancy theoretical models about something they've never actually handled.
Learning by Doing, Not by Spreadsheet
Michl described the initiative as an experiment designed to help the CNB understand tokenization, custody processes, and how digital assets actually function inside a central bank environment. This is hands-on research, not a strategic investment shift.
The bank included Bitcoin (BTC) in the test portfolio because it behaves somewhat like gold—showing low correlation with traditional assets and potentially helping diversify large portfolios. Though Michl pointed out that Bitcoin's volatility has recently started mirroring major tech stocks like Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), Meta Platforms Inc. (META), and Tesla Inc. (TSLA).
But he's not sugarcoating the risks. Michl told Central Banking that Bitcoin's long-term value "could plausibly end up at two extremes – very high or zero." That's quite a range.
What's Actually in the Portfolio
The CNB assembled this test portfolio on Oct. 30 through a market operation conducted outside its international reserves. At the time, Bitcoin was trading near $110,670. The portfolio includes Bitcoin, dollar-denominated stablecoins, and tokenized deposits.
The bank has made it clear this won't expand. The portfolio is intentionally small enough that it won't meaningfully affect the CNB's overall financial performance. Instead, the focus is on learning about custody design, key management, multi-level approval structures, anti-money laundering controls, and how digital assets should be reported in financial accounts.
The Numbers Look Good, But So Does the Volatility
Here's where it gets interesting. Michl said CNB simulations showed that a 5% Bitcoin allocation would have boosted annual returns by roughly 3.5 percentage points over the past decade. That sounds great until you hear the catch: this gain would have come with sharply higher risk, actually doubling overall portfolio volatility.
Over the past five years, he noted, Bitcoin had outperformed equities on a risk-return basis. The bank's analysis suggested that if they wanted higher expected returns, allocating about 2.5% of reserves into a Bitcoin ETF would have been more efficient than increasing U.S. equity exposure from 38% to 50%, based on historic data.
The Operational Challenges Are Real
A 50-page CNB technical study digs into the practical difficulties of storing and managing Bitcoin. The big takeaway? The risk of losing private keys is unlike anything seen in traditional asset management. Lose your keys, lose your Bitcoin. Forever. No customer service department can help you.
The study examined hardware wallets, multi-party computation, and co-custody structures. It concluded that co-custody with a specialized provider was the most secure option—essentially admitting that even a sophisticated central bank needs help managing this stuff properly.
On the accounting front, the CNB has consulted the European Central Bank and the IMF. Both agreed that directly held Bitcoin cannot be classified as an official reserve asset. Instead, it would be listed as "tangible and intangible assets" on the balance sheet and valued at the lower of its acquisition price or fair value.
Other European Central Banks Aren't Convinced
Central Banking reached out to major European central banks for their take. The ECB, France, Spain, Switzerland, the UK, and others all declined to comment—which is itself kind of telling.
The Swiss National Bank said cryptocurrencies don't meet its reserve policy requirements. The Netherlands Bank noted that adding any new asset class demands a full strategic review before consideration.
Ukraine's central bank offered a blunt warning: Bitcoin would create additional vulnerabilities, especially under wartime financial-stability pressures. Serbia's central bank said current law doesn't allow digital asset holdings in reserves, though it continues monitoring global developments.
So the Czech National Bank is basically out there experimenting while most of its peers watch from the sidelines. Whether this turns out to be visionary or cautionary remains to be seen—somewhere between very high and zero, apparently.