
Binance plans to convert its $1 billion SAFU fund from stablecoins into Bitcoin, citing long-term conviction and market resilience.
Summary
- Binance will convert the SAFU fund’s roughly $1B stablecoin reserves into Bitcoin.
- The exchange will rebalance the fund and top it back to $1B if BTC price drops.
- Binance framed the move as a long-term bet on bitcoin as crypto’s core asset.
Binance has revealed that its Secure Asset Fund for Users will be converted into into Bitcoun, marking a shift in how the exchange backs its emergency protection fund amid ongoing market volatility.
The plan was disclosed in an open letter shared on X on Jan. 29. Binance said the conversion will take place over the next 30 days, after which the SAFU fund will be fully held in Bitcoin (BTC) rather than dollar-pegged assets.
SAFU fund moves to a Bitcoin-only reserve
The SAFU fund will be rebalanced based on market value. If Bitcoin price movements cause the fund to fall below $800 million, the exchange said it will top it back up to $1 billion.
The exchange described Bitcoin as the foundational asset of the crypto ecosystem and said holding SAFU in BTC reflects a long-term view rather than a short-term response to price swings.
SAFU was launched in 2018 as an emergency insurance fund meant to protect users in cases such as hacks or unexpected platform losses. Until now, the fund had been maintained using a mix of stablecoins and major crypto assets.
Expansion, regulation, and market positioning
The announcement comes as Binance continues to scale its global operations. The exchange said it reached 300 million users in 2025 and processed $34 trillion in trading volume during the year. Binance also reported proof-of-reserves totaling $162.8 billion across 45 crypto assets.
In recent public comments at Davos, Binance founder Changpeng “CZ” Zhao said Bitcoin could enter a “supercycle” in 2026, potentially moving beyond the traditional four-year halving cycle as adoption expands and policy attitudes evolve. Zhao has also said Binance is in discussions with governments on areas such as asset tokenization.
On the regulatory front, Binance recently applied for an EU MiCA license in Greece, which would allow unified operations across the bloc. Executives have also said the exchange is taking a cautious approach to a possible return to the U.S. market, while exploring the re-introduction of tokenized equities after suspending the product in 2021.











