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    Trump’s quantum computing push puts $449 billion in “exposed Bitcoin” back in the limelight

    On June 22, President Donald Trump signed two executive orders that put the federal government’s most sensitive civilian computer systems on a 2031 post-quantum security timetable while launching a national effort to accelerate the development of advanced quantum computers.

    One order requires federal high-value assets and high-impact systems to adopt post-quantum cryptography for establishing encryption keys by the end of 2030 and for digital signatures by the end of 2031.

    The second creates a program aimed at delivering a quantum computer capable of scientific applications beyond the reach of existing classical machines to a Department of Energy facility.

    Charles Edwards, Caprioles’ founder, said:

    “Quantum Computing is probably the most undervalued asset class in the world by orders of magnitude.”

    Washington moves the quantum clock forward

    Market observers pointed out that these orders suggest that the federal government sees the timeline for both quantum development and cryptographic migration compressing rapidly.

    Alex Pruden, CEO of quantum-security company Project Eleven, noted:

    “From the perspective of the American executive branch, offense (quantum computing) and defense (post-quantum cryptography) are now on the same five-year horizon. Migration to post-quantum cryptography isn’t tomorrow’s problem anymore. It’s today’s.”

    Notably, the first order establishes the Quantum Computer for Application Development and Discovery Science effort, known as QC-ADDS.

    It expresses an explicit intent to deliver at least one quantum machine capable of scientific applications beyond classical computing to a Department of Energy facility. Structurally, the order requires the department to define technical specifications within 90 days and examine the costs, partnerships, and potential delivery timelines within 180 days.

    A separate five-year provision in the order mandates that the Secretaries of Commerce, Defense, and Energy, alongside the NASA Administrator, develop operational plans to deploy quantum-enabled sensors and networks.

    The second order sets strict deadlines for civilian agencies, requiring federal high-value assets and high-impact civilian systems to adopt post-quantum cryptography for key establishment by December 31, 2030, and for digital signatures by December 31, 2031.

    National security systems are excluded from these specific civilian deadlines and will be handled through a distinct, classified reporting process.

    White House science advisor Michael Kratsios framed the push as an expansion of long-term strategic technology goals. According to him, the new directives aim to build a robust domestic supply chain and an American quantum workforce through expanded registered apprenticeships and the creation of National Quantum Workforce Development Institutes.

    Additionally, the orders reconstitute the National Quantum Initiative Advisory Committee and expand the Quantum Counterintelligence Protection Team to guard domestic research against foreign espionage.

    These steps follow an established pattern of technology policies enacted over the past 18 months, including the January 2025 establishment of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology and the November 2025 Genesis Mission, which focused on using artificial intelligence to accelerate scientific discoveries across quantum and advanced physics.

    Notably, these Trump’s executive orders build upon letters of intent signed last month by the U.S. Commerce Department to award just over $2 billion in planned funding to nine quantum computing companies.

    These are designed as industrial manufacturing investments rather than standard research grants. Under the planned packages, IBM is slated to receive $1 billion to establish a quantum-grade superconducting wafer foundry, while GlobalFoundries is designated to receive $375 million for a multi-architecture fabrication plant.

    The remaining $636 million is distributed among seven firms specializing in superconducting, trapped ion, photonic, and neutral-atom quantum architectures.

    Nearly 7 million Bitcoin sit in the quantum computing line of fire

    The compressed migration timetable immediately refocuses attention on the crypto industry, where almost 7 million BTC, worth nearly $449 billion of Bitcoin, currently sits in outputs whose public keys have been exposed and could theoretically be attacked by a sufficiently powerful quantum computer.

    Exposed Bitcoin to Quantum ComputingExposed Bitcoin to Quantum Computing
    Exposed Bitcoin to Quantum Computing (Source: 21Shares)

    The security model of modern cryptocurrencies relies heavily on public-key cryptography. For a classical computer, deriving a private spending key from a publicly broadcast key requires exponential time, making it practically impossible.

    However, a sufficiently powerful quantum computer running Shor’s algorithm can solve the underlying discrete-logarithm problem in polynomial time. This capability would allow an attacker to recover private keys from any public keys exposed on the blockchain, granting them full control over the associated funds.

    While the underlying Bitcoin protocol remains structurally sound, the danger stems from how the blockchain network users interact with it.

    A 21Shares report revealed that approximately 65% of all Bitcoin remains protected from immediate exposure because the network obscures its public keys until the coins are spent. This protocol feature limits the immediate attack surface.

    However, these coins are not inherently quantum-safe; once a user spends from an address, the public key is revealed on-chain, opening a window of vulnerability if the remaining funds are not handled correctly.

    Meanwhile, the risk is highly concentrated among addresses that have already broadcast their credentials. Data indicates that over 70% of this exposure is caused by address reuse, which is a practice where users repeatedly receive and spend funds from the same wallet address, permanently exposing the public key.

    This vulnerability continues to grow despite shifting industry standards, with address-reuse exposure alone climbing by 28,306 BTC in May 2026 and by around 500,000 BTC over the past year. This dynamic reflects a steady influx of legacy habits offsetting improvements elsewhere.

    Furthermore, this vulnerable capital is heavily consolidated. Dune analytics data shows that approximately 84.5% of the exposed Bitcoin sits in just 4,079 wallets.

    According to 21Shares, most of these high-value targets remain completely anonymous, as nearly 80% carry no public label, making it difficult for compliance firms to pinpoint which institutions or large holders carry the most concentrated risk.

    Dormant Satoshi-era coins complicate Bitcoin’s escape plan

    Beyond active users practicing poor wallet hygiene, the Bitcoin network faces a deep structural challenge originating from its earliest blocks.

    21Shares pointed out that approximately 1.08 million Bitcoin mined in 2009 have remained completely stationary for 16 years.

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