Moody’s Rates First Bitcoin-Backed Revenue Bonds
Moody’s has assigned a provisional Ba2 rating to up to $100 million in Bitcoin-backed revenue bonds issued through the New Hampshire Business Finance Authority, marking what multiple sources describe as the first time a major credit agency has rated debt instruments collateralized entirely by Bitcoin.
The rated bonds are tied to the Waverose Finance Project, split into Series 2026A-1 and Series 2026A-2, both due in 2029. They are limited-recourse obligations repaid solely from Bitcoin collateral, with no New Hampshire public funds or taxing power pledged to cover shortfalls.
The New Hampshire Business Finance Authority announced approval of the financing structure on November 18, 2025, describing it as the world’s first municipal bond backed by Bitcoin. The authority stressed that no taxpayer funds or state guarantees are at risk.
BitGo Bank & Trust, National Association, is designated to hold the Bitcoin collateral in segregated wallets for bondholders. Moody’s risk assumptions for the deal included a 72.06% advance rate, 1.60x initial collateral coverage, and a 1.40x trigger that would force mandatory redemption if breached.
What a Ba2 Rating on Bitcoin-Backed Debt Actually Signals
WHAT TO KNOW
- First rated Bitcoin bond: Moody’s provisional Ba2 rating covers up to $100 million in revenue bonds backed entirely by Bitcoin collateral, not taxpayer funds.
- Built-in safeguards: The structure requires 1.60x collateral coverage at issuance and triggers mandatory redemption if coverage falls below 1.40x.
A Bitcoin-backed revenue bond, in this context, is a conduit debt instrument where the issuing authority acts as a pass-through. The New Hampshire BFA is not borrowing money itself. Instead, it lends its municipal issuance framework to a private project, the Waverose Finance Project, which pledges Bitcoin as the sole source of repayment.
The Ba2 provisional rating sits two notches below investment grade. For traditional fixed-income investors, that places the bonds in speculative territory, but the fact that Moody’s engaged with the structure at all represents a shift. Credit agencies have historically avoided rating instruments backed by volatile digital assets.
The legal architecture was designed by Orrick, which described the deal as an over-collateralized Bitcoin structure with broader public-finance significance. The law firm’s involvement signals that established capital-markets counsel sees a viable framework, not just a novelty experiment.
Why This Could Matter for Institutional Bitcoin Finance
A recognized credit rating, even a speculative-grade one, can lower the barrier for institutional participation. Many pension funds, insurance companies, and endowments have internal mandates that require rated instruments before allocation is possible. The Ba2 designation opens the door for a class of buyers that could not previously consider Bitcoin-linked fixed income.
This development arrives while broader institutional sentiment toward crypto remains cautious. The Fear & Greed Index recently printed at 16, reflecting extreme fear, even as structural products like these bonds suggest deeper integration between digital assets and traditional capital markets. That tension mirrors the dynamic seen in recent profit warnings hitting crypto-exposed firms like Coinbase and Robinhood.
The bond’s collateral mechanics depend directly on Bitcoin’s price stability and liquidity. At research time, BTC traded near $71,665 with a market capitalization above $1.4 trillion and 24-hour trading volume exceeding $27 billion. That liquidity depth is part of what makes a rated instrument feasible; a thinly traded asset could not support the rapid liquidation that a 1.40x coverage trigger might require.
The structure also draws a clear line between Bitcoin as a speculative trading instrument and Bitcoin as balance-sheet collateral. That distinction matters for ongoing regulatory conversations about how digital assets should be treated within the financial system.
What Investors and Crypto Watchers Should Track Next
The rating is provisional, meaning final assignment depends on Moody’s review of completed legal documents and pricing terms. Until the bonds actually price and settle, the deal remains a framework rather than a finished transaction.
The most meaningful follow-through signal would be issuance volume. If the full $100 million is placed and similar structures emerge from other state finance authorities, the Waverose deal becomes a template. If it stalls at a smaller size or remains a one-off, the precedent value diminishes significantly.
Investor uptake will also reveal whether the Ba2 rating is enough to attract meaningful institutional capital, or whether buyers at that grade demand additional structural protections beyond the 1.60x collateral coverage already built in. The gap between bold projections in the crypto space and actual institutional follow-through has historically been wide.
Other conduit issuers watching this deal will want to see how Bitcoin’s volatility interacts with the mandatory redemption trigger over time. A sharp drawdown that forces early redemption would test the structure’s resilience and likely influence whether other states replicate New Hampshire’s approach.
The provisional rating also does not remove execution risk. Moody’s has flagged that the final rating depends on documentation and pricing, and a market environment marked by extreme fear could affect both the timing and terms of the eventual offering.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
