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IMF Bombshell: El Salvador Didn’t Buy Bitcoin In 2025 After All
Public trackers even showed holdings climbing past 6,102 BTC. Yet the IMF’s July 15 Article IV consultation says there were no new purchases since the $1.4 billion Extended Fund Facility was approved in December 2024.
Related Reading: Canadian Crypto Ecosystem Seeks To Hold 1% Of BTC Supply By 2027## Internal Wallet Moves Created Illusion Of Buying
According to the IMF report, the rise in public‑sector Bitcoin didn’t come from fresh spending. Instead, government‑owned wallets moved coins around.
Those transfers made balances pop up on public dashboards. But those were just internal shifts. They didn’t draw on taxpayer money or involve the market. Small ups and downs in the Chivo e‑wallet also came from internal corrections, not new deposits.
Pressure On Bitcoin Legal Tender Reversal
Back in 2021, El Salvador grabbed headlines by making Bitcoin legal tender. That move set off cheers and warnings around the world. Reports show the country flipped that decision in January 2025 under pressure from international lenders.
They stripped Bitcoin of its legal‑tender status and agreed to stop using public funds for more coins. The IMF now confirms those promises held true.
Based on reports, the government must end public‑sector involvement in the Chivo system by July 31, 2025. That date is just around the corner. El Salvador has also promised to unwind Fidebitcoin, the public Bitcoin trust it set up. Both steps aim to boost fiscal transparency and keep the Extended Fund Facility on track.
El Salvador President Nayib Bukele. Source: Getty Images
Related Reading: US Offloads 80% Of Bitcoin – Lummis Says It’s A ‘Total Blunder’### Analysts Eye Trust And Transparency Questions
Some experts say the big takeaway is about trust. Shuffling coins between wallets while claiming new buys can hurt the government’s credibility. Citizens and investors could start to wonder what else might be spun into a story.
Image: REUTERS/Johannes P. Christo/File Photo
Even if no fresh money changed hands, the mismatch between claims and reality has put a spotlight on how data gets shared.
The IMF gave credit for meeting its program targets. Yet the coming weeks will show if the government follows through on all its commitments.
Clearing out Chivo and dissolving Fidebitcoin are major moves. If El Salvador sticks to the plan, it could reset its narrative. If not, skeptics will find new reasons to doubt every future Bitcoin announcement.
Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView