UK Gold Miner Bluebird Pioneers Bitcoin Reserve Move

Bitcoin has found an unexpected champion on London’s junior market. Bluebird Mining Ventures Ltd (AIM: BMV), a gold-focused developer valued at just £2.7 million, says it will recycle any future bullion revenues into Bitcoin and hold the cryptocurrency as its primary treasury reserve—an initiative the company touts as the first of its kind for a UK-listed miner.
Bluebird Mining Eyes Bitcoin Pivot
In a strategic update released this morning, Bluebird framed the decision as a response to “a tectonic shift in global markets.” Management argued that gold’s centuries-old role as a store of value is increasingly “under threat” from the rise of Bitcoin, which many commentators call “digital gold.” The company now intends “to convert future revenues from its mining projects into bitcoin—essentially converting gold to ‘digital gold’,” adding that it will “adopt a policy of holding bitcoin on its balance sheet as a treasury reserve asset.”
Executive Director and interim chief executive Aidan Bishop, who has led the rethink, was explicit about the motivation. “I embarked some time ago on a journey to understand and learn about bitcoin,” he said. “I am convinced that we are witnessing a tectonic shift in global markets and that bitcoin will reshape the landscape of financial markets on every level.” He described the hybrid “gold plus digital gold” model as a chance “to turn the page, look to the future and seek to attract a new type of shareholder.”
The pivot comes as Bluebird edges toward a breakthrough farm-out on its flagship Batangas gold project in the Philippines. Negotiations with its local partner have reached an “advanced stage” that, if concluded within weeks, would extend the company’s free-carry status all the way to first production while preserving a life-of-mine net-profit interest with no additional capital outlay.
In South Korea, where regulatory setbacks have stalled progress at the Kochang and Gubong deposits, Bluebird’s local counsel is preparing an administrative lawsuit to be filed before 18 June in an effort to protect asset value. The board said it would “continue to actively identify opportunities whereby these projects could progress without further capital requirements from the Company.”
Because the firm plans to run with “minimal corporate overhead,” it believes a Bitcoin-backed treasury could amplify returns once Philippine cash flow begins. Management pointed to public companies elsewhere that hold Bitcoin and “have been enjoying significant investor interest as well as substantial premiums to Net Asset Value that have challenged traditional financial metrics.”
To drive the new strategy, Bluebird has started searching for a chief executive with digital-asset expertise. Discussions with several candidates are already under way.
Whether the market rewards the experiment remains to be seen, but on the day the plan was announced Bluebird shares traded 63% higher on heavy volume, suggesting that investors are at least prepared to speculate that gold mined from Asian hillsides can be alchemised into a balance-sheet stack of cryptographic scarcity. If the Philippine deal and the Bitcoin treasury both materialise, Bluebird will test a simple thesis: in a world of fiat debasement and tightening gold margins, digital gold may prove the richer vein.
At press time, BTC traded at $105,495.

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