Written by Smartech Daily Team
This article has been originally published on Smartech Daily and republished at Dataconomy with permission.
Bonds have long served a simple purpose in investment portfolios. They protect capital while generating predictable income.
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That formula worked well in an era of stable inflation and steadily declining interest rates. Today, however, the role of traditional bonds is being questioned. Inflation has eroded purchasing power, so real yields struggle to keep pace with the rising cost of living.
The result is a dilemma that investors increasingly face, which is that safe assets tend to produce low returns, while higher-yield opportunities come with volatility and substantial risk.
Peoples Reserve aims to forge a new path.
The company’s Bitcoin Bond bridges that divide by combining the stability of U.S. Treasury securities with exposure to Bitcoin’s long-term growth potential. The concept blends two very different financial instruments into a single framework designed to protect principal while introducing asymmetric upside.
Separating Safety From Growth
Many structured investment products attempt to balance safety and yield, but they often expose both components to the same underlying risk.
Bitcoin Bonds take a different approach by separating those functions. The balancing act of allocation is dependent on the Treasury note yield. The return over the duration of the note determines the exact percent allocation into the Treasury note and Bitcoin positions.
A majority of the invested capital is allocated to U.S. Treasury Notes, widely considered the safest financial assets in the world. These securities are structured to mature at or above the investor’s original principal investment value over a defined time horizon.
The remaining portion of the capital is allocated into spot Bitcoin, which the company calls engineered money, whose long-term price performance has been one of the most widely discussed developments in modern finance.
By separating the protective component from the growth component, their structured Bitcoin Bond note allows investors to maintain principal protection while still gaining exposure to Bitcoin’s asymmetric upside.
Carl-Joseph Konstantinos (CJK), Founder of Peoples Reserve, views the concept as a natural evolution of fixed income.
“Traditional bonds were designed for a monetary system where currency retained stable purchasing power,” he says. “But when, due to fiscal dominance, inflation becomes a persistent factor, the system’s collateral layer [structure] starts to break down. Fusing risk-free Treasuries with engineered money introduces a new way to think about yield.”
How the Structure Works
A simplified example illustrates the mechanics…
An investor commits $100,000 to a Bitcoin Bond.
Roughly $80,000 is allocated to a five-year U.S. Treasury note paying 4% APY. Over the five-year period, approximately $20,000 will be paid in interest. At maturation, $80,000 will be returned. Return of principal plus interest paid protects the investor’s original $100,000 investment — that’s principal protection backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Treasury.
The remaining $20,000 is used to purchase Bitcoin, which is custodied by BitGo and held in a bankruptcy remote SPV with no potential for rehypothecation (the risky lending games that caused the FTX crash).
If Bitcoin appreciates significantly over the investment horizon, the value of that allocation grows dramatically. Because the treasury portion protects the principal, the Bitcoin allocation functions as a growth engine layered on top of the protected capital base.
If Bitcoin’s five-year compounding annual growth rate (CAGR) is 15%, Bitcoin Bonds pay 6.7% APY. That’s almost double the current Treasury bill yield at 3.75% APY.
If Bitcoin’s five-year CAGR is 30%, the note pays 12.4% APY. At 60% CAGR, Bitcoin Bonds pay 35% APY. And remember, these returns are with principal protection (you can’t lose the value of the original investment).
In practical terms, this means the investor’s downside risk is limited to the opportunity cost of the Bitcoin allocation, while the upside is theoretically unlimited.
Why Investors Are Reconsidering Fixed Income
The development of Bitcoin Bonds signal a broader conversation taking place across financial markets.
In recent years, many investors have begun questioning whether traditional fixed-income products can continue fulfilling their historical role. When inflation rises faster than bond yields, the real return on capital turns negative.
This has pushed portfolio managers and institutions to explore alternative structures capable of preserving capital while still offering meaningful growth potential.
Bitcoin, with its fixed supply and 24/7/365 global liquidity, has increasingly entered those conversations.
The digital asset trades continuously across international markets, settles almost instantly, and operates on a transparent monetary policy that cannot be manipulated by governments or central banks. For many investors, those characteristics make it an appealing complement to traditional financial instruments.
A Tool for Individuals, Businesses, and Institutions
Peoples Reserve positions its Bitcoin Bond product as a flexible financial instrument that can serve a wide range of investors.
Individuals can use the structure to maintain exposure to Bitcoin’s long-term growth without risking their entire investment principal.
Businesses can incorporate Bitcoin exposure into treasury management strategies while maintaining balance sheet stability.
A big added benefit of holding a Bitcoin Bond is that it also serves as a collateral on the Peoples Reserve platform. Bond holders can borrow against the full value of their U.S. Treasury allocation with no margin calls and no liquidation risk.
This opens up the doors for businesses to park their revenues in Bitcoin Bonds. They can borrow against the bonds to reinvest the revenues back into the business. Then use the future business revenues to service the debt taken out against the bond.
What happens when a business does this? The business now profits the difference between their borrow rate on the bond and the performance rate of Bitcoin. In other words, Bitcoin’s performance now increases the bottom line of the business.
Institutions may view the structure as a way to hedge inflation while preserving the conservative risk profile associated with government-backed securities.
In each case, the idea remains the same: combine a stable financial foundation with a scarce digital asset capable of producing asymmetric returns.
A New Direction for Fixed Income
Bitcoin Bonds do not attempt to replace traditional bonds outright. Instead, they represent an effort to adapt the structure of fixed income to a changing financial landscape.
If inflation continues to challenge traditional yield models, the search for hybrid instruments will accelerate. Combining sovereign debt with sound money savings technology is a powerful approach being explored across global financial markets.
For Peoples Reserve, the concept fits within a broader philosophy centered on using Bitcoin as pristine collateral. Across its platform, the goal is to engineer financial tools that allow individuals and institutions to unlock liquidity, generate yield, and retain ownership of their best-performing assets.
While the foundations of money itself are being reconsidered, the bond market is primed for a paradigm shift to sound money.
