CoinShares says fears around quantum attacks on Bitcoin overstate the risk, pointing to limited exposure and a long runway for technical adaptation. The post QuantumCoinShares says fears around quantum attacks on Bitcoin overstate the risk, pointing to limited exposure and a long runway for technical adaptation. The post Quantum

Quantum Panic Over Bitcoin? CoinShares Says the Risk Is Real – but Far From a Crisis

2026/02/09 13:50
2 min read
  • CoinShares argues that quantum computing poses a theoretical but distant challenge to Bitcoin, not an imminent threat to its security or markets.
  • The firm says meaningful exposure is confined to a small subset of legacy addresses, with only a tiny portion capable of affecting liquidity.
  • Aggressive fixes like burning coins are discouraged, with gradual upgrades favoured to preserve decentralisation and property rights.

Concerns about quantum computing undermining Bitcoin’s cryptographic security have intensified, but a new CoinShares report argues the issue is being overstated and misunderstood. The firm frames quantum risk as a long-term engineering challenge rather than an immediate systemic threat to Bitcoin’s network or market stability.

CoinShares explains that Bitcoin’s security relies on elliptic curve signatures for transaction authorisation and cryptographic hashing for address protection and mining integrity. While quantum algorithms could theoretically weaken these mechanisms, the report stresses that current technology falls dramatically short of what would be required for practical attacks.

According to CoinShares, genuine quantum exposure is largely limited to legacy Pay-to-Public-Key (P2PK) addresses where public keys are permanently visible on-chain. These addresses collectively hold around 1.6 million Bitcoin, representing roughly 8% of total supply, but only a small fraction poses any realistic market risk.
Related: Bitcoin Slump Hits Saylor’s Strategy at the Worst Possible Moment

Breaking Down the Risk

The report estimates that just 10,200 Bitcoin sit in legacy outputs large enough to cause “appreciable market disruption” if compromised suddenly. The remainder is distributed across tens of thousands of smaller outputs that would take extraordinarily long periods to exploit even under optimistic quantum assumptions.

CoinShares also challenges claims that as much as 25% of Bitcoin is vulnerable, arguing such figures often include temporary and easily mitigated risks like address reuse. Breaking Bitcoin’s core cryptography within meaningful timeframes would require quantum computers tens of thousands of times more powerful than those currently in existence.

The firm cautions against aggressive responses such as burning coins or rushing protocol changes, warning that such actions could undermine property rights, decentralisation and trust. Instead, CoinShares maintains Bitcoin has ample time and clear upgrade pathways to adapt gradually if quantum capabilities advance.

Related: Bitcoin’s 50% Plunge Puts Miners Under Severe Cost Pressure

The post Quantum Panic Over Bitcoin? CoinShares Says the Risk Is Real – but Far From a Crisis appeared first on Crypto News Australia.

Market Opportunity
QUANTUM Logo
QUANTUM Price(QUANTUM)
$0.003416
$0.003416$0.003416
-1.15%
USD
QUANTUM (QUANTUM) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

DeFi Technologies' Valour Launches New Bitcoin-Collateralized ETP on London Stock Exchange

DeFi Technologies' Valour Launches New Bitcoin-Collateralized ETP on London Stock Exchange

PANews reported on September 19th that, as the UK gradually relaxes restrictions on digital assets, Valour, a subsidiary of DeFi Technologies, launched a Bitcoin-collateralized ETP on the London Stock Exchange, offering investors the opportunity to earn cryptocurrency returns. This Bitcoin-collateralized ETP offers an annual yield of 1.4%, backed by Bitcoin held in cold wallets and secured by multi-party computation (MCP) technology. Currently, this new Bitcoin-collateralized ETP is only available to institutional and professional investors. The UK will allow retail investors to purchase cryptocurrency ETNs again on October 8, lifting a ban in place since 2021. The announcement did not specify how returns will be generated. However, another Bitcoin ETP listed by Valour on a French exchange generates Bitcoin returns by delegating tokens on Core Chain.
Share
PANews2025/09/19 08:09
Why a Lambo Rental Atlanta Experience Feels Different

Why a Lambo Rental Atlanta Experience Feels Different

Atlanta has a reputation. Some of it’s earned. Some of it’s exaggerated. And some of it lives somewhere between late-night stories, car culture, and the way the
Share
Techbullion2026/02/09 17:43
Treasury opens comment period on GENIUS Act stablecoin rules

Treasury opens comment period on GENIUS Act stablecoin rules

The post Treasury opens comment period on GENIUS Act stablecoin rules appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The US Department of the Treasury has issued an advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM) to begin implementing the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act. The measure invites public comments for 30 days following publication in the Federal Register, with submissions viewable on Regulations.gov. The Treasury is seeking input on consumer protection, illicit finance, financial stability, and compliance obligations for stablecoin issuers, as it develops the first formal regulations under the new law. The GENIUS Act, passed earlier this year, marked the first major US legislation focused specifically on payment stablecoins. It directs the Treasury to create a regulatory framework that balances innovation with oversight. This effort follows the Treasury’s August 18 request for comment on detecting illicit activity involving digital assets, which remains open until October 17. While the current notice does not impose new obligations, it signals a pivotal stage in translating the GENIUS Act into enforceable policy. Ethereum stablecoin supply | Blockworks Research Ethereum remains the dominant hub for stablecoins, with a circulating supply of $174 billion on its network, representing 60.7% market share across all chains, according to Blockworks Research data. USDT leads with more than $84 billion deployed on Ethereum, followed by USDC at $47 billion.  Emerging stablecoins such as USDe and USDf have shown sharp growth, expanding their supply by over $141 million and $38 million respectively in recent reporting periods. This is a developing story. This article was generated with the assistance of AI and reviewed by editor Jeffrey Albus before publication. Get the news in your inbox. Explore Blockworks newsletters: Source: https://blockworks.co/news/treasury-comment-period-genius
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/20 02:00