British opposition leader Nigel Farage has established himself as a leading crypto advocate by investing $288,000 in Stack BTC Plc, a bitcoin treasury firm chaired by former Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng.
Nigel Farage, leader of Reform UK, has solidified his position as Westminster’s most prominent crypto advocate by disclosing a $288,000 investment in Stack BTC Plc, a bitcoin treasury firm chaired by former Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng.
The investment, confirmed by the company on Monday, March 9, saw Farage acquire 4.3 million shares at 7 cents each. This 6.31% stake makes Farage a larger shareholder than Kwarteng, whose 5.43% interest includes shares held by his wife.
According to a Bloomberg report, the partnership marks an unusual convergence of two of the UK’s most talked-about political figures. While Farage is riding a wave of polling success, Kwarteng is best remembered for his 38-day tenure as chancellor, when his 2022 “mini-budget” triggered significant market volatility. Now, the duo is pivoting toward the digital frontier. Stack BTC operates on a strategy of accumulating bitcoin while acquiring businesses whose profits are reinvested directly into the cryptocurrency.
“I have long been one of the UK’s few political advocates for Bitcoin, recognizing the role digital currencies will play in the future of business and finance,” Farage said. “We can and should be a major global hub for the crypto industry.”
Farage’s journey into the world of digital assets has been a calculated evolution. While he has spent the last year railing against the Financial Conduct Authority for what he calls “heavy-handed” regulation that stifles innovation, his interest dates back further. He has frequently framed bitcoin as a tool for “financial revolution,” appealing to his base by portraying crypto as a hedge against traditional banking systems and central bank “money printing.”
The rhetoric appeared to have intensified following his high-profile battle with Coutts bank over the closure of his accounts. Since then, Farage has increasingly championed decentralized finance, or DeFi, as a solution for those who feel frozen out by the legacy financial establishment. This investment is not an isolated personal whim; Reform UK recently topped Britain’s political fundraising tables, bolstered by a multimillion-pound donation from prominent crypto investor Christopher Harborne.
Farage’s financial commitment puts him at odds with the more cautious approach seen in the Treasury under both Conservative and Labour leadership. By positioning the UK as a potential global hub for crypto, Farage is attempting to capture a demographic of younger, tech-savvy voters and libertarian-leaning donors who feel the UK’s current regulatory environment is too restrictive.