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US accounting standards board rules will reflect institutional crypto assets’ fair value

The U.S. FASB has decided that crypto assets will be represented at their fair value in accounting beginning late next year.

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US accounting standards board rules will reflect institutional crypto assets’ fair value

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Crypto companies and institutions holding crypto assets will be able to record the value of their crypto more realistically under accounting rule changes in the United States. 

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) finalized the new rules on Dec. 13. The FASB is the organization that sets accounting and reporting standards for the U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). GAAP-standard financial reports are required from companies that trade on public markets in the United States.

Related: New crypto accounting guidelines could ‘smooth the way’ for adoption

Under current practice, crypto is considered an indefinite-lived intangible asset and therefore is subject to impairment. This means the value of the crypto assets is decreased on the books if they lose value in an accounting period, and the recorded value cannot be increased until the assets are sold, even if the value of the holdings goes up before then.

This is a disadvantage in the volatile crypto market, as it could make a company’s assets appear to be worth less than their market value. The FASB said in its Accounting Standards Update:

“Accounting for only the decreases, but not the increases, in the value of crypto assets in the financial statements until they are sold does not provide relevant information that reflects (1) the underlying economics of those assets and (2) an entity’s financial position.”

Under the updated accounting standards, crypto assets’ fair value — estimated market value — will be measured in each accounting period and represented in companies’ books. The FASB update said the change will provide more relevant information and reduce accounting costs and complexity.

The FASB finalized the new rules after a consideration process that began last year. It had a call for comments in March and voted on the changes in September. The updated rules will take effect in fiscal years that begin after Dec. 15, 2024.

Magazine: How to protect your crypto in a volatile market: Bitcoin OGs and experts weigh in

  • #Cryptocurrencies
  • #Taxes
  • #Bitcoin Price
  • #Assets
  • #Digital Asset
  • #Regulation

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