1.4 Recently Issued Accounting Guidance
1.4.1 FASB ASU on Crypto Assets
In December 2023, the FASB issued ASU
2023-08, which addresses the accounting and disclosure
requirements for certain crypto assets. Before the ASU’s issuance, an entity
accounted for certain digital assets as indefinite-lived intangible assets in
accordance with ASC 350 (i.e., the assets were measured at historical cost less
impairment). Stakeholders had raised concerns that, among other factors, this
intangible asset model (1) did not faithfully represent the economics of crypto
assets and (2) made the recognition of impairments needlessly complex by
requiring entities to use a crypto asset’s lowest observable fair value within a
reporting period.
Accordingly, ASU 2023-08 requires entities to subsequently measure certain crypto
assets at fair value, with changes in fair value recorded in net income in each
reporting period. In addition, entities are required to provide additional
disclosures about certain crypto asset holdings.
However, as discussed in more detail in Section
2.3, the new guidance only applies to certain crypto assets
within its scope. As a result, an entity may need to consider other accounting
frameworks to account for a digital asset or some digital assets may continue to
be accounted for under the intangible asset model that is in effect before the
adoption of the guidance in ASU 2023-08. The accounting for crypto assets that
are not intangible assets, such as certain stablecoins and NFTs, is outside the
scope of this publication. An entity should carefully determine the
classification of such crypto assets and is encouraged to discuss this matter
with its accounting advisers.
1.4.2 SEC Guidance
1.4.2.1 SAB 121 and SAB 122
In March 2022, the SEC issued SAB 121, which:
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Provided the SEC staff’s view that an entity that has an obligation to safeguard crypto assets should record a liability and corresponding asset on its balance sheet at the fair value of the crypto assets.
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Added Section FF to SAB Topic 5; this section included “interpretive guidance for entities to consider when they have obligations to safeguard crypto-assets.”
The SEC staff had seen an increase in the number of entities that give users
the ability to transact crypto assets and provide a service to safeguard
these assets. Further, the staff had observed diversity in practice related
to how entities disclose their obligations to safeguard crypto assets. In
the SEC staff’s view, unique risks and uncertainties (e.g., technological,
legal, regulatory) are associated with safeguarding crypto assets.
Accordingly, SAB 121 was intended to “enhance the information received by
investors and other users of financial statements about these risks, thereby
assisting them in making investment and other capital allocation
decisions.”
On January 23, 2025, the SEC published SAB 122 to rescind SAB 121. The rescission will have a
significant impact on the financial statements of entities that were
previously within SAB 121’s scope since entities will now derecognize
safeguarding assets and safeguarding liabilities that were formerly
recognized under SAB 121. Such entities will evaluate whether liabilities
under ASC 450 need to be recorded for any safeguarding activities.
Although SAB 122 rescinds the guidance in SAB 121, the SEC staff continues to
emphasize the unique risks and complexities of arrangements involving
digital assets. The staff has highlighted that it is important for companies
to understand the facts and circumstances of safeguarding-related
transactions as well as the risk of loss events associated with
safeguarding. For more information about SAB 121, see Appendix C. For further details on SAB 122,
see Chapter 9.
Connecting the Dots
While SAB 122 rescinds SAB 121, full retrospective application of SAB
122 is only required for annual periods beginning after December 15,
2024, and entities are permitted to early adopt SAB 122 in any
interim or annual financial statement period included in filings
with the SEC on or after January 30, 2025. Since entities can wait
to adopt SAB 122 until the required effective date, Appendix C includes guidance related
to SAB 121. However, we believe that most, if not all, entities will
early adopt SAB 122 and that many have already early adopted it as
of the date of issuance of this publication.
1.4.2.2 Crypto Lending and Borrowing
The SEC has also shared its views on other aspects of accounting for digital
assets. At the 2022 AICPA & CIMA Conference on Current SEC and PCAOB
Developments, the SEC staff discussed the accounting for crypto lending,
prompting the AICPA to update its practice
aid on digital assets (the “AICPA Practice Aid”)3 to reflect the staff’s views. See Section
8.2 for further considerations related to crypto asset
borrowing and lending.
Footnotes
3
The AICPA Practice Aid provides nonauthoritative interpretive
guidance from the AICPA’s Digital Assets Working Group (DAWG) on how
to account for and audit digital assets.