4.2 Crypto Assets That Are Within the Scope of ASU 2023-08
4.2.1 Fair Value Measurement
ASC 350-60
05-1 This Subtopic provides
guidance on the subsequent measurement, presentation,
and disclosure of crypto assets that are within the
scope of this Subtopic.
05-2 This Subtopic does not
address the initial measurement, recognition, and
derecognition of crypto assets. Reporting entities shall
account for the initial measurement, recognition, and
derecognition of crypto assets in accordance with other
generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP).
The FASB issued ASU 2023-08 because of the operational challenges of applying the
impairment model to crypto assets that meet the definition of an intangible
asset, the cost of performing the impairment analysis when crypto assets were
acquired at different cost bases, and the fact that the amount presented in
financial statements did not necessarily reflect the underlying economics of a
company’s crypto asset holdings. The ASU addresses the subsequent measurement of
in-scope crypto assets.
ASC 350-60
35-1 An entity shall measure
crypto assets at fair value in the statement of
financial position. Gains and losses from the
remeasurement of crypto assets shall be included in net
income.
ASU 2023-08 requires entities to subsequently measure certain in-scope crypto
assets at fair value, with changes in fair value recorded in net income in each
reporting period. Paragraph BC31 of ASU 2023-08 states that the Board
“considered whether the guidance in Topic 820 provides a sufficient basis for
entities to measure the fair value of crypto assets” and ultimately determined
that “[ASC] 820 is operable and sufficient for measuring the fair value of
crypto assets” within the scope of the ASU.
ASC 820 establishes a framework for measuring fair value and requires disclosures
about fair value measurements. ASC 820-10-20 defines fair value as the “price
that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an
orderly transaction between market participants at the measurement date.” Thus,
a fair value measurement is an “exit price.” As discussed in Chapter 3 of Deloitte’s Roadmap Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures (Including the
Fair Value Option), an entity needs to perform various
steps to (1) prepare a fair value measurement that complies with the measurement
principles in ASC 820 and (2) meet the disclosure requirements in ASC 820. These
principles should be applied to crypto assets that are measured at fair
value.
The Background Information and Basis for Conclusions of ASU 2023-08 indicates
that entities should use the existing guidance in ASC 820 in (1) determining the
principal (or most advantageous) market, the levels of inputs in the fair value
hierarchy, and the fair value of the transactions affected by related parties;
(2) measuring fair value when the volume of transactions has decreased
significantly; (3) identifying transactions that are not orderly; and (4) using
quoted prices provided by third parties. As it does when assessing other assets
measured at fair value, an entity should use judgment when evaluating the
factors related to determining the fair value of in-scope crypto assets.
Connecting the Dots
Before the adoption of ASU 2023-08, only entities that are within the
scope of the investment- company guidance in ASC 946 and certain
entities applying the guidance for broker-dealers in ASC 940 are
permitted to measure crypto assets at fair value. The amendments in ASU
2023-08 that allow entities to measure certain crypto assets at fair
value are intended to address stakeholder concerns that the
cost-less-impairment 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.
While the fair value guidance discussed in this chapter applies more directly to
in-scope crypto assets, it may also apply to ASC 350-30 crypto assets when an
entity is determining whether those assets are impaired, since the impairment of
ASC 350-30 assets is determined on the basis of their fair values.