C.1 Introduction
The SEC issued SAB 122 on January 23, 2025, to rescind
                                            SAB 121 (which was released in March
                                        2022). However, SAB 121 may still apply to certain entities
                                        that have not yet adopted SAB 122 until the required
                                        effective date, which is for annual periods beginning after
                                        December 15, 2024. Further, an entity that has adopted SAB
                                        122 should consider what disclosures and risks may remain
                                        applicable under other standards. For more information about
                                        SAB 122, see Chapter
                                        9.
                                Under SAB 121, an entity that was responsible for safeguarding crypto assets held for
                its platform users recorded on its balance sheet (1) a liability (“safeguarding
                liability”) representing its obligation to safeguard such crypto assets and (2) a
                corresponding asset (“safeguarding asset”). This accounting represented a departure
                from the treatment of traditional custodial services for financial assets such as
                stocks and bonds or commodities such as gold before the issuance of SAB 121. In
                explaining why it believed the SAB was needed, the SEC staff noted that obligations
                associated with crypto asset custodial “arrangements involve unique risks and
                uncertainties” (e.g., technological, legal, regulatory) that are “not present in
                arrangements to safeguard [other] assets.” 
            While SAB 121 applied to entities that assume responsibility (legally, contractually,
                or both) for safeguarding crypto assets owned by another party, the SEC has viewed
                scope more broadly in formal and informal consultations since the SAB’s issuance.
                This broader view is based, in part, on the uncertain legal landscape (given the
                relative nascence of the digital asset sector) and the importance of information for
                users of the financial statements in the case of potential loss events. Accordingly,
                in the evaluation of whether the SAB applied to a given activity, it is critical to
                understand how an entity marketed its products and services; whether and, if so, how
                the entity was involved in transaction flow; whether the customer may have perceived
                that safeguarding responsibilities (direct or indirect) were assumed; and whether,
                in legal terms, the entity’s role and exposure might have been viewed as going
                beyond that of having a contractual relationship with the customer.