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Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Work Hours
Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM
Cryptocurrencies are decentralized digital assets that use cryptography to ensure the security of your transactions.
In addition, it uses blockchain technology as an accounting and distributed ledger that prevents fraud.
The most famous examples of cryptocurrencies are Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Cardano (ADA) and Binance Coin (BNB).
Bitcoin is the first digital currency created in the world and used for payments and receipts transactions without a financial institution, such as a bank, to intermediate the process.
The coin appeared in 2009 and was created by Satoshi Nakamoto, a pseudonym that remains a mystery to this day. No one knows if Satoshi Nakamoto is a person or a group of people, for example.
The fact is that the published article on bitcoin described the way cryptocurrencies worked – in this case, bitcoin specifically. The text also explained the system that records all operations carried out with the currency, as if it were a ledger. It’s called blockchain.
The Brazilian Ministry of Economy, at the end of 2020, through its National Department of Business Registration and Integration, confirmed that cryptocurrencies can be used to compose the share capital of a business.
In addition, in 2019, the Central Bank recognized cryptocurrencies as goods, passing the trading of these digital assets to be accounted for in the national trade balance.
Regarding the payment of Bitcoins and other cryptocurrencies in the share capital of companies, the Ministry of Economy stressed that the rules are the same applied to movable assets.
According to RFB Normative Instruction No. 1,888, both individuals and legal entities must declare their earnings and transactions with cryptocurrencies.
In the case of an individual, earnings above BRL 35,000 from the sale of Bitcoins and cryptocurrencies apply:
On the other hand, taxation in companies has no exemption limit value, so any sale value will be treated as a sale of good or right, subject to capital gain.
Although there is still no Law, standard or CPC specifically for cryptocurrencies, the accountant should consider the interpretation of existing accounting rules, such as: