Businesses face challenges integrating crypto into traditional accounting

As cryptocurrency adoption grows, businesses are increasingly accepting digital assets for payments, but traditional accounting frameworks are ill-equipped to handle them. New regulations like the GENIUS Act are accelerating this shift, with companies like Square, Microsoft, and PayPal leading the way. However, valuing volatile assets, verifying ownership, and complying with evolving rules pose significant hurdles.

The surge in digital asset use has reinvigorated business interest in cryptocurrency over the past year. Regulatory developments, including the GENIUS Act, are pushing crypto into mainstream finance, enabling faster settlements and access to global customers. For instance, Square recently started supporting Bitcoin payments, while Microsoft accepts crypto for certain services, and PayPal allows users to buy and sell digital currencies.

Despite these opportunities, integrating crypto into accounting presents unique demands. Traditional methods fall short in the crypto space, where assets can fluctuate rapidly in value. This volatility affects financial statements, reporting periods, and revenue recognition, which must be calculated at the fair market value upon receipt. Companies handling over 100 crypto transactions annually or managing multiple assets often encounter unsustainable challenges in closing their books.

Fragmentation adds complexity, as reconciling transactions across various wallets and exchanges is labor-intensive and prone to errors when done manually via spreadsheets. Proving ownership is another issue, given crypto's decentralized nature lacks a central authority for verification, requiring teams to perform their own due diligence. Regulatory guidance remains fluid, demanding agility in compliance.

To address these, businesses need crypto-native systems with digital ledgers tailored to how assets function. Such tools can automate accounting, making it more efficient than traditional approaches. This adaptation not only avoids resource strain but also enables optimizations like tax loss harvesting, exposure rebalancing, and better cash flow management.

Looking ahead, 2026 is expected to see more firms embrace everyday crypto transactions, evolving the financial system for streamlined buying, selling, and money movement. With regulators and consumers preparing, accounting must follow suit to capture growth and efficiency gains from digital assets.

Makala yanayohusiana

U.S. Treasury report illustration showing holographic tech pillars for crypto compliance: AI monitoring, digital ID, blockchain analytics, and data APIs, with privacy mixer endorsement.
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U.S. Treasury report proposes AI, digital ID pillars for crypto compliance; endorses lawful mixer privacy

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The U.S. Treasury Department submitted a report to Congress on March 9, 2026—commissioned under the GENIUS Act—outlining four technological pillars to enhance transparency in cryptocurrency transactions: artificial intelligence for monitoring, digital identity for onboarding, blockchain analytics for tracing, and interoperable data-sharing APIs. It describes digital assets as key to U.S. innovation leadership while acknowledging lawful users' need for privacy tools like mixers on public blockchains, amid risks from illicit exploitation.

A CoinDesk opinion column argues that cryptocurrencies have failed to deliver practical utility after over a decade of promises. Author VerifiedX’s Pollak highlights poor user experiences, speculative focus, and technical barriers as key reasons for limited real-world use. Global ownership remains below 10%, with even less actual usage for payments.

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Cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase has warned that new U.S. tax reporting requirements for digital assets impose unnecessary burdens on retail users and clutter the tax system. The company's tax experts highlighted issues with the IRS's Form 1099-DA, which reports gross proceeds from crypto transactions starting in 2025. They argue that including small transactions, stablecoins, and gas fees leads to over-reporting without real tax implications.

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