The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) published the final Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) on 10 October 2022. This provides for the automatic exchange of information between countries on crypto-assets. These are intended as global standards, though the U.S. likely will not adopt them, and it’s left to individual countries to apply them within their own jurisdictions.
The final CARF provides some guidance on hard-to-value assets. They allow analysts to rely on the second value of new resulting property if the hard-to-value asset is exchanged. In addition, if the relevant crypto-asset service provider does not maintain an applicable reference value, it may rely on:
- First, the internal accounting book values with respect to the relevant crypto-asset should be used;
- If a book value is not available, a value provided by third-party companies or websites that aggregate current prices of relevant crypto-assets must be used if the valuation method used by that third party is reasonably expected to provide a reliable indicator of value;
- If neither of the above is available, the most recent valuation of the relevant crypto-asset must be used; and
- If a value can still not be attributed, a reasonable estimate may be applied as a measure of last resort.
Prior to the release of the final rules, based on responses to the initial March 2022 draft, the OECD revised many provisions including the definition of covered assets, the treatment of decentralised finance (DeFi) platforms, and who would be required to report. The final rules include a new threshold of $US50,000 for retail transaction reporting.