Canada’s KPMG Adds Bitcoin To Its Treasury

Share This Post

The Canadian member of KPMG’s global organization of independent firms bought bitcoin through Gemini for its corporate treasury.

  • KPMG Canada has added bitcoin to its corporate treasury.
  • The allocation is a first-of-a-kind investment for the company.
  • KPMG Canada is an independent member affiliated with KPMG International, one of the Big Four accounting firms.

Canada’s KPMG has added bitcoin to its corporate treasury through Gemini Trust Company’s execution and custody services, a first for the Canadian member of KPMG International Limited, a British-Dutch multinational professional services network and one of the Big Four accounting organizations.

“The investment illustrates the firm’s outlook on emerging technologies underpinned by blockchain,” the company said in a Monday statement.

KPMG said it established a governance committee with stakeholders from finance, risk management, advisory, audit, and tax to provide oversight and approve the bitcoin allocation, which also included one other cryptocurrency. The committee performed a “rigorous risk assessment process” that included a review of the many different risks the allocation could pose. Tax and accounting implications were also assessed.

“This investment reflects our belief that institutional adoption of cryptoassets and blockchain technology will continue to grow and become a regular part of the asset mix,” Canadian managing partner of advisory services at KPMG in Canada, Benjie Thomas, said in a statement. “Investors such as hedge funds and family offices to large insurers and pension funds are increasingly gaining exposure to cryptoassets, and traditional financial services such as banks, financial advisors and brokerages are exploring offering products and services involving cryptoassets.”

KPMG is a full-service audit, tax, and advisory firm owned and operated by Canadians for over 150 years. The company provides consulting, accounting, auditing, and tax services in the country with its over 8,000 employees in more than 40 locations. KPMG did not disclose the size of the allocation.

“The cryptoasset industry continues to grow and mature and it needs to be considered by financial services and institutional investors,” said Kareem Sadek, advisory partner, cryptoassets and blockchain services co-leader, KPMG in Canada.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

$33.14 Billion At Risk If The Bitcoin Price Hits $72,462, Here’s Why

Crypto analyst Ash Crypto has alerted the crypto community that $3314 billion is at risk if the Bitcoin price reaches $72,462 This relates to the short positions that could be liquidated if the

Post halving, Bitcoin miners are choosing between hodling BTC and upgrading to AI

After the Bitcoin halving took place in April, major Bitcoin miners have increasingly started choosing one of two strategies — either hodl the BTC they mine or gear up with artificial intelligence

Trial Postponed for Jailed Ex-US Federal Agent After Court No-Show

A Nigerian court has adjourned the trial of Tigran Gambaryan, a jailed Binance executive, due to his illness Gambaryan, a US citizen and former federal agent, missed a scheduled court appearance

Ripple CEO Praises the State of Cryptocurrency Regulation in Brazil

Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple, a payments and cryptocurrency service provider, has praised the state of cryptocurrency regulation in Brazil, one of the largest crypto markets in Latam In an

Beyond Hacks: Understanding and managing economic risks in DeFi

The following is a guest article from Vincent Maliepaard, Marketing Director at IntoTheBlock Economic risks have led to nearly $60 billion in losses across DeFi protocols While this number may seem

Powell’s Legacy, the Ethics of ‘Doxing’, and Uptober or Rektober

This editorial is from last week’s edition of the newsletter Week in Review Subscribe to the newsletter to get this weekly editorial the second it’s finished The newsletter also includes the