ForsikringsBrief AdvisorBrief
KØB SENESTE NYT KURSER
Køb Abonnement

Crypto Miners Would Get Tax Reporting Reprieve in Senate Bill

Cryptocurrency mining machines at a Canada Computational Unlimited Inc. computation center in Joliette, Quebec, Canada, on Friday, Sept. 10, 2021. CCU.ai, a Bitcoin mining center powered by hydroelectricity, has been conditionally approved for trading on the TSX Venture Exchange in Toronto under the stock symbol SATO. Photographer: Christinne Muschi/Bloomberg
Cryptocurrency mining machines at a Canada Computational Unlimited Inc. computation center in Joliette, Quebec, Canada, on Friday, Sept. 10, 2021. CCU.ai, a Bitcoin mining center powered by hydroelectricity, has been conditionally approved for trading on the TSX Venture Exchange in Toronto under the stock symbol SATO. Photographer: Christinne Muschi/Bloomberg
1240x-1.jpg
Cryptocurrency mining machines at a Canada Computational Unlimited Inc. computation center in Joliette, Quebec, Canada, on Friday, Sept. 10, 2021. CCU.ai, a Bitcoin mining center powered by hydroelectricity, has been conditionally approved for trading on the TSX Venture Exchange in Toronto under the stock symbol SATO. Photographer: Christinne Muschi/Bloomberg
Cryptocurrency mining machines at a Canada Computational Unlimited Inc. computation center in Joliette, Quebec, Canada, on Friday, Sept. 10, 2021. CCU.ai, a Bitcoin mining center powered by hydroelectricity, has been conditionally approved for trading on the TSX Venture Exchange in Toronto under the stock symbol SATO. Photographer: Christinne Muschi/Bloomberg

Crypto miners and software developers hoping to avoid new Internal Revenue Service reporting rules are getting help from a group of key senators.

Legislation introduced Wednesday by a mix of Republicans and Democrats including Senators Pat Toomey, Cynthia Lummis, Rob Portman, Kyrsten Sinema, and Mark Warner would exempt the firms from being considered crypto "brokers." Under a 2021 law, the label could trigger requirements to collect information on customers' capital gains and losses and other transaction data.

The Treasury Department has said it supports not classifying miners, developers and other "ancillary parties" as brokers, thus sparing them from the effort aimed at boosting tax compliance.

Despite that, industry executives are still pushing for Congress to intervene to ensure Treasury actually includes the exemptions in regulations. Crypto advocates have said miners and software developers don't have access to the information that they'd need to report.

A similar effort by the same group of senators last year failed at the last minute because of a dispute over an unrelated issue involving military spending.

(C)2022 Bloomberg L.P.


Andre læser også

DAGENS

E-AVIS

E-avis vignette
Dagens E-avis