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TOO MANY MOVING PARTS
Just how you would manage your books for normal (“traditional”) books that covers cash, accounts payable, accounts receivable, investments, treasury and capital gains/losses, you would do all of this but for both Crypto and traditional books. Then, just because it’s crypto, you need to figure out how to merge the two books and still be compliant; FASB + US GAAP, to IFRS + local compliance.
TOOLS TOOLS TOOLS
Crypto accounting is still a new world even for CPAs. Not many fully understand or grasp the depth required to follow, create and manage crypto books in addition to traditional books. No one tool does it all for crypto (yet) unlike the NetSuites and SAPs of the world where all AP, AR, Billing, Revenue, ERP and sub ledgers are in singular place. Finding the right tool is hard and gets harder as your company starts with more complex onchain transactions. 1 reply
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FINANCE STACKS GET WEIRD
You typically would have an ERP (QuickBooks, NetSuite, SAP etc), in additional to a billing tool (Airbase, Bill, Stripe etc) and perhaps a corporate credit card (Airbase, Brex, Ramp etc). These are very standard in the world of startups.
Then you need to worry about the crypto finance stack. You will need a crypto subledger that essentially scrapes the blockchain(s) you operate on for all transactions and calculate the capital gains/loss automatically per FIFO, LIFO, Lot etc. So far, Integral has the competitive edge on this realm - a solid team who is very responsive, listen to feedback and are crazy quick to deploy upgrades and features!!
Then if you pay people or receive payments in crypto you need wallets - whether those are hot wallets, multisig wallets or custody accounts. Typically a web3 company has all of these, each used for something specific. (eventually Custody providers too!) 1 reply
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