Brazil’s securities regulator asks Mercado Bitcoin to clarify token information: Estadão

Quick Take

  • Brazil’s securities and exchange commission (CVM) requested information from Mercado Bitcoin about its fixed-income token offering, local newspaper Estadão reported.
  • Mercado Bitcoin offers several fixed-income ERC-20 tokens on its website. 
  • The notice comes as Brazil’s securities regulator separately plans to issue guidelines for crypto companies. 

Mercado Bitcoin confirmed it received a request from Brazil's securities and exchange commission that local news outlet Estadão said yesterday was related to its fixed-income token offering. 

While a spokesperson for the Brazilian crypto exchange confirmed the communication, it did not say how it plans to proceed.

“We do not carry out a public offering of securities outside the scope of the authorizations we have as an authorized crowdfunding and investment manager platform,” the company said in a Portuguese-language statement, adding that it supports regulation of digital asset service providers.

Mercado Bitcoin, which offers more than 200 types of digital assets to its more than 3.8 million customers, recorded overall transactions of more than 40 billion reais in 2021 (about $7.44 billion at today’s exchange rate). Among them are a variety of fixed-income tokens available via the ERC-20 token standard. These require a minimum investment of 100 Brazilian reais ($18.60) and advertise up to double-digit yields depending on the asset. 

The regulator wants to know how much Mercado Bitcoin has raised in these token offerings since January 2020 and if it will keep providing them, Estadão reported. It also wants to see a list of investors who acquired the assets and how much they invested.

“In relation to the so-called non-security tokens (tokens that do not represent securities), we take due care not to infringe on the scope of action of authorized entities, including consulting the regulator in advance about the structure used for such tokens, at the beginning of our operations in 2020,” Mercado Bitcoin said.

The CVM does not comment on specific cases, a spokesperson told The Block. However, the regulator did confirm that it asks for more information when necessary if it identifies transactions involving potential securities. 

The CVM said that “whenever necessary and, in particular, when it identifies possible transactions with potential characteristics of securities, carries out interactions with the participants in order to request information for the due work of analysis of facts and appropriate measures."

New securities guidelines coming for crypto companies

THE SCOOP

Keep up with the latest news, trends, charts and views on crypto and DeFi with a new biweekly newsletter from The Block's Frank Chaparro

By signing-up you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
By signing-up you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

The CVM is also working on a set of guidelines for crypto companies to better orient themselves around securities rules, which these companies still must follow despite the country’s lack of digital asset regulations.

"The CVM is preparing an advisory opinion that will have general directives on the subject,” the regulator told The Block earlier this month. It underscored that the forthcoming directive should be treated as a source of guidelines, rather than crypto-specific regulations. 

“It is not, at least for the time being, a regulation, given that there is currently no legal provision,” the CVM said in the statement. “The document will be characterized as providing recommendations and guidance to the market."

Cointelegraph Brasil, which first reported that the CVM was preparing the guidelines, wrote that they would be coming last week. The regulator however said it has not yet defined a date. 

A crypto regulation bill in Brazil’s Congress has reached key milestones this year, but it has been stalled in the lower house since the Senate approved the proposal in April. The bill likely will not make any progress before the country’s presidential elections on Oct. 2. 

Brazil’s securities regulator arguably has been open to crypto. It has permitted crypto exchange-traded funds and even launched a regulatory sandbox for fintech companies. But at the same time, it has cracked down on crypto companies in certain instances.

Earlier this month, the CVM blocked crypto exchange Bybit from acting as a securities broker. It also told Binance in 2020 that it could not offer derivatives products in the country.


© 2023 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

About Author

Kristin Majcher is a senior correspondent at The Block, based in Colombia. She covers the Latin America market. Before joining, she worked as a freelancer with bylines in Fortune, Condé Nast Traveler and MIT Technology Review among other publications.