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Insights & Resources

Start exploring insights from across the industries we serve, featuring the latest industry trends, compliance alerts, tax and accounting news and much more.

Recent cryptocurrency exchange failures were not caused by technological issues, but by a lack of structure in corporate governance and internal controls.
U.S. banking regulatory agencies (including the Federal Reserve, FDIC & OCC) released their first-ever joint statement on crypto-asset risks to banking organizations.
Companies must now account for cryptocurrency assets using fair value, according to a decision made by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB).
The demand for guidance on how firms should manage digital assets for accounting purposes continues to grow in tandem with the use and acceptance of crypto assets.
To improve tax compliance, the U.S. Treasury Department proposed four changes to "modernize" the corporate and individual reporting of digital assets.
Senators Kirsten Gillibrand and Cynthia Lummis proposed the Responsible Financial Innovation Act to create a comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets.
As the SEC considers regulations to strengthen cybersecurity in public companies, concerns about cyberattacks are on the rise. Learn more.
The growing popularity of virtual currencies and their potential to facilitate tax evasion has prompted the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and Congress to impose additional reporting requirements on taxpayers who hold or use virtual currencies.
With cryptocurrencies becoming more mainstream, Weaver is consistently asked to decrypt what crypto means for individuals and businesses that want to learn more.
When cryptocurrencies first came on the scene, they were widely viewed as a fringe development, but in recent years they’ve moved closer to the mainstream.
We’ve all seen it. Your organization has a contract in place with a key customer, but your obligations don’t necessarily make sense to the people responsible for achieving them. This is especially common with IT-related obligations, and is typically caused by the volume of verbiage addressing IT topics and a lack of understanding of that jargon by legal and finance leadership.