The Canadian Securities Administration (CSA), the country’s securities watchdog, has proposed new regulatory requirements for public investment funds that looks to invest in crypto assets.
In a report released Thursday, the regulator announced certain rules that would restrict how public funds invest in cryptos.
Canadian securities regulators seek feedback on rules for public investment funds holding crypto assets. https://t.co/x82uL6XgTG pic.twitter.com/uKGSlCDD8S
— CSA_News (@CSA_News) January 18, 2024
For instance, the CSA noted that only alternative mutual funds and non-redeemable investment funds would be allowed to buy, sell and hold crypto assets directly.
“Mutual funds, other than alternative mutual funds, will only be permitted to invest in crypto assets by investing in underlying alternative mutual funds or non-redeemable funds that invest in crypto assets,” the regulator wrote.
Furthermore, the rules also clarified the type of crypto asset that investment funds need to hold. Additionally, public crypto asset funds cannot buy or hold cryptocurrencies that are not fungible – NFTs – due to their “characteristics that are incompatible with investment fund products offered to retail investors,” the report added.
“we are proposing to restrict investment funds to investing only in crypto assets that are listed for trading on, or are the underlying interest for a specified derivative where that specified derivative trades on, an exchange that has been recognized by a securities regulatory authority in Canada,” it stated.
The CSA further limited funds from using crypto as collateral in transactions, such as securities lending, repurchase transactions or reverse transactions.
“We are proposing to clarify that a ‘money market
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