Brazil Tells Exchanges To Prove Reserves Daily Starting From 2027

Not an occasional reassurance anymore, but plenty of routine checks to keep Brazil’s crypto markets healthy.

A Brazilian financial officer interogating a robot ina digital space.
Created by Gabor Kovacs from Ciphera

Brazil’s central bank has ordered licensed crypto trading platforms to produce daily proof they have enough assets to cover customer liabilities, a rule that will take effect on Jan. 1, 2027. The directive is part of a broader push to align exchange oversight with the standards used in the country’s traditional financial sector.

Under the new framework, exchanges will need to submit recurring reports demonstrating “asset sufficiency” — effectively showing they can withstand losses from hacks, operational failures, or other leaks without leaving clients short. The central bank also instructed platforms to adopt bank-like requirements around data protection and confidentiality.

A Tough Compliance Bar To Clearly Separate Client Funds

The rules go beyond reserve reporting. Exchanges will be required to keep their own fiat and crypto holdings segregated from customer assets, using separate accounts and wallets.

That segregation mandate is designed to make it harder for firms to mingle operational funds with client balances — a risk area regulators have repeatedly flagged in crypto market blowups.

Brazil’s central bank also published an accounting manual tailored to crypto exchanges and crypto payments firms. One notable feature: it allows companies to record crypto on their balance sheets directly, rather than forcing conversion into fiat-denominated representations for reporting purposes.

Some details around enforcement mechanics and the exact format of daily reporting were not fully clear in early coverage, but the direction is unmistakable: frequent, standardized disclosures that can be audited and compared across firms.

Brazil Plays By Rules Of a Global Post-Hack Playbook

Brazil’s move lands in the middle of a wider international trend: regulators increasingly want exchanges to hold more explicit liability buffers and adopt tighter operational controls, especially after high-profile security incidents and customer-loss events across the industry.

In Brazil, the central bank has framed the package as both investor-protection policy and a crime-prevention tool, pointing to risks ranging from money laundering to tax evasion.

Observers in the local market have also suggested the rules may tighten scrutiny on certain flows, including transfers to overseas venues, though practical limits will depend on how monitoring is implemented.

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People Also Ask:

What exactly are exchanges required to do starting in 2027?

Every day, licensed crypto platforms in Brazil must send reports proving they have enough real assets (fiat money and crypto) to cover risks like hacks or deficit.

When does this rule start?

The full daily proof-of-reserves requirement begins January 1, 2027. Some related rules (like data protection matching bank standards and special accounting for crypto) are rolling out around the same time.

Why is Brazil doing this?

To make crypto safer for users after big scandals worldwide showed exchanges sometimes didn’t hold enough funds for customer deposits. Brazil wants crypto companies to follow the same high safety and transparency rules as regular banks.

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This article is for information purposes only and should not be considered trading or investment advice. Nothing herein shall be construed as financial, legal, or tax advice. Trading forex, cryptocurrencies, and CFDs pose a considerable risk of loss.

Author
Samantha Diamo

Samantha is a journalist at Ciphera, covering the latest stories and trends shaping the crypto and Web3 space.

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