[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":913},["ShallowReactive",2],{"navigation":3,"/blog/foundation-treasury-accounting":31,"/blog/foundation-treasury-accounting-surround":902},[4,22],{"title":5,"path":6,"stem":7,"children":8,"page":21},"Introduction","/docs/introduction","1.docs/2.introduction",[9,13,17],{"title":10,"path":11,"stem":12},"Why","/docs/introduction/why","1.docs/2.introduction/1.why",{"title":14,"path":15,"stem":16},"Blockchain as solution?","/docs/introduction/blockchain-as-solution","1.docs/2.introduction/2.blockchain-as-solution",{"title":18,"path":19,"stem":20},"What's the Solution?","/docs/introduction/wag3s-as-solution","1.docs/2.introduction/3.wag3s-as-solution",false,{"title":23,"path":24,"stem":25,"children":26,"page":21},"Api Documentation","/docs/api-documentation","1.docs/3.api-documentation",[27],{"title":28,"path":29,"stem":30},"getting started","/docs/api-documentation/api","1.docs/3.api-documentation/1.api",{"id":32,"title":33,"authors":34,"badge":41,"body":43,"date":864,"description":865,"disclaimer":866,"extension":867,"faqs":868,"image":887,"meta":888,"navigation":896,"path":897,"reviewedBy":898,"reviewedDate":864,"seo":899,"stem":900,"__hash__":901},"posts/3.blog/53.foundation-treasury-accounting.md","Foundation Treasury Accounting: Optimism, Arbitrum, Aave & DAO Foundations",[35],{"name":36,"to":37,"avatar":38,"description":40},"Wag3s Team","https://x.com/W3Wag3s",{"src":39},"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1720428793699926016/yofJTeB6_400x400.jpg","Editorial team specializing in Web3 finance, crypto tax, and DAO operations. Based in Zurich, Switzerland.",{"label":42},"Foundations",{"type":44,"value":45,"toc":836},"minimark",[46,50,54,57,60,65,70,73,113,117,120,152,156,159,191,194,198,201,221,224,238,241,245,248,323,326,329,355,359,363,366,386,389,415,419,422,448,451,471,475,478,482,485,489,492,518,521,547,551,554,558,561,565,568,572,575,607,610,614,617,655,658,662,670,718,725,729,772,776],[47,48,33],"h1",{"id":49},"foundation-treasury-accounting-optimism-arbitrum-aave-dao-foundations",[51,52,53],"p",{},"Crypto foundations now sit on multi-billion-dollar treasuries — the Ethereum Foundation reportedly holds over $1B, Optimism Foundation manages an OP allocation worth several billion, Arbitrum Foundation, Aave Companies, the Polkadot Web3 Foundation, the Solana Foundation, and dozens of smaller protocol foundations all operate non-trivial finance functions. Their accounting is a blend of NGO/charity reporting, hedge-fund-style mark-to-market, and on-chain governance attribution that doesn't match any traditional template.",[51,55,56],{},"This guide covers how foundations actually do their accounting in 2026, the legal-structure choices that drive the framework, sequencer revenue and grant program recognition, IFRS and US GAAP reporting realities, and the workflow a foundation finance lead needs. It's written for foundation operators, controllers, and DAO leads operating through foundation wrappers.",[51,58,59],{},"The short version: pick your legal structure (Cayman foundation is the most common), report under IFRS with fair-value measurement for crypto holdings, recognize grants as expenses at distribution rather than at award, and publish annual financials with full grant-program transparency.",[61,62,64],"h2",{"id":63},"the-three-dominant-legal-structures","The three dominant legal structures",[66,67,69],"h3",{"id":68},"cayman-foundation-company","Cayman foundation company",[51,71,72],{},"The most common structure for protocol-issued tokens (Optimism, Arbitrum, Aave Companies, dYdX, etc.). Established under the Cayman Islands Foundation Companies Act 2017. Key characteristics:",[74,75,76,84,95,101,107],"ul",{},[77,78,79,83],"li",{},[80,81,82],"strong",{},"Legal personality"," without members, beneficiaries, or shareholders — controlled by directors and (optionally) supervisors.",[77,85,86,89,90,94],{},[80,87,88],{},"Purpose-driven",": the foundation document specifies one or more purposes, which can be very broad (\"supporting the ",[91,92,93],"span",{},"Protocol"," ecosystem\").",[77,96,97,100],{},[80,98,99],{},"No tax in Cayman",": zero corporate tax, zero capital gains tax, zero withholding.",[77,102,103,106],{},[80,104,105],{},"Flexible reporting",": no statutory IFRS requirement; voluntary publication is the norm for transparency.",[77,108,109,112],{},[80,110,111],{},"Director-controlled",": typically uses professional directors who execute decisions made by the broader DAO or core team.",[66,114,116],{"id":115},"swiss-stiftung-foundation","Swiss Stiftung (foundation)",[51,118,119],{},"The original crypto-foundation pattern, used by Ethereum Foundation, Polkadot's Web3 Foundation, Tezos Foundation, Solana Foundation. Key characteristics:",[74,121,122,128,134,140,146],{},[77,123,124,127],{},[80,125,126],{},"Strict purpose",": established under Swiss Civil Code with a defined, unchangeable purpose.",[77,129,130,133],{},[80,131,132],{},"Regulated",": subject to Federal Supervisory Authority for Foundations (ESA) oversight.",[77,135,136,139],{},[80,137,138],{},"Tax status",": typically tax-exempt if purposes qualify as \"public benefit\"; otherwise taxed as a Swiss corporate entity.",[77,141,142,145],{},[80,143,144],{},"Statutory accounting",": required to produce annual financial statements following Swiss accounting standards (Swiss GAAP FER for larger foundations).",[77,147,148,151],{},[80,149,150],{},"Less flexibility",": changing the purpose requires court intervention and is rarely successful.",[66,153,155],{"id":154},"wyoming-tennessee-utah-dao-llc","Wyoming / Tennessee / Utah DAO LLC",[51,157,158],{},"The US-domiciled option for DAO-native organizations seeking legal personhood. Key characteristics:",[74,160,161,167,173,179,185],{},[77,162,163,166],{},[80,164,165],{},"Recognizes the DAO",": members are tracked on-chain; the smart contract is the operating agreement.",[77,168,169,172],{},[80,170,171],{},"Tax personality",": typically partnership treatment by default; check-the-box election available.",[77,174,175,178],{},[80,176,177],{},"Reporting",": state filing required, federal partnership return (Form 1065) typically required.",[77,180,181,184],{},[80,182,183],{},"Newer",": still being tested in courts; legal status outside the home state is uncertain.",[77,186,187,190],{},[80,188,189],{},"Best for",": smaller DAOs, especially those wanting US presence for vendor contracts.",[51,192,193],{},"The choice between these three depends on: where the protocol's contributors are concentrated, the desired regulatory profile, the level of transparency required, and whether the foundation needs to hold significant non-crypto assets (where Swiss/Cayman flexibility is meaningful).",[61,195,197],{"id":196},"reporting-framework-ifrs-becomes-the-de-facto-standard","Reporting framework: IFRS becomes the de facto standard",[51,199,200],{},"For protocol foundations, IFRS is the de facto reporting standard in 2026 — even when not strictly required:",[74,202,203,209,215],{},[77,204,205,208],{},[80,206,207],{},"Cayman foundations"," voluntarily publish IFRS statements for transparency. The Optimism Foundation has produced IFRS-aligned annual reports since 2023; Arbitrum Foundation since 2024.",[77,210,211,214],{},[80,212,213],{},"Swiss Stiftungen"," are required to produce statements under Swiss GAAP FER (similar in spirit to IFRS).",[77,216,217,220],{},[80,218,219],{},"DAO LLCs"," typically produce US GAAP statements for partnership filings. The 2024 FASB ASU 2023-08 guidance materially aligned US GAAP with IFRS for fungible crypto.",[51,222,223],{},"The key 2024–2026 framework changes that simplified foundation accounting:",[74,225,226,232],{},[77,227,228,231],{},[80,229,230],{},"IAS 38 amendments (2024)",": digital assets held in active markets can use the revaluation model with fair-value remeasurement.",[77,233,234,237],{},[80,235,236],{},"FASB ASU 2023-08 (2024)",": fair-value measurement with changes through net income for most fungible crypto.",[51,239,240],{},"The result: a 2026 foundation report shows crypto holdings at fair value with ongoing revaluation through P&L (or OCI for some IFRS reporters). This is materially simpler than the pre-2024 indefinite-life intangible asset treatment that required impairment testing and never allowed write-ups.",[61,242,244],{"id":243},"treasury-composition-the-typical-foundation-balance-sheet","Treasury composition — the typical foundation balance sheet",[51,246,247],{},"A representative protocol foundation balance sheet:",[249,250,251,264],"table",{},[252,253,254],"thead",{},[255,256,257,261],"tr",{},[258,259,260],"th",{},"Line",[258,262,263],{},"Typical % of treasury",[265,266,267,276,284,291,299,307,315],"tbody",{},[255,268,269,273],{},[270,271,272],"td",{},"Native protocol token (OP, ARB, AAVE, etc.)",[270,274,275],{},"40–80%",[255,277,278,281],{},[270,279,280],{},"ETH",[270,282,283],{},"5–25%",[255,285,286,289],{},[270,287,288],{},"Stablecoins (USDC, DAI)",[270,290,283],{},[255,292,293,296],{},[270,294,295],{},"BTC",[270,297,298],{},"0–5%",[255,300,301,304],{},[270,302,303],{},"Other crypto (ecosystem holdings)",[270,305,306],{},"0–10%",[255,308,309,312],{},[270,310,311],{},"Cash and cash-equivalents (fiat)",[270,313,314],{},"1–10%",[255,316,317,320],{},[270,318,319],{},"Operating assets (computers, IP)",[270,321,322],{},"\u003C1%",[51,324,325],{},"The native-token concentration creates the structural challenge: the foundation's reporting currency is USD/EUR/CHF, but its largest holding is volatile and protocol-specific. A 30% drawdown in OP shows up as a 30% reduction in the foundation's net assets unless hedged or diversified. Most foundations don't hedge — they accept the volatility in exchange for protocol-aligned incentives.",[51,327,328],{},"The diversification trend (2024–2026) has been:",[74,330,331,337,343,349],{},[77,332,333,336],{},[80,334,335],{},"From 100% native token"," toward 40–60%.",[77,338,339,342],{},[80,340,341],{},"Into stablecoins for operations"," (typically 12–24 months of runway).",[77,344,345,348],{},[80,346,347],{},"Into ETH for treasury"," (long-term store of value, gas reserve, DeFi yield base).",[77,350,351,354],{},[80,352,353],{},"Into US Treasuries"," via tokenized RWAs (sBUOY, USDM, OUSG, etc.).",[61,356,358],{"id":357},"revenue-streams-three-categories","Revenue streams — three categories",[66,360,362],{"id":361},"_1-sequencer-revenue-rollup-foundations","1. Sequencer revenue (rollup foundations)",[51,364,365],{},"For protocol foundations operating L2 rollups (Optimism, Arbitrum, Base via Coinbase, ZKsync), sequencer revenue is now a meaningful operating income line:",[74,367,368,374,380],{},[77,369,370,373],{},[80,371,372],{},"Optimism Foundation",": receives 50% of Superchain net sequencer revenue from January 2026; uses revenue for OP buybacks (12-month program approved by governance).",[77,375,376,379],{},[80,377,378],{},"Arbitrum Foundation",": retains sequencer revenue; allocates through DAO governance proposals.",[77,381,382,385],{},[80,383,384],{},"Base"," (operated by Coinbase, not a foundation): revenue retained by Coinbase Inc.",[51,387,388],{},"Accounting treatment for foundations receiving sequencer revenue:",[74,390,391,397,403,409],{},[77,392,393,396],{},[80,394,395],{},"Recognize at on-chain distribution event"," (when the foundation receives the funds, not when earned by the sequencer).",[77,398,399,402],{},[80,400,401],{},"Classify as ordinary operating income",".",[77,404,405,408],{},[80,406,407],{},"FMV at distribution"," in the reporting currency.",[77,410,411,414],{},[80,412,413],{},"Subsequent uses"," (buybacks, grants, operations) are separate accounting events.",[66,416,418],{"id":417},"_2-treasury-yield","2. Treasury yield",[51,420,421],{},"Most foundations now run yield strategies on idle treasury:",[74,423,424,430,436,442],{},[77,425,426,429],{},[80,427,428],{},"ETH staking"," — typically 3–4% annualized through Lido, Coinbase, or self-staked.",[77,431,432,435],{},[80,433,434],{},"Stablecoin lending"," — Aave or Compound at typical 3–6% on USDC.",[77,437,438,441],{},[80,439,440],{},"Tokenized US Treasuries"," — sBUOY, USDM, OUSG yielding ~5%.",[77,443,444,447],{},[80,445,446],{},"DeFi LP positions"," for the more aggressive treasuries.",[51,449,450],{},"Yield accounting:",[74,452,453,459,465],{},[77,454,455,458],{},[80,456,457],{},"Income at receipt"," for staking and lending rewards.",[77,460,461,464],{},[80,462,463],{},"Mark-to-market"," for tokenized Treasury holdings.",[77,466,467,470],{},[80,468,469],{},"Realized gains/losses"," on disposals.",[66,472,474],{"id":473},"_3-grant-or-sponsor-income-rarer","3. Grant or sponsor income (rarer)",[51,476,477],{},"Some foundations receive grants from larger entities (e.g. ecosystem grants from L1 foundations to L2 foundations). Recognized as ordinary income at receipt, with conditions satisfied.",[61,479,481],{"id":480},"expense-streams-the-program-structure","Expense streams — the program structure",[51,483,484],{},"The expense side of a foundation P&L typically has three or four major program lines:",[66,486,488],{"id":487},"grant-programs","Grant programs",[51,490,491],{},"Most foundations operate one or more named grant programs:",[74,493,494,500,506,512],{},[77,495,496,499],{},[80,497,498],{},"Optimism RetroPGF",": retroactive public goods funding.",[77,501,502,505],{},[80,503,504],{},"Arbitrum DAO grants",": governance-approved ecosystem funding.",[77,507,508,511],{},[80,509,510],{},"Aave Grants DAO",": ecosystem development grants.",[77,513,514,517],{},[80,515,516],{},"Ethereum Foundation grants",": research, client teams, public goods.",[51,519,520],{},"Accounting treatment:",[74,522,523,529,535,541],{},[77,524,525,528],{},[80,526,527],{},"Each grant as a discrete expense"," at distribution.",[77,530,531,534],{},[80,532,533],{},"Multi-year or milestone-based grants",": recognized at each milestone, not at award.",[77,536,537,540],{},[80,538,539],{},"OP/ARB/AAVE grants valued at FMV"," at the distribution date in the reporting currency.",[77,542,543,546],{},[80,544,545],{},"Audit trail",": each grant should reference the governance proposal or grant-committee decision that authorized it.",[66,548,550],{"id":549},"operational-expenses","Operational expenses",[51,552,553],{},"Salaries, legal, audit, hosting, software, contractor compensation. Standard expense recognition. The wrinkle for crypto-native foundations is paying contributors in tokens — which requires per-payment FMV valuation and triggers contributor-side income recognition.",[66,555,557],{"id":556},"validator-and-infrastructure-costs","Validator and infrastructure costs",[51,559,560],{},"For foundations operating validators (Lido staking infrastructure, Solana Foundation running validators, etc.): hosting, bandwidth, and personnel costs.",[66,562,564],{"id":563},"marketing-and-ecosystem","Marketing and ecosystem",[51,566,567],{},"Conferences, sponsorships, hackathons, developer relations. Standard expense recognition.",[61,569,571],{"id":570},"annual-reporting-what-foundations-publish","Annual reporting — what foundations publish",[51,573,574],{},"The transparent foundations (Optimism, Arbitrum, Aave Companies) publish:",[74,576,577,583,589,595,601],{},[77,578,579,582],{},[80,580,581],{},"Annual financial statements"," (IFRS-aligned) with auditor sign-off where possible.",[77,584,585,588],{},[80,586,587],{},"Treasury composition"," as of fiscal year-end and quarterly.",[77,590,591,594],{},[80,592,593],{},"Grant program detail",": every grant recipient, amount, purpose, governance reference.",[77,596,597,600],{},[80,598,599],{},"Sequencer-revenue dashboards"," (for L2 foundations).",[77,602,603,606],{},[80,604,605],{},"Operational expense breakdown"," at department/program level.",[51,608,609],{},"The less-transparent foundations publish less, but the regulatory direction is clear: the EU's MiCA Article 30 disclosure requirements and the OECD's CARF framework are pushing toward more transparency, not less. Even Cayman foundations are voluntarily increasing transparency to maintain credibility with token holders.",[61,611,613],{"id":612},"the-audit-reality","The audit reality",[51,615,616],{},"Big-4 audit of a foundation treasury requires:",[74,618,619,625,631,637,643,649],{},[77,620,621,624],{},[80,622,623],{},"Wallet ownership proof",": for every wallet on the balance sheet, demonstrate control via signed message or transaction history.",[77,626,627,630],{},[80,628,629],{},"Cost-basis support",": documentation of how each position was acquired and at what cost basis.",[77,632,633,636],{},[80,634,635],{},"FMV pricing methodology",": defensible price sources for each asset.",[77,638,639,642],{},[80,640,641],{},"Internal controls",": signer multi-sig configuration, change management, incident logs.",[77,644,645,648],{},[80,646,647],{},"Grant authorization trail",": every grant traced to a board or governance decision.",[77,650,651,654],{},[80,652,653],{},"SOC 2 Type II"," (increasingly): for foundations large enough to attract that level of scrutiny.",[51,656,657],{},"The major audit firms (Deloitte, PwC, EY, KPMG) all now have crypto-foundation audit practices. The 2025 IFRS amendments and FASB ASU 2023-08 simplified the technical accounting; the operational controls remain the harder part.",[61,659,661],{"id":660},"how-wag3s-supports-foundation-accounting","How Wag3s supports foundation accounting",[51,663,664,669],{},[665,666,668],"a",{"href":667},"/ledger","Wag3s Ledger"," provides foundation-specific features:",[74,671,672,678,688,694,700,706,712],{},[77,673,674,677],{},[80,675,676],{},"Multi-jurisdictional reporting"," for Cayman, Swiss, US-domiciled foundations.",[77,679,680,683,684,687],{},[80,681,682],{},"IFRS revaluation"," and ",[80,685,686],{},"FASB ASU 2023-08 fair-value"," accounting modes.",[77,689,690,693],{},[80,691,692],{},"Grant program tracking"," with per-program expense lines and beneficiary attribution.",[77,695,696,699],{},[80,697,698],{},"Sequencer-revenue recognition"," for L2 foundations with automated distribution-event detection.",[77,701,702,705],{},[80,703,704],{},"Multi-sig signer attribution"," linking every transaction to the signers who approved it.",[77,707,708,711],{},[80,709,710],{},"Snapshot proposal anchoring"," linking governance decisions to the transactions they authorize.",[77,713,714,717],{},[80,715,716],{},"Audit-ready exports"," for Big-4 review with full drill-through from financial statement to on-chain transaction hash.",[51,719,720,721,402],{},"For the broader DAO governance and contributor-payment workflow, see ",[665,722,724],{"href":723},"/dao","Wag3s DAO Treasury",[61,726,728],{"id":727},"useful-resources","Useful resources",[74,730,731,740,748,756,764],{},[77,732,733,739],{},[665,734,738],{"href":735,"rel":736},"https://laws.gov.ky/",[737],"nofollow","Cayman Islands Foundation Companies Act 2017"," — the legal framework for Cayman foundation companies.",[77,741,742,747],{},[665,743,746],{"href":744,"rel":745},"https://www.fedlex.admin.ch/eli/cc/24/233_245_233/en",[737],"Swiss Civil Code Articles 80–89"," — the Stiftung framework.",[77,749,750,755],{},[665,751,754],{"href":752,"rel":753},"https://wyoleg.gov/",[737],"Wyoming DAO LLC Act"," — the US-domiciled DAO LLC framework.",[77,757,758,763],{},[665,759,762],{"href":760,"rel":761},"https://optimism.io/transparency",[737],"Optimism Foundation transparency reports"," — example of IFRS-aligned crypto foundation reporting.",[77,765,766,771],{},[665,767,770],{"href":768,"rel":769},"https://arbitrum.foundation/",[737],"Arbitrum Foundation reports"," — comparable practice.",[61,773,775],{"id":774},"related-guides","Related guides",[74,777,778,794,801,808,815,822,829],{},[77,779,780,784,785,784,789,793],{},[665,781,783],{"href":782},"/blog/dao-treasury","DAO treasury management",", ",[665,786,788],{"href":787},"/blog/dao-accounting","DAO accounting",[665,790,792],{"href":791},"/blog/dao-public-reporting","DAO public reporting"," — the broader DAO finance picture.",[77,795,796,800],{},[665,797,799],{"href":798},"/blog/multi-sig-treasury-accounting","Multi-sig treasury accounting"," — Safe-native bookkeeping that foundations use.",[77,802,803,807],{},[665,804,806],{"href":805},"/blog/dao-contributor-compensation","DAO contributor compensation"," — how foundations pay contributors.",[77,809,810,814],{},[665,811,813],{"href":812},"/blog/ifrs-vs-gaap-crypto","IFRS vs GAAP for crypto assets"," — framework choice for foundation reporting.",[77,816,817,821],{},[665,818,820],{"href":819},"/blog/crypto-audit-readiness","Crypto audit readiness"," — what auditors look for at foundations.",[77,823,824,828],{},[665,825,827],{"href":826},"/blog/l2-accounting-arbitrum-optimism-base","L2 accounting (Arbitrum, Optimism, Base)"," — for L2 foundations specifically.",[77,830,831,835],{},[665,832,834],{"href":833},"/blog/multi-chain-reconciliation","Multi-chain reconciliation"," — for foundations holding treasuries across multiple chains.",{"title":837,"searchDepth":838,"depth":838,"links":839},"",2,[840,846,847,848,853,859,860,861,862,863],{"id":63,"depth":838,"text":64,"children":841},[842,844,845],{"id":68,"depth":843,"text":69},3,{"id":115,"depth":843,"text":116},{"id":154,"depth":843,"text":155},{"id":196,"depth":838,"text":197},{"id":243,"depth":838,"text":244},{"id":357,"depth":838,"text":358,"children":849},[850,851,852],{"id":361,"depth":843,"text":362},{"id":417,"depth":843,"text":418},{"id":473,"depth":843,"text":474},{"id":480,"depth":838,"text":481,"children":854},[855,856,857,858],{"id":487,"depth":843,"text":488},{"id":549,"depth":843,"text":550},{"id":556,"depth":843,"text":557},{"id":563,"depth":843,"text":564},{"id":570,"depth":838,"text":571},{"id":612,"depth":838,"text":613},{"id":660,"depth":838,"text":661},{"id":727,"depth":838,"text":728},{"id":774,"depth":838,"text":775},"2026-05-09T00:00:00.000Z","How crypto foundations handle treasury accounting in 2026. Cayman vs Swiss vs DAO LLC structures, sequencer revenue, grant programs, IFRS reporting for non-profits.","This article is informational. Foundation accounting depends on the legal jurisdiction (Cayman, Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Wyoming, etc.), entity type (purpose foundation, charitable foundation, DAO LLC), and applicable financial-reporting framework. Consult a foundation-specialist accountant and legal counsel before designing your reporting workflow.","md",[869,872,875,878,881,884],{"question":870,"answer":871},"What's the typical legal structure for a crypto foundation?","Three patterns dominate in 2026: (1) Cayman foundation companies (used by Optimism Foundation, Arbitrum Foundation, Aave Companies — flexible, English-law-based, used by most major protocols); (2) Swiss Stiftung (used by Ethereum Foundation, Polkadot's Web3 Foundation — strict purpose definition, regulated by FINMA where activities qualify); (3) Wyoming/Tennessee/Utah DAO LLC (used by Web3-native DAOs wanting US legal personhood — newer, smaller protocols).",{"question":873,"answer":874},"Are foundation grants taxable income to recipients?","Generally yes, in most jurisdictions. A grant from Optimism Foundation, Arbitrum Foundation, or Aave Foundation to a contributor or downstream protocol is ordinary income at the FMV when received. Some grants structured as scholarships or recognized public-good funding qualify for tax-exempt treatment in specific jurisdictions, but this is the exception. Recipients should treat foundation grants as income at receipt unless they have a specific tax ruling otherwise.",{"question":876,"answer":877},"How does sequencer revenue flow through foundation accounting?","For protocols where the foundation receives sequencer revenue (Optimism Foundation getting 50% of Superchain sequencer revenue from Jan 2026, OP Labs PBC managing distributions), recognition happens at the on-chain distribution event. The revenue is ordinary income at FMV. Subsequent uses — buybacks, grants, operational spending — are separate accounting events. The most common error is netting buybacks against revenue; they should be separate gross flows for transparency.",{"question":879,"answer":880},"Should a Cayman foundation report under IFRS or US GAAP?","Cayman foundations typically file under IFRS or Cayman-specific simplified standards depending on size and activities. The Optimism Foundation, Arbitrum Foundation, and Aave Companies generally produce IFRS-compatible statements voluntarily for transparency to token holders, even though Cayman law doesn't strictly require IFRS. The 2025 IAS 38 amendments and the FASB ASU 2023-08 framework converge on fair-value measurement for fungible crypto, simplifying the cross-framework picture.",{"question":882,"answer":883},"How are grant programs typically tracked in foundation accounting?","As discrete program lines on the foundation's P&L. The grant is recognized as an expense at the time of distribution (when the foundation has a binding obligation), with a corresponding reduction in the treasury. Multi-year grants with milestone-based releases are recognized at each milestone, not at award. Conditional grants (e.g. RetroPGF) are recognized when the condition is satisfied.",{"question":885,"answer":886},"What's special about Optimism's RetroPGF for accounting purposes?","Retroactive Public Goods Funding (RetroPGF) is a recurring program where the Optimism Foundation distributes OP tokens to projects judged to have provided public goods. Accounting-wise: each round's awards are recognized as expenses at distribution, not at announcement. The Foundation tracks the OP-denominated awards at FMV (USD) at distribution. Recipients recognize income at the same value. The program now runs roughly twice a year and has distributed >40M OP cumulatively.",null,{"keywords":889},[890,891,892,893,894,895],"foundation treasury accounting","optimism foundation accounting","aave foundation","arbitrum foundation","dao foundation accounting","cayman foundation crypto",true,"/blog/foundation-treasury-accounting","Wag3s Editorial Team — verified against IFRS for NPOs, US GAAP non-profit guidance, and 2026 foundation reporting practice",{"title":33,"description":865},"3.blog/53.foundation-treasury-accounting","8P3M-14EIKuyhkm-ieDqPJOB3L7JcsKeHiHu8jkwGDo",[903,908],{"title":904,"path":905,"stem":906,"description":907,"children":-1},"Crypto Accounting QuickBooks Integration: Setup Guide for 2026","/blog/crypto-accounting-quickbooks-integration","3.blog/52.crypto-accounting-quickbooks-integration","How to integrate crypto-native accounting with QuickBooks Online and Desktop. Subledger pattern, COA setup, journal entry imports, and reconciliation for small and mid-sized Web3 teams.",{"title":909,"path":910,"stem":911,"description":912,"children":-1},"The Rise of Cryptocurrencies: From Speculation to Financial Infrastructure","/blog/crypto-overview","3.blog/6.crypto-overview","How cryptocurrencies moved from speculation to real financial infrastructure — stablecoin payments, DAO treasuries, on-chain payroll — and what it means for B2B finance teams in 2026.",1778328593686]