Article

Global Legal Insights on Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Legislation

Conrad Druzeta, Simon Grant, Matthew Peters and Ceilidh Hemmati
September 24, 2018
Social Media
Download
Download
Read Mode
Subscribe
Summarize
 Global Legal Insights on Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Legislation

Conrad Druzeta, Simon Grant, Matthew Peters and Ceilidh Hemmati author the Canada chapter in Global Legal Insights‘ Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Legislation 2019. They provide a detailed look at key areas of blockchain and cryptocurrency legislation:

  • Government attitude and definition
  • Cryptocurrency regulation
  • Sales regulation
  • Taxation
  • Money transmission laws and anti-money laundering requirements
  • Promotion and testing
  • Ownership and licensing requirements
  • Mining
  • Border restrictions and declaration
  • Reporting requirements
  • Estate planning and testamentary succession

Conrad, Simon, Matthew and Ceilidh’s insights include:

The general attitude of the Canadian government (including regulatory agencies) to cryptocurrencies has been a mix of caution and encouragement: caution in terms of protecting investors and the public, but encouragement in its support of new technology.

The Canadian government itself is also experimenting with blockchain technology.

For taxation purposes, cryptocurrencies are treated as commodities, not as money. Under securities laws, many cryptocurrencies or “tokens” are classified as securities.

Cryptocurrencies are not treated as legal tender in Canada. Despite this, the Bank of Canada tested Digital Depository Receipts (DDR) as a digital representation of Canadian currency in 2016 and 2017.

Project Jasper was a joint initiative between the public and private sector, conducted by the Bank of Canada and Payments Canada with the help of banks and corporations (such as R3). Together, they built and tested a closed, simulated payment system to better understand the potential for blockchain to augment or displace FMI. Project Jasper marked the first ever DLT experiment in which a central bank partnered with private financial institutions.

Social Media
Download
Download
Subscribe
Republishing Requests

For permission to republish this or any other publication, contact Bryan Canning at canningb@bennettjones.com.

For informational purposes only

This publication provides an overview of legal trends and updates for informational purposes only. For personalized legal advice, please contact the authors.

Latest Insights

See All Insights
AI Powered Cyber Threats Are Changing the Risk Equation Are Your Vendors Ready
Blog

AI-Powered Cyber Threats Are Changing the Risk Equation—Are Your Vendors Ready?

April 15, 2026
Stephen D. BurnsJ. Sébastien A. GittensDavid Wainer
Stephen D. Burns, J. Sébastien A. Gittens & David Wainer
Would The Real Guarantor Please Stand Up
Blog

Would The Real Guarantor Please Stand Up

April 13, 2026
John D. van GentQuinn Rozwadowski
John D. van Gent & Quinn Rozwadowski
Placeholder
Blog

Canada's Q1 2026 M&A Landscape

April 13, 2026
Andrew N. DisipioGeoffrey P. StengerAlexis Fol
Andrew N. Disipio, Geoffrey P. Stenger & Alexis Fol
Alberta Court of Appeal Provides Antidote to Consternation on Scope of Arbitration Clauses
Blog

Alberta Court of Appeal Provides Antidote to Consternation on Scope of Arbitration Clauses

April 6, 2026
Artem N. Barsukov FCIArbEdward W. HulshofPaige Lutz
Artem N. Barsukov FCIArb, Edward W. Hulshof & Paige Lutz