It is legal to own and exchange cryptocurrencies in Canada. Canada primarily regulates cryptocurrencies under securities laws, which are enacted on a provincial and territorial basis. The Canadian Securities Administrator (CSA) harmonizes all securities laws and facilitates coordination between various provincial and territorial securities regulators. As per the CSA, if a coin or token is deemed to be a security, then businesses issuing such coins have to meet the registration, prospectus requirements, and AML/KYC requirements.
The Financial Transactions and Report Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC) brings cryptocurrencies under the definition of virtual currencies. Virtual currency is defined as a digital representation of a value that can be used for payment, investment, or retail activities such as buying and selling of goods and services. The definition of virtual currencies includes blockchain-based such as bitcoins. Digital currencies used in virtual economies, such as those present in online games, are not included in this definition.
Entities dealing in virtual currencies include those entities that offer virtual currency exchange services and virtual currency transfer services. Virtual currency exchanges services include exchanging funds for virtual currency or vice versa and one virtual currency for another virtual currency.
The FINTRAC is Canada’s financial intelligence unit. Its mandate is to facilitate the detection, prevention, and deterrence of money laundering and the financing of terrorist activities while ensuring the protection of personal information under its control. FINTRAC is established under the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act (PCMLTFA).
The FINTRAC has oversight over crypto-asset trading platforms (CTPs — the preferred term used by Canadian regulators for crypto exchanges), which are regulated as Money Service Businesses (MSBs) under the PCMLTFA. The FINTRAC also regulates foreign money service businesses (FMSBs).
CSA is an industry forum comprising all of Canada’s territorial and provincial securities regulators. The organization's chief goal is to collaborate on the creation and harmonization of securities regulations across Canada
On 29 March 2021, the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC) along with the CSA, issued Staff Notice 21-239. The staff notice provides guidance on how securities legislation will apply to CTPs that facilitate or propose to facilitate the trading of crypto assets that are a) securities and b) crypto-asset contracts. Under the Staff Notice, those CTPs that do not immediately provide the final settlement of the crypto trade fall under the scope of crypto-asset contracts.
If the CTPs can be categorized as ‘securities’ then they have to, based on their business activities, further classify themselves into ‘Marketplace platforms’ or ‘Dealer platforms’. In order to bring their operations into compliance, CTPs should seek clarification regarding the registration process and other relevant requirements directly from their local securities regulators. Under dealer platforms buy and sell orders do not interact directly with each other and the dealer is the counterparty for every client trade. A CTP is regulated as a marketplace when it operates a market or facility.
MSBs are required to put in place a robust AML/KYC compliance program in line with the Canadian law on Anti-Money Laundering, Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering), and Terrorist Financing Regulations (PCMLTFR). To implement an effective compliance program, the MSBs have to the following steps:
On 1 June 2021, amendments to the Travel Rule came into force. The amendments require specific identifying information to be recorded when an electronic funds transfer (EFT) or virtual currency transfer is sent or received.
All reporting entities including MSBs have to submit an electronic funds transfer report to FINTRAC when they initiate or receive funds electronically in an international transaction. The threshold for reporting transactions is set to $10,000 or more for a single transaction or multiple small transactions that take place over a 24-hour period.
As per the 2021 amendments, identifying information includes the (a) name, address, and account or another reference number (if any) of the person or entity who requested the transfer, (b) name and address of the beneficiary, and (c) if applicable, the beneficiary’s account or other reference numbers. The FINTRAC has extended these requirements to include not just domestic MSBs and financial institutions but also foreign MSBs (and casinos with respect to EFTs).