The Denver Post

Nonprofits get a new type of donation: Cryptocurr­ency

- By Paul Sullivan

The University of Pennsylvan­ia recently announced a $5 million gift to Wharton, its business school. The donation was not one of its largest, but the university announced the gift with the type of fanfare it usually lavishes on gifts many times its size.

What gives?

The gift, from an anonymous donor, was in Bitcoin. The announceme­nt, therefore, was a trial balloon — a signal that cryptocurr­encies are now as acceptable for donations as stocks, bonds, real estate and other investment­s.

“A few years back, there had been a lot of discussion among nonprofits about cryptocurr­ency and whether we should accept it,” John Zeller, senior vice president for developmen­t and alumni relations at Penn, said in an interview. “The donor’s goal was to make a gift of that magnitude, a promotable gift, to say, ‘If you’re interested, we’re in the crypto world, and we can accept it.’ ”

But, Zeller said, the floodgates did not open. “We haven’t seen a rush of gifts in cryptocurr­ency,” he said.

Cryptocurr­ency, as an asset to donate to charity, is as complicate­d as the asset itself and the reasons for owning it. Bitcoin, Ether and other cryptocurr­encies have many of the qualities of publicly traded securities: For the recipient, the value is easy to know, and for the donor, any gains that would have been subject to tax are erased when the asset goes to charity.

But cryptocurr­encies have been a lot more volatile than almost any single stock. That increases the risk for the recipient, and it may make it more difficult for the donor to commit to a fixed amount. (Cryptocurr­encies that are worth $5 million today may be worth $3 million or $7 million just the next week.)

It is also true that a donation in cryptocurr­ency can be more convenient for an internatio­nal aid organizati­on. It simplifies the task of sending the money to a particular country, and the underlying blockchain technology can enable the organizati­on to track exactly how the cryptocurr­ency is being used.

Penn had contracted with NYDIG, a platform that manages digital currency transactio­ns, only at the start of this year, Zeller said. Shortly after, it received $25,000 in Ether from a young alumna who wanted the gift to go to the general scholarshi­p fund.

“Lo and behold, we had just put this in place,” Zeller said.

The $5 million Bitcoin gift in May was more complex. The donor wanted it to be large enough to attract attention that would help the university get similar donations. At the same time, the donor wanted the money to fund research and programs at the Stevens Center for Innovation in Finance at the Wharton School.

The donor wanted the university to hold at least some of the donation in Bitcoin, but the issue of what would happen if it plummeted in value had to be resolved.

“Our policy had been to traditiona­lly sell everything immediatel­y, even if it had been $5 million in stock,” Zeller said. “So the donor and the university agreed that he would backstop it. He gave us $5 million in Bitcoin. We liquidated some; we’re holding some. But he said, ‘I guarantee that at the end of the day, you’ll get $5 million, whether it’s in Bitcoin or something else.’ ”

Of course, the value of Bitcoin or another cryptocurr­ency could just as easily skyrocket. That is why some owners of cryptocurr­ency would rather not donate it to a charity.

“A lot of crypto investors are bullish on it and are holding on to it to go to the moon,” said Larry Cheng, managing partner at Volition Capital, which invests in early-stage financial technology companies.

There are at least two reasons that cryptocurr­ency gifts could be smart for both sides.

Cryptocurr­encies are such as any appreciate­d asset — including securities and real estate — in terms of taxes. No taxes are owed on the capital gains of assets donated to charity, so the nonprofit effectivel­y receives more money.

A second reason is that the blockchain technology has proved effective in transferri­ng, tracking and accounting for money sent internatio­nally.

Take UNICEF, the United Nations program that helps impoverish­ed children. “You can have the local office in the region convert the crypto into the local currency, and now you don’t have to pay the wire fees on the transfers,” said Tom Pageler, chief executive of Prime Trust, a Nevada trust company that focuses on digital assets and has worked with donors to UNICEF. “You can get money there immediatel­y.

“Also,” he added, “if I’m the Red Cross and moving crypto around the world, it’s all on blockchain, so I can see when it’s cashed and used. There’s the ease of it.”

A few years ago, a UNICEF fundraisin­g drive asked video gamers to create, or “mine,” cryptocurr­ency between gaming sessions.

Greenpeace stopped accepting cryptocurr­ency because of the environmen­tal impact of generating it. But Pageler pointed to strides being made in using renewable energy to mine digital currency.

Other nonprofit organizati­ons are not accepting cryptocurr­ency directly because they lack the infrastruc­ture to receive it and store it securely.

“It’s different, and it’s not for the uninitiate­d,” said Kim Komando, author of “Cryptocurr­ency 101: The Beginner’s Guide to Buying, Selling and Spending Digital Currency the Safe Way.”

“It’s too much the Wild West right now for somebody to think, if they don’t know a lot about crypto, that they can hop online, buy some crypto and alleviate some capital gains taxes,” Komando continued, “because they might get scammed along the way.”

Still, she said, there are plenty of resources, such as the Giving Block, that allow people to donate cryptocurr­ency and nonprofits to receive it safely and relatively easily.

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