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Employers can save out on paying holiday PTO


Depending on your jurisdiction, most countries or states require companies to treat PTO as cash and pay it out upon leaving the company. One reason why unlimited PTO is so popular, no need to pay anything out at the end.


Block has an accounting quirk where they report Bitcoin that users purchase through CashApp under "revenue".

Revenue feels like the wrong place for this number to show up, but the result is that it inflates their revenue number


They are legally required to report it that way. The quarterly shareholder reports include revenue with and without Bitcoin.


Which is amazingly transparent for a public company to do.


Purchasing Bitcoin as revenue?

I am not sure the justification of it. Ages ago the debate was, if bitcoin was asset, currency or commodity? But how does buying something through an exchange results in the asset's entire price to be recognized as revenue for the company? They are doing it only for Bitcoin, not for any other things. I have no clue because it doesn't make sense.

From the 10-k [0]

...customers access to hundreds of listed stocks and ETFs, as well as the ability to buy and sell bitcoin. Stocks, ETFs, or bitcoin can be purchased...e. For bitcoin buying and selling, we recognize revenue when customers purchase bitcoin and it is transferred to the customer's account.

...During the year ended December 31, 2021, we saw a significant increase in total Cash App revenue, primarily from bitcoin revenue which contributed 57% of total consolidated net revenue in 2021, and 48% of the total increase in consolidated net revenues in 2021

[0] https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1512673/000162828022...


I’m not an accountant and just guessing here, but I’m thinking it’s because it’s treated as a purchase of an asset or a good. Similar to how if you went and bought a refrigerator, the appliance store would book what you paid them for the fridge as revenue.

It seems crypto can have multiple definitions based on what’s most convenient at the time.


I posted to r/accounting.

Two people there said that, it maybe is transaction fees. But they have asked me to look into the numbers. I think they are right, but I still find the phrasing to be quite ambiguous tbh.

https://www.reddit.com/r/Accounting/comments/tzbg6i/what_is_...


Pretty sure the intent of the article is to explain to his parents (as indicated by the title and sentence after the quote)


They actually had a major pivot to content creation a few years ago, and could now be considered more of a partner than a competitor to YouTube


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