Digital Assets and Investment Management Liability Insurance

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Digital Assets (DA) such as cryptocurrency, DeFi, Web3.0 and tokenization have swiftly moved from a fringe speculative investment niche into the forefront of the investment world, which is further evidenced by the approval by the SEC of spot Bitcoin ETFs in January.

Whether you like it or not, these assets are here to stay, and as an RIA you likely have multiple clients inquiring about them. You have several options for managing these assets, which present two important questions: “How do I manage this risk, and does my E&O (errors & omissions) insurance cover these investment recommendations?”

The most important thing to understand about the investment advisor E&O marketplace is that all carriers have different coverage forms and underwriting appetites. There are two basic underwriting categories of carriers: conservative versus liberal (i.e., DA deemed acceptable). Since DA has only recently become popular with the public, the insurance underwriting marketplace is still trying to determine how it wants to cover or exclude these investments. As a sidenote, this is ever-changing and evolving and not all DA strategies are viewed the same.

Recently, we held roundtable talks with 10 key insurance carriers to talk through the DA exposures, grasp their current viewpoints, appetites, and establish some underwriting guidelines so we can all move forward successfully (insureds and insurers). Overwhelmingly, many of the key carriers open to higher risk-investment strategies confirmed – as our office interpreted in their contract forms – that DA is not excluded. The more conservative carriers, who often already have specific exclusions surrounding DA, are open to insuring DA in specific scenarios based on how the RIA is managing assets in the space.

As an aside, overwhelmingly, the greatest concerns among underwriters were (1) custody of digital assets (2) clarity regarding DA regulation (3) safekeeping of DA within various custodial platforms and (4) advisor experience/expertise in the asset class (in other words, is the advisor qualified to manage this asset class?).

Now that we have an overview on the marketplace, how do we determine if coverage is provided by a carrier? This depends largely on how you plan to incorporate (or have already incorporated) DA into your firm’s operations. The following are some ways you can advise clients around this investment class: