In this Guide
1. Why Brazil is the Epicenter of RWA
Over the past 24 months, Brazil has moved far ahead of most jurisdictions in standardizing digital token assets. This isn't just because of high public cryptocurrency interest; it is the result of a deliberate, coordinated effort by two top-tier regulators: the Central Bank of Brazil (BCB) and the Securities Commission (CVM).
With Drex (Brazil's wholesale Central Bank Digital Currency built on Hyperledger Besu) actively testing institutional tokenized transactions and delivery-versus-payment (DvP) rails, tokenization in Brazil has transitioned from high-tech experimentation into a core pillar of modern corporate finance.
"We are seeing a major structural shift. Tokenization in Brazil is no longer about testing the tech; it is about packaging yield and credit in highly efficient formats for global investors."
2. The Three Regulatory Pillars: CVM, BCB, and Virtual Assets Law
A compliant RWA project in Brazil requires navigating three distinct intersecting sets of regulations:
A. CVM Resolution 88
Governs simplified tokenized public offerings (formerly corporate crowdfunding). It allows issuers to raise up to BRL 15 million per offering with simplified disclosure documents, avoiding the high cost and lengthy duration of full-prospectus IPOs.
B. BCB Resolution 521
Establishes the regulatory boundaries for stablecoin emissions, payments, and foreign exchange interactions. It provides virtual asset service providers (VASPs) a clear legal format to interface with the Pix payment system and clear local currency swaps.
C. Virtual Assets Law (14.478/2022)
Defines virtual assets, sets the licensing requirements for VASPs, and establishes the BCB as the primary supervisor. This law provides a solid legal bedrock, separating true digital assets from standard security definitions.
3. Key Eligible Asset Classes (FIDCs, CRAs, CRIs)
Foreign investors looking to distribute or lock capital in Brazilian yields can access several highly structured tokenized financial asset formats:
- FIDCs (Receivables Funds): Ideal for credit rights, billing portfolios, and trade receivables. FIDCs can be tokenized at the share level, allowing fractional distribution under CVM 88.
- CRAs and CRIs: Agricultural (CRA) and Real Estate (CRI) receivables certificates. These are heavily used in Brazil and carry attractive tax exemptions for certain investor categories.
- Environmental/Carbon Credits: Regulated under PL 3434/2024, providing a clean blockchain-based registry to tokenized carbon offsets and ESG-related receivables.
4. Structuring Vehicles for Foreign Capital Entry
To invest in or distribute Brazilian RWAs, overseas sponsors typically choose one of three structural frameworks:
1. The Off-Shore Legal Wrapper: Capital is pooled in a Cayman or Virgin Islands SPV. This SPV acts as a single foreign investor under standard CVM Resolution 13 / Annex V rules to purchase local tokenized debt shares directly.
2. Local Credit Originator Partnership: Partnering with a licensed local tokenizer and credit distributor who manages custody and operations on-shore, while foreign capital acts strictly as a senior purchaser.
3. Wholly-Owned Local Entity (CNPJ): Incorporating a local holding entity with a resident legal representative, allowing direct onshore operations and custom stablecoin integration under BCB 521 terms.
5. Compliance and Operational Onboarding Checklist
When launching or funding a Brazilian tokenization project, investors should follow this strict compliance roadmap:
| Phase | Key Requirement | Responsibility |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Asset Review | Origination due diligence, valuation verification, and asset legal backing. | Sponsor / Local Partner |
| 2. Structure Design | Securities categorization check (is it a CVM 88 crowdfunding or an institutional FIDC quota?). | Avalon / Legal Counsel |
| 3. Smart Contracts | Implementation of compliance constraints on-chain (KYC checks, transaction limits). Technical audit. | Web3 Team |
| 4. FX Onboarding | Opening foreign exchange channels and Pix flow setup in compliance with BCB 521. | Licensed Local Bank |
| 5. Distribution | Onshore or offshore investor onboarding with real-time reporting. | VASP Platform |
RZRicardo Zago
Consultant and Co-founder of Avalon Blockchain Consulting · Blockchain Professor at FIAP · Startup Mentor
Ricardo Zago works on structuring blockchain businesses, real asset tokenization, and stablecoins for the corporate market. He develops projects at the intersection of traditional markets and decentralized infrastructure, focusing on regulatory feasibility and generating results for Brazilian companies.
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