Brazil’s top financial policy body banned some pension funds from investing in cryptocurrencies because they are too risky.
The National Monetary Council (CMN) forbade closed pension entities known as Entidades Fechadas de Previdência Complementar (EFPCs) from allocating any portion of their guarantee reserves into bitcoin (
BTC
) or other digital currencies.
The EFPCs manage retirement savings for tens of thousands of unionized and company-employed workers and their reserves are typically made up of bonds and equities.
“The resolution also prohibits investments in virtual assets, considering their specific investment characteristics and associated risk,” a Ministry of Finance
notice
circulating among
local news outlets
reads.
The ruling was published last week under under
Resolution 5.202/2025
by the National Monetary Council (CMN).
In contrast, last year British pension specialist Cartwright guided the country’s first
pension fund to make a bitcoin allocation
worth 3% of its assets. Several U.S. states have begun experimenting with crypto allocations for their pension systems, despite federal-level caution. Wisconsin’s state investment board, for example, revealed in February it had
invested $340 million in bitcoin through BlackRock’s ETF
(IBIT).
The ruling does not appear to apply to open pension funds or individual retirement products sold by banks and insurers. These are regulated separately and may allow indirect investment through exchange-traded funds or tokenized asset platforms.