【Blockchain Rhythm】Major Shift in South Korea’s Stablecoin Policy by Financial Regulators
On January 8th, news broke that the Korea Financial Services Commission (FSC) has changed its previous stance and now supports the plan proposed by the Bank of Korea (BOK)—setting stricter thresholds for stablecoin issuance. In simple terms, future stablecoins can only be issued by bank-led consortia, and banks must hold the majority stake.
The specific rules are as follows: consortia can issue stablecoins, but banks must maintain over 50% ownership control. Technology companies can participate, but their shareholding must be lower than the overall holdings of the banks. In other words, traditional financial institutions will have absolute dominance here.
This policy adjustment actually reflects disagreements among the ruling party, financial regulators, and the central bank. Legislators have concerns about banks issuing Korean won stablecoins, but ultimately, a compromise was reached.
For crypto trading platforms, the days may become more difficult. The new regulations require platforms to improve IT system stability standards, mandate compensation for user losses caused by hacking, and set fines up to 10% of annual revenue. All these requirements are costly.
Additionally, stablecoin issuers need to prepare at least 500 million Korean won (about $370,000 USD) in paid-in capital. Regulators also clarified that there is room for adjustment—this capital requirement may continue to increase as the market develops. This means the barriers to entry in the industry are continuously rising.
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VitalikFanAccount
· 01-10 04:07
It's the same old story again, banks tighten their grip. Tech companies are sidelined and have to obediently follow orders.
View OriginalReply0
CompoundPersonality
· 01-08 09:44
It's the same old trick again, the bank just has to block us, doesn't it?
View OriginalReply0
hodl_therapist
· 01-08 09:42
It's another victory for the banks; tech companies have been sidelined.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeNightmare
· 01-08 09:40
It's the banks pulling stunts again... Raising the 50% control threshold directly locks out tech companies. This move is truly clever. The old tricks of traditional finance to monopolize are just changing shells and continuing to play.
View OriginalReply0
BlockchainBrokenPromise
· 01-08 09:36
It's another new trick for banks to cut into the profits, I knew it.
View OriginalReply0
MoneyBurnerSociety
· 01-08 09:25
50% control of the bank, tech companies playing along... This is the essence of traditional finance; the discourse power always remains in their own hands.
South Korea adjusts stablecoin regulation direction, bank control becomes key
【Blockchain Rhythm】Major Shift in South Korea’s Stablecoin Policy by Financial Regulators
On January 8th, news broke that the Korea Financial Services Commission (FSC) has changed its previous stance and now supports the plan proposed by the Bank of Korea (BOK)—setting stricter thresholds for stablecoin issuance. In simple terms, future stablecoins can only be issued by bank-led consortia, and banks must hold the majority stake.
The specific rules are as follows: consortia can issue stablecoins, but banks must maintain over 50% ownership control. Technology companies can participate, but their shareholding must be lower than the overall holdings of the banks. In other words, traditional financial institutions will have absolute dominance here.
This policy adjustment actually reflects disagreements among the ruling party, financial regulators, and the central bank. Legislators have concerns about banks issuing Korean won stablecoins, but ultimately, a compromise was reached.
For crypto trading platforms, the days may become more difficult. The new regulations require platforms to improve IT system stability standards, mandate compensation for user losses caused by hacking, and set fines up to 10% of annual revenue. All these requirements are costly.
Additionally, stablecoin issuers need to prepare at least 500 million Korean won (about $370,000 USD) in paid-in capital. Regulators also clarified that there is room for adjustment—this capital requirement may continue to increase as the market develops. This means the barriers to entry in the industry are continuously rising.