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South Korea New Crypto Rules Enter Full Force

By TH3FUS3 Editorial Staff

July 19, 2024 10:49 AM

Reading time: 1 minute, 54 seconds

TL;DR South Korea enforces new rules to safeguard crypto users' assets and curb unfair trading practices. Financial regulators now have the authority to supervise, inspect, and sanction virtual asset trading platforms.

New Rules to Safeguard Crypto Users

For the last year, South Korea has had a law in place designed to protect crypto users' assets. Now, the law is finally being implemented.

Today, South Korean regulators delivered new rules to safeguard users' deposits and virtual assets and curb unfair trading practices such as price manipulation. Crypto outfits must now monitor and report suspicious transactions.

Authority to Supervise and Sanction

The law also gives financial regulators the authority to supervise, inspect, and sanction virtual asset trading platforms. "As it becomes possible to bring severe penalties against those engaging in unfair trading activities, it is also expected to help establish a sound order in the virtual asset market," the Financial Services Commission said in a statement on Thursday.

A Major Hub for Crypto Trading

South Korea, a central hub for crypto trading, has been strengthening its regulatory framework following the collapse of Terraform Labs' TerraUSD stablecoin, which caused losses of $60 billion in 2022. Some 200,000 people in the country invested in Terra.

However, despite the fallout and calls for greater scrutiny of the crypto industry in the country, it hasn't dented retail demand for trading. In the first quarter of this year, the Korean won facilitated $456 billion in crypto trade volume, compared to $455 billion traded using the US dollar.

Key Aspects of the New Regulations

Key aspects of the new regulations include mandates for virtual asset service providers (VASPs) to securely store customer deposits in banks. VASPs must separate users' virtual assets from their own and maintain insurance or reserve funds to cover liabilities from hacking or network malfunctions.

VASPs must maintain surveillance systems for suspicious transactions and report such activities to the Financial Supervisory Service. This type of requirement has long been standard in traditional finance.

Delays in Other Proposed Regulations

The law empowers financial authorities to supervise, inspect, and sanction VASPs. Regulators can inspect VASPs for compliance with user protection duties, and the FSC can impose sanctions on those that break the rules.

Other proposed crypto regulations in South Korea have faced delays. Last week, lawmakers from the ruling People Power Party proposed delaying a 20% tax on crypto trading profits until 2028.

The tax would apply to annual gains exceeding 2.5 million won ($1,800), while the threshold for stock trading gains is 50 million won ($36,000).

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