South Korea's Bold January Deadline For Crypto Regulation
10 Articles
10 Articles
December 10 Ultimátum Defines Future of South Korea's Stablecoin Bill - The Cryptocurrency Post
Lawmaker Kang Jun-hyun of the Democratic Party has issued a definitive warning to financial regulators: they must submit a unified government proposal for the stablecoin bill by December 10, or parliament will act unilaterally. This move seeks to break the months-long deadlock over who will control the issuance of these digital assets, intensifying pressure on the Financial Services Commission (FSC) to resolve internal disputes. According to Nat…
South Korea Pushes Digital Asset Act, Ruling Party Sets January Deadline
South Korea set January 2026 as the deadline to pass the Digital Asset Basic Act, a law that will establish a stablecoin model issued by consortia where banks hold at least 51% of the capital and technology companies participate as minority partners. The framework aims to protect monetary stability while promoting innovation in crypto infrastructure. The National Assembly set December 10 as the deadline to receive the government’s official propo…
South Korea Pressures Regulators to Deliver Stablecoin Bill Next Week
Key Takeaways: Lawmakers are demanding a stablecoin bill by December 10. Disagreement over whether banks should control issuers is blocking progress. Parliament may advance regulation without financial regulators if delays continue. Lawmakers are no longer willing to wait for financial agencies to settle their internal disagreements – and the clock is ticking. The ruling party has set a firm ultimatum: regulators must hand over a complete draf…
South Korea Nears Digital Asset Act Completion After Breakthrough on Won-Based Stablecoin Rules
South Korea plans to wrap up stablecoin rules in January as lawmakers agree on a bank-led consortium model for issuance. The new act sets clear oversight for digital assets and strengthens rules for foreign stablecoins that dominate local trading. Lawmakers also push security and capital market reforms to improve investor protection and support market transparency. South Korea is moving to finalize a new digital asset act by January after lawmak…
[Digital Daily Reporter Park Ki-rok] The Democratic Party of Korea and the Financial Services Commission (FSC) have agreed to pursue legislation for the "Basic Act on Digital Assets," which would require a consortium in which commercial banks hold at least a 51% stake to issue won-denominated stablecoins. This is seen as a compromise between the Bank of Korea's previously advocated "bank-centered" issuance and the FSC and some in the ruling part…
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- There is no tracked Bias information for the sources covering this story.
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium

