South Korean Stablecoin Landscape: Bill In October, NaverPay And Industry Increase Interest

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Disclosure: This is intended for informational purposes only and does not in any way constitute or solicit financial, professional, or legal advice. Readers should conduct their own due diligence at all times.

The FSC (Financial Services Commission) in South Korea has revealed its plans to release a regulatory framework for stablecoins later this year in October.

After weeks of deliberation and consultation with institutions and enterprises, it is understood that the piece of legislation will focus on clear guidance on the issuance of won-based stablecoins and relevant aspects such as managing responsible collateral and risk controls.

This builds on the regions positive digital asset policy development since 2024, when the Virtual Asset User Protection Act began its consultations, as well as a renewed political mandate from President Lee Jae-Myung.

Reflecting on the progress from a number of political debates held over the summer weeks between members on the future of a won-backed stablecoin, Park Min-Gyu (Democratic Party), expressed:

After other organizations raced to apply for won stablecoin trademarks for their own proprietary stablecoin-related products and services, Naver Pay, a mobile payment service provider with around 30 million users, has joined the conversation on the stablecoin agenda after a cooperation with Upbit.

Director of Innovation Lee Byung-Kyu expressed that:

The number of companies based in South Korea interested in the development, issuance, and reserve management of local stablecoins continues to rise, but most, as observed in other regions where local innovation was ahead of legislative clarity, are still waiting on official rules to explore such activity for its users.

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Ron is the founder of Stablecoin News and contributes to the coverage of stablecoins developments worldwide.

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