After 160 Trillion Won Outflow, 3,500 Listed Companies Enter the Market

marsbit2026-01-13 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-01-13 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

South Korea has officially ended its seven-year ban on institutional cryptocurrency investment, marking a significant regulatory shift. Starting January 12, the Financial Services Commission (FSC) now allows listed companies and professional investors—approximately 3,500 entities—to allocate up to 5% of their equity into the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market cap. This move addresses a long-standing contradiction: while South Korea has one of the world's most active retail crypto markets, institutions were previously barred from participation. The policy change is a pragmatic response to massive capital outflows, with over 160 trillion won (roughly $1.1 trillion) moved to overseas crypto exchanges by 2025. This exodus stifled local platforms and created regulatory blind spots. The reform is part of a broader strategy to integrate crypto into the formal financial system, including plans for spot crypto ETFs. The focus has shifted from blocking institutional access to creating a regulated, compliant pathway for participation. Cryptocurrencies are now being recognized as a manageable and legitimate asset class within Korea’s financial framework.

Over the past eight years, South Korea's stance on crypto assets has been in a delicate state of division.

On one hand, it possesses one of the world's most active and emotionally charged crypto trading markets. With a high density of retail investors and fast trading frequency, new narratives are almost always amplified in the South Korean market as soon as they emerge. On the other hand, at the institutional level, listed companies and professional institutions have long been explicitly barred from participating—they are not allowed to hold, allocate, or even include crypto assets in their balance sheets.

Thus, a long-standing but rarely acknowledged structural contradiction has gradually taken shape: the market has long matured, but the institutional framework has remained absent.

On January 12, this contradiction was officially broken by the authorities. The Financial Services Commission (FSC) of South Korea formally approved: listed companies and professional investors can now allocate up to 5% of their equity annually to crypto assets ranked in the top 20 by market capitalization.

This marks the official end of the de facto ban on institutional participation in the crypto market since 2017.

Institutional Relaxation

If we look only at the proportion, this policy is not radical; the real change lies in "who is allowed to enter."

Over the past few years, the keywords repeatedly emphasized by South Korean regulators have always been only two—investor protection and systemic risk. This time, however, the regulators did not choose a full liberalization but instead set very clear boundaries:

  • Limited to listed companies and professional investors (approximately 3,500 entities, including listed companies and registered professional investment institutions, have gained market access)
  • Limited to mainstream crypto assets ranked in the top 20 by market capitalization
  • Allocation cap set at 5% of equity

This is not about encouraging risk appetite but about addressing a more practical issue: when crypto assets have become a significant asset class at the societal level, continuing to exclude all institutions across the board is itself creating new risks.

The "relaxation" of the institutional stance is not a shift toward radicalism but a long-overdue rational correction.

The Cost of Outflow

This change did not happen suddenly, nor did it stem from a shift in ideology; it was repeatedly pushed forward by reality.

By 2025, South Korean investors had transferred over 160 trillion won (approximately $1.1 trillion) to overseas cryptocurrency trading platforms.

Against the backdrop of regulatory delays, crypto assets have de facto become one of the primary investment assets in South Korea, with nearly 10 million investors. However, trading activities are increasingly occurring outside the purview of the institutional framework.

The consequences are not complicated but starkly real:

  • Stagnant growth of domestic trading platforms
  • Investors forced to turn to overseas platforms like Binance and Bybit
  • Both risks and capital flowing abroad, with regulators struggling to cover them

Under such a structure, maintaining the "institutional ban" is no longer prudent but rather amplifies systemic vulnerabilities. Now, with the reopening of domestic compliant channels, this portion of forced outflows has, for the first time, seen the possibility of returning.

From "Blocking" to "Channeling"

More notably, this is not an isolated policy adjustment.

Recently, the South Korean Ministry of Finance has explicitly stated that it will promote the launch of digital asset spot ETFs. From discussions on stablecoins to allowing institutional holdings, and further to the deployment of standardized investment tools, the regulatory logic is undergoing a clear transformation.

When listed companies are allowed to directly allocate crypto assets, and the market is simultaneously preparing compliant, regulated, and clearable financial products, the signal is already very clear: what regulators truly care about is no longer "whether to let institutions in" but "how to keep institutions within the system."

This means that South Korea is building a complete path for institutional participation: from direct holdings to standardized products, and further to compliant trading and clearing systems, rather than dealing with scattered, passive case-by-case approvals.

What has truly changed is not South Korea's attitude toward crypto assets but the regulators' eventual acknowledgment: this market can no longer be excluded from the institutional framework.

As listed companies, professional institutions, and compliant investment channels begin to align simultaneously, the role of crypto assets in South Korea is also changing—it is no longer just a passively tolerated gray market but has been formally incorporated into the financial system as an asset class that can be managed, constrained, and must be taken seriously.

This step did not come early, but at least, it has finally begun.

*This content is for reference only and does not constitute investment advice. The market carries risks, and investment requires caution.

İlgili Sorular

QWhat was the key change announced by South Korea's Financial Services Commission (FSC) on January 12th regarding institutional participation in crypto assets?

AThe FSC officially approved that listed companies and professional investors are now allowed to allocate up to 5% of their equity capital annually to crypto assets ranked within the top 20 by market capitalization.

QHow much money had flowed out of South Korea to overseas cryptocurrency exchanges by 2025, as mentioned in the article?

AOver 160 trillion Korean won (approximately 1.1 trillion US dollars) had flowed out to overseas cryptocurrency exchanges by 2025.

QWhat are the three main boundaries or restrictions set by the new South Korean regulation for institutional crypto investment?

AThe three main restrictions are: 1) Only listed companies and professional investors (about 3,500 entities) are allowed access. 2) Only crypto assets ranked in the top 20 by market capitalization are permitted. 3) The allocation is capped at 5% of a company's equity capital.

QWhat fundamental shift in regulatory logic does the article suggest is happening in South Korea?

AThe regulatory logic is shifting from trying to block institutional participation ('blocking') to creating a complete, compliant path for it within the formal financial system ('channeling'), including direct holdings and standardized products like ETFs.

QWhat significant consequence did the long-standing ban on institutional crypto investment have, according to the article?

AThe ban led to massive capital outflow to overseas exchanges, stunted growth for domestic platforms, and created systemic risks as trading activity moved outside the purview of domestic regulators.

İlgili Okumalar

Retail Ecology Dwindles, ZKsync Bets on Bank Pilots for a Breakthrough

Amidst declining retail activity, ZKsync is pivoting to target institutional banking as its primary growth strategy. The article explores this shift, contrasting it with the competitive "survival of the fittest" narrative by highlighting a cooperative model inspired by naturalist Peter Kropotkin. ZKsync is developing infrastructure like its private, permissioned Prividium suite for banks (e.g., Deutsche Bank's use case via Memento), enabling private transactions with public verifiability via zero-knowledge proofs. This appeals to institutions needing privacy, compliance, and Ethereum-based settlement security, unlike fully private chains (e.g., JPMorgan's Kinaxis) or consortium models (e.g., R3 Corda). However, this strategic focus has coincided with a steep decline in its public DeFi ecosystem, evidenced by plunging TVL and the departure of major protocols like Aave due to low fees. The network's future now hinges on banking adoption, with upcoming pilots like the Cari Network involving regional banks holding over $600 billion in deposits. A significant challenge is balancing this institutional focus with ZKsync's decentralized governance. Banks must operate on a network where rules and fees (denominated in the volatile ZK token) can be changed via community vote, and where a Security Council holds emergency control—a stark contrast to the predictable, contract-bound environments of traditional finance. The coming 18 months will test whether ZKsync can successfully onboard traditional banks onto a dynamically governed public chain or if institutions will ultimately revert to proprietary solutions.

Foresight News39 dk önce

Retail Ecology Dwindles, ZKsync Bets on Bank Pilots for a Breakthrough

Foresight News39 dk önce

The Recursive AI Anthropic Warned About: Tian Yuandong's New Company Has Just Taken the "First Step"

Anthropic recently highlighted the rapid progress toward "recursive self-improvement," where AI systems autonomously design and train their successors. In response, Recursive Superintelligence, a new company co-founded by former Meta researcher Tian Yuan Dong, has publicly demonstrated its first step toward automating AI research. The company released a system designed to autonomously execute the full AI research cycle: generating ideas, implementing code, running experiments, and learning from results. It validated this approach by achieving state-of-the-art results on three diverse benchmarks: 1. **NanoChat Autoresearch:** Optimizing a small language model's validation loss under a fixed 5-minute GPU budget, improving upon the community's best result. 2. **NanoGPT Speedrun:** Reducing the time to train a GPT model to a specific loss on 8 H100 GPUs from 79.7 seconds to 77.5 seconds, beating a highly optimized, human-driven community effort. 3. **SOL-ExecBench:** Improving the overall score on NVIDIA's suite of 235 GPU kernel optimization tasks by 18%, closing the gap to the hardware limit. The system discovered novel optimizations in this highly specialized domain without direct human expertise. Recursive's system operates as a general framework, capable of parallel exploration and cross-task knowledge transfer while incorporating safeguards against reward hacking. The company, backed by $650M in funding and a star-studded team including Richard Socher and Alexey Dosovitskiy, aims to create AI that recursively enhances its own research capabilities. This development represents an early but concrete move toward a new paradigm where AI accelerates its own advancement. It occurs alongside Anthropic's warnings about the need for industry coordination and potential pauses when recursive self-improvement thresholds are reached, highlighting the dual trajectory of rapid technical progress and growing calls for careful stewardship.

marsbit46 dk önce

The Recursive AI Anthropic Warned About: Tian Yuandong's New Company Has Just Taken the "First Step"

marsbit46 dk önce

The Gold Buy-on-the-Dip Guide: Watch Interest Rates, Not Just War

"Gold Buying Guide: Focus on Interest Rates, Not Just War" Four months ago, gold buyers likely didn't anticipate buying at a peak that even a war couldn't sustain. After hitting a record high of $5,596 on January 29, gold entered a bear market just 91 days later, its fastest decline since 2008. A key trigger was the Fed's hawkish shift, highlighting that monetary policy, not geopolitics, is the primary driver. The article argues that the traditional "buy gold in turmoil" script has changed. While the US-Iran conflict initially boosted prices, the sustained rally in oil prices heightened inflation fears, forcing central banks to maintain or consider tighter policy. Since gold yields no interest, higher rates increase its opportunity cost, eroding its appeal. This dynamic was evident when gold fell sharply on May 18 despite positive peace talks, as lower oil prices eased inflation and thus rate hike pressures. The recent sell-off is also part of a broader market deleveraging. Correlations between gold, Nasdaq, and Bitcoin spiked as leveraged investors sold liquid assets to cover losses, creating a synchronized downturn. Historically, gold bottoms align with policy shifts, not conflict resolutions. The 2008 and 2022 bear markets ended with shifts to extreme easing and peak inflation expectations, respectively. For potential buyers, the author suggests monitoring three signals: 1) Peak interest rate hike expectations, 2) Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz (to ease oil/inflation pressure), and 3) A return to net inflows for Gold ETFs, indicating the end of forced selling. While predicting the exact bottom is impossible, the author's personal strategy involves scaling into a position across price levels like $4000, $3700, and $3500, committing no more than 30% of the intended total allocation initially, and adding the remainder only if key signals emerge. The core conclusion: In turbulent times, watching interest rates is more crucial than watching wars.

marsbit53 dk önce

The Gold Buy-on-the-Dip Guide: Watch Interest Rates, Not Just War

marsbit53 dk önce

Recent On-Chain Review: No Clear Narrative Under U.S. Stock Market Pressure, Just Hype

This article analyzes the current state of the Solana meme coin and community token ecosystem, highlighting a market caught between two dominant forces: attention-based PvP and a gradual return to community-centric projects. The first part explores the "Attention PvP" dynamic, where success is driven by celebrity endorsements, viral events, and speed. Examples include $JOTCHUA, which surged after its meme creator's social media activity, and $WORLDCUP, which outperformed a similar Base chain project ($PITCH) largely due to influencer support. The recent "pump.fun GO" feature, allowing bounty tasks for token promotion, is critiqued for fostering sensationalist and often negative stunts—like people getting token tickers tattooed on their bodies for rewards—reminiscent of old internet shock content. In contrast, the article points to a resurgence of organic, community-driven tokens that survive market volatility through strong holder bases and shared ideology, not just hype. Influencer Ansem is cited, arguing that durable meme coins rely on communities willing to endure losses and promote their core message daily. Examples given are older tokens like $neet (anti-work ethos), $troll, $buttcoin, and $triplet, which have maintained relative price stability. A prime example of this community-build model is the new project $KINS, the token for the browser-based MMORPG Kintara. Its success stems not from advanced graphics but from consistently delivering updates, fostering player trust, and creating genuine engagement (e.g., in-game economies, events, property auctions). It has attracted a growing player base and even notable KOLs as participants, demonstrating that sustainable growth can come from building trust rather than orchestrating pumps. The article concludes by questioning whether the market is ultimately a game of mutual trust or mutual deception, expressing hope that such reflection might lead to a healthier ecosystem.

marsbit53 dk önce

Recent On-Chain Review: No Clear Narrative Under U.S. Stock Market Pressure, Just Hype

marsbit53 dk önce

İşlemler

Spot
Futures
活动图片