Discussions around stablecoins have long focused on one question: who will issue the next dominant stablecoin.
However, a series of recent actions by stablecoin issuer Circle in Korea are diminishing the significance of this question itself. (Related reading: On the Eve of Korean Stablecoin Launch: As Regulation Thaws, Circle and Tether Send Different Signals)
In the latest statement, Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire clearly stated: there are no immediate plans to launch a Korean Won stablecoin. Simultaneously, Circle is intensively advancing in Seoul:
- Deepening cooperation with the exchange ecosystem
- Establishing connections with banks and financial groups
- Promoting the deployment of stablecoin infrastructure
This combination of "avoiding issuance while strengthening links" essentially points to a more critical change: the core of stablecoin competition is shifting from "issuance rights" to "systemic positioning."
The Korean Market: High Activity Coexists with Low Structure
Understanding Circle's strategy requires first看清ing the structure of the Korean market. According to data from crypto data firm Kaiko:
- Korea accounts for about 30% of global crypto trading volume
- Altcoin trading comprises up to 85% of this
- Bitcoin and Ethereum combined account for less than 15%
Behind these figures lies not just "active trading," but three deeper characteristics:
- Sentiment-driven: Funds concentrate on high-volatility assets, showing significant short-term gaming features
- Retail-driven: Institutional participation is novice, market depth is insufficient
- Structural imbalance: Liquidity quality is lower than in mature markets (e.g., Japan)
This means Korea is not a "mature financial market," but rather a "high-traffic market that hasn't completed structural upgrades." And this is precisely the timing of Circle's entry.
Circle's Three Key Actions
Within this market structure, Circle's布局 shows a highly consistent direction.
1. Embedding into Trading Flow Entrances
Circle expanded its cooperative relationships with Dunamu (operator of Upbit) and Bithumb. The core of this is not simple business expansion, but embedding USDC and related services into Korea's core trading infrastructure. This corresponds to a key position—the entrance point for capital flow.
2. Connecting with Core Financial System Institutions
Reports indicate Allaire's meetings included: Shinhan Bank, one of Korea's largest commercial banks; KB Financial Group, a leading comprehensive financial holding group; Woori Bank, Korea's second-largest national commercial bank and the only state-owned bank; Kakao Group, the Korean instant messaging giant; Hashed, a Korean crypto venture capital firm; and Coinone, Korea's third-largest exchange.
This combination has a clear direction:
- Banking system: Potential issuers
- Tech platforms: User entry points
- Exchanges: Liquidity cores
Its essence is to complete the connection and binding of multiple stakeholders before regulation is finalized.
3. Clearly Avoiding Issuance Rights Competition
With Korea's stablecoin path still undetermined, Circle chose not to participate in issuing a Korean Won stablecoin. This decision is not conservative, but based on a clearer judgment: issuance rights are still being contested, but infrastructure demand is already certain.
Korea's Core Contradiction: The Dispute Over Issuance Rights
The current分歧 over stablecoins in Korea centers on: some forces within the policy layer favor issuance by tech companies, while the banking system and central bank advocate for bank-led issuance.
The essence of this conflict is: are stablecoins financial instruments or internet products?
Until this question is resolved:
- The issuing entity cannot be determined
- Business models are difficult to solidify
- The market landscape remains unstable
This is perhaps the fundamental reason why Circle chose to "bypass the issuance right."
From Issuer to Infrastructure Provider
Integrating the above actions leads to a clear conclusion: Circle is transitioning from a "stablecoin issuer" to a "stablecoin infrastructure provider."
This transformation is reflected on three levels:
- Revenue structure: Shifting from issuance scale to technology and service capabilities
- Risk structure: Avoiding direct exposure to regulatory uncertainty
- Market adaptation: Flexibly embedding into different regulatory systems
Under this model, regardless of who ultimately issues the stablecoin, Circle can participate.
Circle's Asia Observations
After the Korea trip, Jeremy Allaire also mentioned that a Chinese Yuan (RMB) stablecoin presents a huge opportunity, and China might launch one within the next 3 to 5 years.
This statement did not address the method or participation, and is closer to a general observation on regional trends. But combined with Circle's actual actions in Korea, it can be understood as a more holistic view of Asia. From the current situation, although the paths of China and Korea differ, they show several common characteristics:
- Stablecoins are entering the core agenda of regulation
- Relationships with the traditional financial system are increasingly close
- Participating entities are becoming more diverse
In this process, the role of stablecoins is changing: from an early crypto trading medium to a broader financial infrastructure.
Circle's布局 in Korea, along with its continued attention to the Chinese market, essentially point to the same thing: finding a position to embed within this infrastructure evolution process.
The Future Stablecoin System
Behind Circle's strategy change lies a corresponding macro trend. The future stablecoin system will likely appear as:
- Coexistence of multiple sovereign currencies
- Constrained by strong regulatory frameworks
- Deep integration with the traditional financial system
In this landscape, issuance rights belong to nations or licensed institutions, and technology and clearing capabilities also become new competitive cores. Therefore, for institutions like Circle, their value is no longer limited to USDC itself, but lies in whether they can become the connection layer and infrastructure layer between different stablecoin systems.
Who Issues is No Longer the Core Question
While the market is still discussing: Who will issue the stablecoin? Which country will land it first?
Circle has already provided another answer through its actions: what determines the long-term position is not the issuance right, but whether one is embedded in the system.
In the future stablecoin landscape, a structure is likely to emerge:
- Highly localized issuers
- Highly收敛 (convergent/concentrated) regulation
- Underlying capabilities provided by a few globalized institutions
In this structure: some companies will not appear on the front line, but will exist in every transaction.
*This content is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice. The market carries risks, investment requires caution.





