South Korea has officially ended its 9-year restriction on cryptocurrency investments, marking a major shift in the country's regulatory stance. The new policy permits listed companies and professional investors to participate in crypto markets with clearer guidelines.
Under the updated framework, institutional investors can allocate funds to the top 20 cryptocurrency assets, with investments capped at 5% of their equity capital. This measured approach balances market participation with risk management. The move is expected to affect approximately 3,500 entities across the country, opening significant opportunities for institutional capital to enter the digital asset space.
This regulatory breakthrough reflects evolving global attitudes toward cryptocurrency integration within traditional financial systems and could accelerate South Korea's position as a Web3 hub in Asia.
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BlockBargainHunter
· 3h ago
South Korea has finally opened the window; after 9 years of ban, it's lifted just like that. The pace is a bit fast.
The ceiling for institutional investment is only 5%. To be honest, it's a bit timid... But with 3,500 institutions rushing in, what can they really hype up?
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GateUser-6bc33122
· 21h ago
South Korea has finally broken the defense; after 9 years of bans, they are lifting the restrictions, and institutions are about to start playing.
However, is the 5% cap a bit conservative... It still feels like testing the waters.
How much of a wave can 3,500 institutions create? Let's wait and see.
Honestly, this relaxation has a significant impact on the entire Web3 landscape in Asia.
Wait, only the top 20 coins can be invested in? Is this to prevent retail investors from following the trend or for risk control considerations...
South Korea is about to take off, indeed. It was so restrictive before, and now suddenly shifting, is the strategy changing so quickly?
Does institutional capital entering mean that the crypto world is about to change? I feel like that's a bit of an overinterpretation.
Finally, crypto is no longer being demonized. Progress...
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HodlAndChill
· 01-12 14:01
South Korea has finally loosened its grip. After a 9-year ban, it's lifted just like that, and institutional funds are about to enter... This is getting interesting.
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OldLeekMaster
· 01-12 13:59
South Korea has finally loosened restrictions. After 9 years of ban, it's been lifted just like that. Now institutional funds will start to enter the market.
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NotFinancialAdvice
· 01-12 13:54
9-year ban lifted, institutional funds are about to enter... South Korea is really about to get started
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StableGenius
· 01-12 13:43
lmao 5% cap is basically south korea's way of saying "we'll allow it but not really" — institutional money flowing in is inevitable tho, empirically speaking this always happens once regulators stop pretending crypto doesn't exist
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YieldFarmRefugee
· 01-12 13:34
After 9 years, the ban is finally lifted. Is South Korea seriously embracing crypto now?
South Korea has officially ended its 9-year restriction on cryptocurrency investments, marking a major shift in the country's regulatory stance. The new policy permits listed companies and professional investors to participate in crypto markets with clearer guidelines.
Under the updated framework, institutional investors can allocate funds to the top 20 cryptocurrency assets, with investments capped at 5% of their equity capital. This measured approach balances market participation with risk management. The move is expected to affect approximately 3,500 entities across the country, opening significant opportunities for institutional capital to enter the digital asset space.
This regulatory breakthrough reflects evolving global attitudes toward cryptocurrency integration within traditional financial systems and could accelerate South Korea's position as a Web3 hub in Asia.