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Yonhap News Agency: South Korea's Basic Law on Digital Assets is proposed to include no-fault compensation and stablecoin bankruptcy isolation mechanisms; the government's proposal may be postponed until next year.

2025-12-29 23:57

According to Odaily, the South Korean government's draft "Digital Asset Basic Law" (the second phase of legislation for crypto assets) aims to include several investor protection measures, such as introducing no-fault liability for digital asset service providers and establishing a bankruptcy risk isolation mechanism for stablecoin issuers. However, due to significant disagreements surrounding core issues such as the issuers of stablecoins, the government's proposal is expected to be submitted next year.

The report states that a draft government proposal currently being studied by the Financial Services Commission may require stablecoin issuers to allocate their assets to low-risk assets such as deposits and government bonds, and to deposit or entrust at least 100% of the outstanding balance to banks or other regulatory institutions to prevent the risk of issuer bankruptcy from being passed on to investors. Simultaneously, the information disclosure obligations, terms, and advertising regulations for digital asset operators will be closer to those of traditional financial institutions. In the event of a hacker attack or system failure, no-fault liability may be applied in accordance with the Electronic Financial Transactions Act.

Furthermore, the draft bill may allow the sale of digital assets within South Korea, provided that information disclosure is strengthened, to correct the previous practice of "overseas issuance, domestic circulation" established due to administrative restrictions on ICOs. Although the legislative framework has been initially established, disagreements remain between the Financial Services Commission (FSC) and the Bank of Korea on key issues such as the eligibility of stablecoin issuers, approval mechanisms, minimum capital requirements, and whether exchanges can simultaneously perform issuance and circulation functions. The FSC stated that relevant departments are continuously working to narrow the gap in their positions and have not yet reached a final decision on the plan. (Yonhap News Agency)