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South Korea Lifts Its Corporate Crypto Ban - But Draws A Hard Line Against USDT And USDC

South Korea Lifts Its Corporate Crypto Ban - But Draws A Hard Line Against USDT And USDC

South Korea's Financial Services Commission is preparing guidelines that will end a near-nine-year ban on corporate cryptocurrency investment - but will exclude dollar-pegged stablecoins, including Tether's (USDT) and Circle's (USDC), from permitted holdings.

The decision was confirmed at a March 5 government meeting, according to local newspaper Herald Kyungjae, which cited an unnamed source close to the FSC taskforce: "The decision is final."

The guidelines are expected to roll out in the weeks ahead, allowing listed companies and professional investment firms to allocate up to 5% of their own capital into cryptocurrency - but only in the top 20 non-stablecoin assets by market capitalization.

Transactions must flow through regulated domestic exchanges such as Upbit and Bithumb.

Why Stablecoins Were Cut

The core obstacle is legal, not political. South Korea's Foreign Exchange Transactions Act - a 1998 law governing cross-border payment flows - does not recognize stablecoins as an approved external payment instrument.

Under that framework, international transactions must pass through designated foreign exchange banks, and regulators argue that permitting corporations to hold USDT or USDC would directly conflict with existing statute.

The FSC also cited concerns about "indiscriminate investments" during what it called the early stages of the corporate crypto market.

The regulator reportedly prefers to channel cross-border trade deals through conventional foreign exchange banking infrastructure rather than letting companies settle directly with overseas counterparties in dollar-pegged tokens.

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Who Loses Ground

The exclusion lands hardest on listed companies with significant cross-border trade exposure, several of which had lobbied the FSC to include stablecoins for settlement and currency-hedging purposes.

In October 2025, lawmakers responded by drafting a bill that would formally recognize stablecoins as a means of payment - but that legislation remains at the committee stage in the National Assembly, stalled partly over disagreements between the Bank of Korea and the FSC about who can issue Korean won-pegged tokens.

Until that bill clears, companies wanting stablecoin exposure must continue using personal wallets or overseas OTC platforms - arrangements that operate outside the regulated domestic framework the FSC is now building. South Korean firms have watched Japanese and U.S.-based counterparts build multi-billion-dollar Bitcoin (BTC) treasury positions while domestic rules kept them sidelined for nearly a decade.

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Disclaimer and Risk Warning: The information provided in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and is based on the author's opinion. It does not constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Cryptocurrency assets are highly volatile and subject to high risk, including the risk of losing all or a substantial amount of your investment. Trading or holding crypto assets may not be suitable for all investors. The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author(s) and do not represent the official policy or position of Yellow, its founders, or its executives. Always conduct your own thorough research (D.Y.O.R.) and consult a licensed financial professional before making any investment decision.