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Korea’s Top Financial Regulator: Crypto Exchanges Should Face ‘No Problems’ With Banks

Korea’s Top Financial Regulator: Crypto Exchanges Should Face ‘No Problems’ With Banks

The chairman of South Korea’s Financial Services Commission has affirmed that crypto exchanges should face no issues with banking provisions.

The chairman of South Korea’s Financial Services Commission (FSC) has affirmed that crypto exchanges should face no issues with banking provisions, local media platform Token Post reported Oct. 30.

The FSC’s Choi Jong-Ku clarified that banking support would be provided as long as exchanges have adequate anti-money-laundering (AML) safeguards in place and apply robust know-your-customer (KYC) checks.

In particular, Korean banks previously could offer “virtual” accounts to crypto exchanges to provide traders with more anonymity. In January, South Korea had introduced strict AML rules for exchange operators, designed to prevent anonymous trading by stipulating that all accounts be linked  to a ‘real name’ bank account and leading numerous banks to stop providing virtual accounts in order to comply.

Choi’s statement explicitly addressed this mechanism, saying that with adequate security and compliance measures, banks’ provision of the virtual account service faces “no problem.”

The positive statement is reported to have been well received by the Korea Blockchain Association, whose chairman Chin Daeje, affirmed that regulators’ concern over both KYC and AML compliance has been addressed and “resolved” by the domestic exchange sector.

In late summer, Bithumb, one of the country’s largest crypto trading platforms, regained the support of its banking partner Nonghyup after the latter had ceased its services for the exchange in the wake of a high-profile hack. The exchange clarified in a statement that it had regained banking access by following a series of requirements, including a decision “to keep the investor assets separate, and not [to] accept interest or deposits.”

Choi’s remarks come at a pivotal time for the Korean crypto sector, which awaits the possible announcement of a government decision in November over whether or not to repeal the country’s local ban on Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), which has been in force since September 2017.

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