South Korea Takes Steps To Regulate Digital Currencies

Attempt to Regulate Digital Currency
The South Korean Financial Services Commission (FSC), announced on September 3 how they would deal with digital currencies such as bitcoin and ether, according to local publications.
Sunday’s announcement followed a joint task force meeting chaired by FSC secretary-general Kim Yong-beom. “At this point, digital currencies cannot be considered money and currency not financial products,” Business Korea reported him saying. The meeting was attended by officials from the FSC, the Ministry of Strategy and Finance, the Fair Trade Commission, the Ministry of Justice, the Korea Communications Commission, the National Tax Service, the National Police Agency, the Bank of Korea, the Financial Supervisory Service and the Korea Internet & Security Agency, according to iNews24.There is a need for the government to cope with the virtual currencies to prevent them from being used as tools for crimes and simple speculative investment.
Specific Measures
One of the measures discussed is to strengthen identity verification procedures. “Banks will be required to strictly check the personal information of people who work at digital currency exchanges,” Yonhap reported the FSC explaining. “If there are suspicious transactions in such bank accounts, lenders will be required to report the transactions to authorities.”
Digital Currency Market & ICOs
Meanwhile, the country’s largest bitcoin exchange Bithumb reported that its daily trading volume on August 18 exceeded 2.6 trillion won (approximately $2.3 billion). This was more than the trading value of Kosdaq market, which was 2.43 trillion won the day before, according to Hankyoreh daily newspaper. Kosdaq is the Korean counterpart of Nasdaq. “It was one-off, but enough to shock the financial market,” the publication detailed.
Images courtesy of Shutterstock and Yonhap
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