logo
Bank of Korea deputy chief says desirable to introduce stablecoins gradually

Bank of Korea deputy chief says desirable to introduce stablecoins gradually

Yahoo7 hours ago

SEOUL (Reuters) -The senior deputy governor of South Korea's central bank said it was desirable to introduce won-denominated stablecoins at a gradual pace, first with rigorously-regulated commercial banks.
Stablecoins, a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a constant value – typically pegged at 1:1 to the U.S. dollar – are widely used by crypto traders to move funds between tokens, and are starting to be adopted by more and more companies.
"It is desirable to first allow banks, which are under a high level of regulations, to issue (won-based stablecoins) and gradually expand to the non-bank sector with the experience," Ryoo Sang-dai, senior deputy governor of the Bank of Korea (BOK), said at a press conference.
Ryoo said introducing stablecoins could have a significant impact on monetary policy and the transaction settlement system, as he echoed earlier concerns about capital flows raised by Governor Rhee Chang-yong and noted the need for a safety net to prevent financial market disorder and ensure user protection.
South Korea's left-leaning President, Lee Jae Myung, is seen delivering on his election pledge to allow companies to issue won-based stablecoins, with his Democratic Party proposing legislation designed to set up necessary regulatory infrastructure, so the country does not fall behind.
Ryoo also said rising housing prices and household debt had become a more important factor for the central bank, which is currently in an easing cycle. Last month's interest rate cut brought the policy rate to somewhere in the middle of the neutral range, he added.
The BOK will consult with major commercial banks to prepare a second pilot test of its central bank digital currency (CBDC), as the new administration's policy stance becomes clearer, Ryoo said.
The central bank's first pilot test ends next week, after it launched a joint project with the Bank for International Settlements, dubbed the central bankers' central bank, to develop a digital currency in late 2023.
Given the trend of digitalisation, authorities will also speed up market reform efforts to open up its currency market to foreign investors, after a year of extending trading hours and allowing overseas participation, Ryoo said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Next-Gen Chips Spurs Industry Shift
Next-Gen Chips Spurs Industry Shift

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Next-Gen Chips Spurs Industry Shift

Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) and MediaTek are lining up 2-nanometer system-on-chips for a late-2026 debut, riding a surge in on-device AI demand and built by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (NYSE:TSM). Counterpoint Research forecasts that Apple will shift over 80% of its product lineup to 3 nm this year, setting the stage for an even swifter 2 nm rollout. Counterpoint's Parv Sharma says the push toward 3 nm and 2 nm nodes is fueled by the need for faster AI inference and better power efficiency on smartphones, though it lifts wafer costs and raises total semiconductor content per device. TSMC plans tape-outs for 2 nm in H2 2025 and mass production in 2026, paving the way for flagship A-series, Snapdragon and Dimensity chips off the same line. TSMC's foundry dominanceowning roughly two-thirds of the market in Q4 2024 and an estimated 87% of sub-5 nm SoC shipments next yearshould extend to 89% by 2028, says Counterpoint director Brady Wang. That control gives TSMC and its chip-designer partners a clear path to deliver advanced-node scale, though rising node complexity may pressure yields and enlarge capex requirements. Why It Matters: The transition to 2 nm will define the next wave of smartphone performance, battery life and AI features, with TSMC's scale and Apple's design muscle setting the competitive bar. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Bitcoin rebounds from fall after Iran strike: Chart of the Day
Bitcoin rebounds from fall after Iran strike: Chart of the Day

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Bitcoin rebounds from fall after Iran strike: Chart of the Day

Yahoo Finance Markets and Data Editor Jared Blikre, who also hosts Yahoo Finance's Stocks in Translation podcast, takes a closer look at bitcoin's (BTC=F) initial fall and subsequent rebound after the US struck Iran, representing an escalation of conflict in the Middle East. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Morning Brief here. It is time now for our chart of the day. I'm Jared Blikre. Bitcoin is back, uh, above the $100,000 level after briefly hitting its lowest price since May in the wake of these US attacks on Iran. But looking back at some of its recent moves, they show that the cryptocurrency has a high level of correlation with risk assets and mainly technology. So before we get to that chart, I just want to show you the price action over the weekend, and this will include last Friday. You can see it's pretty negative, and you can see here we are above 100,000, but we dipped below, and that was on Sunday, and that generated a lot of headlines because that is that big psychological number. But let me just show you the year to date and show you why this isn't too concerning for me. What we have here is just technically speaking a bull flag. The long-term trend is still to the upside. We're consolidated, but we're moving sideways to down, as we can see in that chart right there. And over the last three years, guess what? We can see this has happened multiple times, most notably in 2024 when we did this for most of the year. That was very frustrating for traders, but not a lot of damage was done technically, uh, just Bitcoin was basically just treading water. And now I want to get to the juice here. This is the, uh, QQQ. This is basically the NASDAQ 100 correlated with Bitcoin, and that is in white here. And you can see it's a lot of, it goes up and down, basically on a scale from zero to 100, and that's on the right. And then in, in, uh, green, we have Bitcoin, and that is scaled on the left. So let me just show you how some of the peaks have worked on in Bitcoin. There's one, and it's hard to see, but in 20, uh, 2017, early 2018, we had a big peak in Bitcoin. You can see that on your screen right there. Then we had another one racing to all-time highs in 2021. And then we just had another one to all-time highs in 2025. Now, what happened here in each of those circumstances, the correlation with tech dropped precipitously each of those times. And so Bitcoin had basically become detached from a lot of the fundamentals that were driving the overall market. What I'm seeing here today is that Bitcoin is acting a lot like tech markets, and basically the entire market is under pressure right now. So Bitcoin is not chasing, it's not catching that safe haven bid. So what we need to see is a new catalyst that allows Bitcoin and crypto assets in general to propel themselves to new highs. But absent that huge catalyst like the election last fall, I don't know if we're going to see that.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store