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Topic: [2018-01-21] South Korea’s Second Largest Bank Supports Cryptocurrency Exchanges (Read 134 times)

legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1460
Kookmin Bank's loss is Shinhan Bank's gain. The cryptocurrency pie is too big for all banks to ignore, especially if there are no signals from the regulators. The biggest banks might shy away, but you will have some younger tech-friendly banks jumping in. If cryptocurrencies really take off, then these banks could get a competitive advantage.

Correct. This is where we might witness big, gargantuan banks and other dominating enterprises fail to adapt with the emergence of the cryptospace while smaller, more nimble companies taking advantage of it.

In 5 years, I reckon cryptocoins will be so ordinary that we will all be ignoring it hehe.

sr. member
Activity: 376
Merit: 251
Even western exchanges have had to deal with similar issues where certain banks were acting like complete jerks.
This will be the very popular problem of different exchanges, it's not only with South Korea, western exchanges and as well as the recent news about India's exchanges accounts are also disabled there. They are starting to do this crazy thing and they are jerks in reality knowing that they are accepting their competitors accounts that will soon will make them out of business.
legendary
Activity: 1554
Merit: 1026
★Nitrogensports.eu★
Kookmin Bank's loss is Shinhan Bank's gain. The cryptocurrency pie is too big for all banks to ignore, especially if there are no signals from the regulators. The biggest banks might shy away, but you will have some younger tech-friendly banks jumping in. If cryptocurrencies really take off, then these banks could get a competitive advantage.
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1460
Banks are always in competition with each other, if one bank does not want to accommodate a market segment then another bank will take advantage of it and take them in.

I reckon Kookmin Bank will be forced to accepting those customers again as more and more banks start accepting cryptocoin related virtual accounts.

What kind of system do they have in South Korea? Can you make an exchange account tied to a virtual bank account and send and receive fiat between the accounts seamlessly?
legendary
Activity: 2170
Merit: 1427
Overall a pretty decent announcement. Even western exchanges have had to deal with similar issues where certain banks were acting like complete jerks. In most cases we do criticize financial institutions for their actions, which in most cases is well justified, but I am glad that there are major differences in the mentality of financial institutions. If they were all equal minded, they would make things a whole lot more difficult for these exchanges, but we must be happy that we have to deal with different standards these institutions are handling. It's basically the same story when it comes to wall street banks - some banks think crypto currencies are a plague, where others see value in them as a potential new asset class.
sr. member
Activity: 358
Merit: 254
Bithumb and Korbit, two of the largest cryptocurrency exchanges in the South Korean market, have announced that Kookmin Bank deposits and withdrawals will be disabled by the end of January.

Shinhan Bank Will Support Cryptocurrency Exchanges

Kookmin Bank, the biggest financial institution in South Korea, has decided not to support cryptocurrency exchanges and provide virtual bank accounts to cryptocurrency investors. On South Korean trading platforms, each investor is provided with a virtual bank account with which they can withdraw and deposit Korean won, without having to directly move funds from and to actual bank accounts.

Over the past few weeks, local investors were concerned with the abrupt decision of Kookmin Bank to close down virtual bank accounts launched on South Korean cryptocurrency exchanges. Many traders feared that other banks would follow the decision of Kookmin Bank and simply cut financial links to cryptocurrency exchanges.

Earlier this week, Korbit told its users and traders that by the end of January, the exchange will begin accepting deposits and withdrawals from Shinhan Bank accounts instead of Kookmin Bank accounts. The statement sent by Korbit to its users read:

“As previously announced, in order to comply with the identification and anti-money laundering regulations being enforced by the government, the current KRW deposit method will be terminated by the end of January 2018.

To use the new KRW deposit method, which is slated to be implemented within this month, you must have a Shinhan Bank account registered under your legal name. Please use this time to create a banking account at Shinhan Bank. We will follow up with further instructions on how to input the new KRW withdrawal account information on Korbit.”

With the recent announcement of Korbit, traders have become relieved and started not to fear about the possibility of a cryptocurrency trading ban. Previously, in an official document, the South Korean government stated that it had requested financial institutions and banks within the regulated finance industry to prevent providing banking services to cryptocurrency exchanges.

What Will Happen to South Korean Cryptocurrency Market?

This week, several local media outlets reported that a high ranking financial authority in South Korea claimed the government is planning to allow financial institutions to list bitcoin futures, as the US Commodities and Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) did in 2017.

The government official explained that the listing of bitcoin futures would stabilize the market and enable the bitcoin exchange market to mature, reducing premiums and excessive speculation by local investors.

In the upcoming months, the South Korean government will likely roll out practical regulations to protect both investors and businesses. In a statement released in December, a member of the cryptocurrency regulation task force noted that the government will follow the regulatory roadmap established by leading markets like Japan and the US.

Given the current state of the market and the government’s decision to not impose a trading ban in the short-term, the South Korean cryptocurrency exchange market has been fairly optimistic over the past few days, as shown by the rising price and volumes of cryptocurrencies in both the South Korean and global market.

https://www.ccn.com/south-koreas-second-largest-bank-supports-cryptocurrency-exchanges-traders-relieved/
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