South Korea’s Cryptocurrency Crackdown Isn’t Stopping This Bitcoin Exchange’s Launch
OKCoin Korea has accepted preorder registrations for more than 150,000 people since Friday
By Steven Russolillo and Eun-Young Jeong
Jan. 22, 2018 5:25 a.m. ET
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Cryptocurrency platform OKCoin is planning to launch a bitcoin exchange in South Korea as soon as next month, a move that comes as the country’s government is considering whether to shut down cryptocurrency exchanges altogether.
Beijing-based OKCoin, which previously ran one of the biggest bitcoin exchanges in China before the government there banned cryptocurrency exchanges on the mainland, now plans to branch out to South Korea, another Asian hot spot for crypto trading. It has launched an OKCoin Korea website and has accepted preorder registrations for more than 150,000 people since Friday. The exchange intends to make some 60 digital coins available for trading.
The intended launch comes even as the South Korean government has stepped up its efforts to crack down on speculative trading in cryptocurrencies. Many Koreans have embraced digital currencies, helping fuel their massive rise in value last year. At one point last month South Korea accounted for as much as a quarter of the global bitcoin trading, according to data firm Coinhills.
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Authorities are concerned the investor frenzy has gone too far and fueled criminal activity tied to digital currencies. A top South Korean official said earlier this month that the government was preparing a bill to ban the trading of cryptocurrencies on exchanges. That came just days after the country’s financial regulator started inspecting some of South Korea’s largest financial institutions that help facilitate digital-currency trading.
Earlier this month, the country’s National Tax Service began investigations into South Korea’s leading cryptocurrency exchanges, Bithumb and Coinone. Separately, a Seoul-based exchange called Youbit filed for bankruptcy last month after it suffered a second cyberattack and lost a large amount of its digital-currency reserves. South Korean authorities launched an investigation into the hack, with preliminary results finding signs North Korea was behind it, the Journal reported.
Han Seung-joon, marketing and public-relations director for OKCoin Korea, said the company has been working since the middle of last year to launch an exchange in Seoul. He said while OKCoin hasn’t directly contacted the South Korean government about its plans, it has been in communication with the Korea Blockchain Association, an industry group involving more than 15 local exchanges.
“We are trying to abide by the law as much as possible,” Mr. Han said. “As a new player in this market, we thought that it would be too much of a risk to voice out our opinions” to the government. But, he added, “we are preparing for the worst-case scenario” with regard to the regulatory risk.
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