South Korea Pressures Regulators to Deliver Stablecoin Bill Next Week
Key Takeaways:
Lawmakers are demanding a stablecoin bill by December 10.
Disagreement over whether banks should control issuers is blocking progress.
Parliament may advance regulation without financial regulators if delays continue.
Lawmakers are no longer willing to wait for financial agencies to settle their internal disagreements – and the clock is ticking.
The ruling party has set a firm ultimatum: regulators must hand over a complete draft of the stablecoin bill by December 10, or the National Assembly will bypass them and open the legislative process without regulatory input. The threat marks one of the rare moments in which Parliament signals it may craft digital-asset policy independently of financial authorities.
A Bill Stuck Between Competing Visions
The delay has little to do with stablecoins themselves and everything to do with who gets to control them. The Bank of Korea favors a model where banks hold majority ownership in any issuer of KRW-denominated stablecoins. Other regulators — including those responsible for industry innovation — prefer a more open environment that doesn’t place banks at the center of every stablecoin project.
Neither side has shown willingness to concede, turning the bill into a battleground for influence over the future of digital finance in the country.
Regulators Try to Buy Time
After lawmakers issued their deadline, the Financial Services Commission acknowledged the ongoing talks but avoided committing to any specific model. It stressed that stablecoin oversight remains under development and that no decisions have been made — particularly around the controversial idea of bank-led consortium issuers.
The carefully worded response did little to ease concerns that the bill could miss the deadline.
Central Bank’s Argument Meets Industry Pushback
The Bank of Korea has justified its position by pointing to the banking sector’s strict anti-money-laundering controls and its long history of oversight under financial law. However, industry players argue that banks acting as mandatory issuers is not the same as establishing safe issuance rules.
Blockchain groups want transparent operating criteria — not privileged gatekeepers. They argue that stability comes from regulation, not ownership.
Looking for a Landing Zone
Advisors inside the ruling party now say the goal is to build a compromise that protects monetary stability while avoiding a framework that freezes innovation. If that balance isn’t achieved fast enough, the stablecoin bill may be pushed forward by lawmakers rather than regulators — a rare scenario in South Korea’s legislative process.
For now, everything hinges on whether the government can deliver a unified draft before the deadline arrives.
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Filed under: Bitcoin - @ December 1, 2025 3:26 pm