Crypto.com cumpără startup-uri sud-coreene pentru a concura cu giganții locali

  • The exchange announced its local acquisitions during Korea Blockchain Week in Seoul
  • The buyouts helped Crypto.com gain registration under South Korea’s Electronic Financial Transaction Act

Crypto markets aren’t exactly bullish. Still, exchange platform Crypto.com is eager to expand to South Korea, having just acquired two local firms to get its local offerings off the ground.

The Singapore-headquartered exchange said in a Monday anunț that it acquired South Korean payment service provider PnLink and digital asset exchange OK-Bit. 

Both companies hold Electronic Financial Transaction Act and Virtual Asset Service Provider registrations — certifications for customer safety — which means they now transfer to Crypto.com.

Crypto.com appears to consider its entry into South Korea critical. In a statement, Patrick Yoon, general manager of Crypto.com in South Korea, said it’s a “tremendously important market for Crypto.com in advancing blockchain technology.”

Historically, cryptocurrency has been incredibly popular in the country, which, combined with restrictive capital controls, often leads to higher digital asset prices on local exchanges, allowing for lucrative arbitrage.

Crypto.com says it has attracted 50 million users overall. According to Coreea Herald, about 15 million people in South Korea hold accounts at crypto exchanges but only about 6 million actively trade.

“We are committed to working with regulators to continue to bring our products and services to market, particularly in countries like South Korea where consumers have shown strong interest and adoption of digital currencies,” said CEO Kris Marszalek.

The announcement didn’t indicate the cost of acquisition or whether the exchange is yet to fulfill other requirements to be able to fully offer services. Blockworks has reached out to learn more.

Crypto.com will have stiff competition in South Korea

Crypto.com is entering South Korea at a sensitive time. Strict reporting requirements enacted last year have stifled competition, leading to consolidare in favor of South Korea’s “big four” platforms Upbit, Bithumb, Coinone and Korbit.

And following crypto market turbulence, South Korean authorities are reportedly weighing new measures to better protect consumers. Implementation of planned taxes in the country was however recently întârziat până la 2025. 

Crypto.com is the world’s ninth-largest crypto exchange by daily volume, processing $316 million in trades over the past 24 hours, per CoinGecko’s normalized volume data, which Încercările to filter out wash trading.

CoinGecko doesn’t publish normalized data for South Korea’s largest exchange Upbit, which reports more than $1.8 billion in daily trade volume.

In any case, Crypto.com’s South Korean play comes after an aprobare de principiu from Singaporean regulators to offer services in the country, in addition to provisional approval from Dubai.

Schimbul recent și-a redus 5% din forța de muncă as cryptocurrency firms slashed costs to deal with headwinds from the market downturn.


Primiți în căsuța dvs. de e-mail cele mai bune știri și informații despre criptomonede ale zilei în fiecare seară. Abonați-vă la buletinul informativ gratuit al Blockworks acum.


  • Shalini Nagarajan

    Blocuri

    Reporter

    Shalini este un reporter cripto din Bangalore, India, care acoperă evoluțiile pieței, reglementările, structura pieței și sfaturile experților instituționali. Înainte de Blockworks, ea a lucrat ca reporter de piață la Insider și corespondent la Reuters News. Ea deține niște bitcoin și eter. Ajunge la ea la [e-mail protejat]

Source: https://blockworks.co/crypto-com-buys-south-korean-startups-to-compete-with-local-giants/