On the 19th, the Financial Services Commission and the Financial Supervisory Service announced that the 'Virtual Asset User Protection Act', which is aimed at protecting the assets of virtual asset users, will be implemented in earnest from this day. The User Protection Act is the 'first business rights law' enacted in July last year, based on the vigilance after the Tena-Luna incident in 2022.
In response, the financial authorities consolidated and coordinated 19 virtual asset-related bills pending in the National Assembly, centering on the essentials for user protection, prepared alternatives, and enacted the User Protection Act after in-depth discussions. The law was enforced after a one-year preparation period, including the enactment of subordinate regulations and preparations for the implementation of the law by virtual asset operators.
The User Protection Act stipulated ▲ protection of users' deposits and virtual assets ▲ regulation of unfair trade behaviors such as market price manipulation ▲ the authority of financial authorities to supervise, inspect, and sanction virtual asset operators and investigate and take action against unfair trade actors.
The virtual asset business shall keep its virtual assets and the virtual assets of users separately, and shall hold substantially the same amount of virtual assets as the virtual assets of users. Accordingly, exchanges must store at least 80% of the virtual assets held by users in cold wallets. In order to fulfill its responsibilities in the event of accidents such as hacking or computer failure, the exchange must purchase insurance or accumulate reserves.
Cryptocurrency exchanges must also monitor abnormal transactions at all times and notify financial authorities if they suspect unfair trading behavior. Criminal penalties and fines may be imposed on those who engage in unfair trade behavior after investigation by financial authorities and investigative agencies.
Financial authorities can also supervise, inspect, and sanction virtual asset operators. The Financial Supervisory Service inspects virtual asset operators for compliance with user protection obligations under the User Protection Act, and the Financial Services Commission can impose sanctions such as corrective orders, suspension of all or part of the business, and fines on virtual asset operators that violate their obligations based on the inspection results.
The industry hopes that the inclusion of virtual assets in the system will restore investor confidence in the market. “Many investors felt uneasy about depositing and storing their assets due to the FTX bankruptcy, but with the implementation of the User Protection Act, they will feel 'safer' than before,” said an industry insider. ”Unfair trading behavior such as scam coins will also gradually disappear as financial authorities strengthen their supervision and sanctions.”
There are also growing calls for the second phase of the legislation, which will cover issuance regulation, distribution regulation, and issuance disclosure, to be discussed sooner rather than later. “The Democratic Party of Korea, which won the April 10 general election, has pledged to enact the second phase of the virtual asset law, so the legislation will speed up,” the official said. ”If the second phase of the law tightens regulations on virtual assets, the market will be more active.”
Jeon HanSin (pocha@fntimes.com)
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