South Korea, Singapore, Thailand clarify crypto rules as U.S. in state of regulatory ‘warfare’

If the first half of this year was distinguished by the U.S. securities regulator slapping fines on cryptocurrency exchanges, warning of legal action and then following up with the same, the second half started in Asia with a raft of jurisdictions running out new rules for exchanges – without the lawsuits.

While some Asia nations, such as Singapore and Thailand, seem to be following the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in frowning upon certain products offered by exchanges, the approach in Asia so far seems to be clarity instead of court battles, in contrast with North America.

The U.S. is in a state of political and regulatory warfare over how to manage the cryptocurrency industry, John Rizzo, senior vice president of public affairs at Washington-based public relation firm Clyde Group, said in email comments.

“Congress appears to be making progress on regulatory frameworks for stablecoins and crypto market structure, but the SEC seems to be determined to essentially ban crypto,” said Rizzo, a former spokesperson on digital assets at the U.S. Department of the Treasury.

According to Zennon Kapron, founder of Asia-based fintech consultancy Kapronasia, crypto was “always on shaky ground in the U.S.” as the regulations were never clear. “For this reason, many firms have focused on overseas markets to begin with,” Kapron said in an email interview.

Nick Ruck, chief operations officer at blockchain infrastructure platform ContentFi Labs, agrees with that view.

“The largest issue with the crypto industry in the US stems from regulators trying to apply a century-old framework to new innovations in financial technology,” said Ruck in text message comments.

Countries in Asia are attracting crypto companies by clarifying rules and being adaptable to innovation, he said.

South Korea appears to be one of them. The country’s National Assembly on the final day of June approved a bill focused on protecting the interests of cryptocurrency investors.

Singapore and Thailand followed with rules that include forbidding crypto staking services, though Singapore authorities added that the product is still being studied.

Not to forget Hong Kong – once home to the now bankrupt FTX exchange that became the poster child for all that’s wrong with cryptocurrency trading platforms.

Hong Kong introduced stricter crypto trading regulations of its own on June 1 and is one of the jurisdictions in Asia running for a spot as a leading digital asset center, with all the potential investment, jobs and financial technology edge it could bring.