A top South Korean financial regulator has denied reports claiming it is set to cooperate with the United States on efforts to classify certain cryptoassets as securities.
Per Hanguk Kyungjae, the South Korean Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) stated that reports that it was planning to meet the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to determine the securities properties of cryptoassets were wide of the mark.
The FSS conceded that a number of key officials were hoping to travel to Washington, where they would indeed meet the SEC. But the FSS said that crypto would not be on the meeting agenda.
An FSS official was quoted as stating:
“It is true that we are preparing to embark on a business trip to the SEC. But the meeting will be about corporate data disclosure reviewing protocols, not cryptoassets.”
The SEC and its Chairman Gary Gensler have repeatedly claimed that tokens whose protocols make use of staking mechanisms may be considered securities.
South Korean regulators, meanwhile, hope to draw clearer lines between tokens that can be viewed as commodities and those that can be viewed as securities. This, prosecutors hope, will allow them to bring legal action against Terraform Labs executives.
Prosecutors want to bring the missing Terraform CEO Do Kwon to court on fraud charges. But the prosecution’s entire case rests on defining Terra ecosystem coins as securities.
Gensler has suggested that no cryptoasset – with the exception of Bitcoin (BTC) – should be considered to be a commodity. Seoul, media outlets previously reported, wants to seek clarification on these matters.
But the FSS stated that the SEC had not yet responded to its request for a meeting. Industry and political insiders think Seoul wants to hear details
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