After Bithumb Incident South Korea’s central bank is pushing to extend stock market-style risk controls to the country’s cryptocurrency exchanges, marking a shift from operational fixes toward changes in market structure.
The Bank of Korea is now going further, proposing tools typically used in equity markets to manage trading itself.
In a new report, the central bank recommended introducing circuit breakers — mechanisms that automatically halt trading during sharp price moves — to manage abnormal volatility.
The proposals map closely onto the rulebook of a traditional exchange.
They include market-wide circuit breakers, tighter reconciliation requirements already introduced by the FSC, and monthly asset verification by independent accounting firms.
The measures are expected to be incorporated into South Korea’s forthcoming Digital Asset Basic Act.
The Bank of Korea’s review pointed to broader weaknesses across the industry, including gaps in transaction approval processes and delayed reconciliation cycles that can allow inconsistencies to build up on exchange books.
South Korea remains one of the largest retail crypto trading hubs globally, with won-denominated trading volumes exceeding $600 billion in 2025 and local exchanges such as Upbit consistently ranking among the top venues by spot volume.
Changes to market structure in Korea therefore affect a significant share of global retail activity.
For exchanges and the broader B2B brokerage industry, the shift raises the operational bar.
Real-time reconciliation, auditable systems and circuit breaker infrastructure increase compliance costs and create higher entry thresholds for new platforms.
Firms already operating under similar requirements in traditional markets enter with an advantage.
Whether other jurisdictions follow South Korea’s lead at the same pace is an open question.
The broader direction, however, is becoming clearer: regulators are increasingly moving away from separate rulebooks for crypto and traditional markets.
In the wake of the Bithumb incident, South Korea’s central bank is extending stock-market style risk controls to crypto exchanges, signaling a shift from operational fixes toward market-structure reform.
The Bank of Korea proposes tools commonly used in equity markets to manage trading, including circuit breakers that automatically halt trading during sharp price moves to curb abnormal volatility.
The measures mirror a traditional exchange rulebook and are expected to be incorporated into the forthcoming Digital Asset Basic Act, with tighter reconciliation and monthly asset verification by independent accounting firms.
The Bank of Korea’s review also points to broader weaknesses, such as gaps in transaction approvals and delayed reconciliation cycles that can allow discrepancies to accumulate on exchange books.
Korea remains a leading retail crypto hub, with won-denominated volumes reaching over $600 billion in 2025 and Upbit among the top spot venues, meaning these market-structure changes will influence a large share of global retail activity.
For exchanges and the B2B brokerage industry, the new regime raises compliance costs and creates higher entry thresholds, advantaging firms already meeting traditional market standards.
Whether other jurisdictions will move at the same pace remains uncertain, but regulators are converging toward unified crypto and traditional-market rules.
Real-time reconciliation and circuit-breaker infrastructure are likely to become the standard.














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