South Korean regulator to enhance anti-money laundering via law revisions

South Korea's financial regulator plans to revise laws and boost international cooperation to combat rising money laundering activities. The Financial Services Commission aims to empower the anti-money laundering agency to freeze suspicious accounts and impose curbs on international criminal rings. It will also strengthen regulations on virtual assets.

On February 5, 2026, South Korea's Financial Services Commission (FSC) announced plans to revise related laws to address the growing threat of money laundering activities and to enhance international cooperation for tracking and cracking down on such operations. The revisions will allow the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), the country's anti-money laundering agency, to freeze accounts suspected of involvement in crimes like drug trafficking and gambling. Additionally, the FSC will push for changes enabling the designation of international criminal rings as entities subject to restrictions on financial transactions.

Seoul aims to strengthen ties with countries including China, Singapore, Cambodia, and other Southeast Asian nations by sharing information and policies to better combat money laundering. This collaborative approach is intended to improve detection and enforcement.

In response to the rise in money laundering through virtual assets, the FSC will bolster relevant regulations, including the crypto travel rule, which currently requires virtual asset exchanges to report domestic transactions exceeding 1 million won (about $690). The commission also plans to establish an anti-money laundering framework specifically for stablecoins.

These measures reflect efforts to counter the globalization and digitalization of money laundering, with the FSC emphasizing international partnerships to maximize effectiveness.

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Lee Eog-weon, chairman of the Financial Services Commission (FSC), said on Wednesday that his agency will take bold steps to help the financial sector develop innovative services. Support will focus on artificial intelligence (AI), data and young entrepreneurs, with unnecessary regulations to be drastically removed.

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The South Korean government will introduce a system to better manage virtual assets under its custody following repeated security breaches, the finance ministry said. The plan was finalized at an emergency economic meeting chaired by Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol. The central government currently holds about 78 billion won worth of such assets.

South Korean police launched the country's first illegal gambling investigation into domestic Polymarket users on June 5. The probe targets residents who placed bets on June 3 local election outcomes using cryptocurrency transactions.

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Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission is pursuing compensation for victims of securities misconduct instead of focusing on fines. The regulator has secured HK$2.5 billion in settlements over recent months. This follows practices in the US, UK and Europe.

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