OpenUSD faces scrutiny over stablecoin partner commitments

Open Standard's OpenUSD stablecoin project is under examination following reports that several named partners have not formally committed to the alliance. A July 3 report highlighted confusion over the involvement of Korean firms listed on the project's site. The issue centers on distinguishing formal participants from those merely in discussions.

A July 3 Chosun Biz report stated that Samsung Electronics, Shinhan Financial Group, Dunamu, Kbank and other Korean firms had not held official consultations with Open Standard or confirmed participation in the OUSD project. Samsung Electronics said there had been no official consultations and that it did not know what role it would play. Other firms indicated that Open Standard had inquired about their willingness to participate and that they would review the proposal, though their names appeared as consortium members.

Open Standard's official site presents OpenUSD as shared stablecoin infrastructure under a “backed by” section. It describes OUSD as a dollar-stablecoin for financial activity, with reserves maintained at major institutions in compliance with US requirements. The site states that OUSD is expected to launch later this year and that most reserve-generated revenue, minus a small management fee, will go to participants that adopt and distribute the stablecoin.

The report noted that participating companies could mint and redeem OUSD without stated fees or limits. Governance is handled by Open Standard as an independent company, with collaborative oversight rather than through a DAO or shareholder structure. The confusion has raised questions about the clarity of roles ahead of any launch.

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Illustration of Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire discussing the Open USD stablecoin consortium.
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Circle CEO questions Open USD stablecoin consortium model

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Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire responded to the June 30 launch announcement of Open USD by arguing that the new stablecoin's more than 140 backers will only matter if it generates live, regulated transaction volume.

Circle stock fell more than 17 percent on Tuesday following the unveiling of Open USD, a new stablecoin backed by over 140 companies including Stripe, Coinbase and BlackRock.

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Hong Kong has awarded its first stablecoin issuer licences to HSBC and a joint venture led by Standard Chartered, marking the city's latest step towards becoming a global digital asset hub. HSBC plans to launch its Hong Kong dollar stablecoin in the second half of this year, integrating it into its PayMe and mobile banking platforms.

OKX Ventures and Korea Investment & Securities plan to each invest 80 billion won for 19.6 percent stakes in South Korean crypto exchange Coinone. The combined 160 billion won deal requires regulatory approval.

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South Korea's Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol and US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent agreed in Washington that excessive volatility in the Korean won against the dollar is undesirable. Seoul's finance ministry said the two will continue consultations on foreign exchange market trends.

India’s local price for Tether’s USDT stablecoin rose more than 8.5 percent above the dollar on June 29 amid tighter enforcement on crypto payment firms.

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Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan passed the Virtual Asset Service Act on June 30, creating the country’s first licensing framework for stablecoin issuers and other virtual asset providers.

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