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Home Startup Blockchain

Why the Next ‘Dunamu’ Might Be Born in Singapore, Not Seoul: The Hidden Risk in Korea’s Digital Asset Act

by Richard Park
March 2, 2026
in Blockchain
0

The era of the “accidental unicorn” in South Korea is officially over. As the Digital Asset Basic Act (DABA) moves from legislative debate into a rigid enforcement reality this March, the very mechanics that allowed companies like Dunamu to scale—founder-led agility and concentrated risk-taking—are being reclassified as systemic liabilities. By framing private trading platforms as “public infrastructure,” Seoul is not only regulating a market but also fundamentally altering the incentive structure for every Web3 founder currently building in the peninsula.

The 15% Governance Cap: A New Ceiling for Korea’s Crypto Founders

The Financial Services Commission (FSC) is currently finalizing Phase 2 of the Digital Asset Basic Act, which introduces a hard cap on major shareholder ownership in virtual asset exchanges, limited to between 15% and 20%.

This policy treats crypto exchanges as “Alternative Trading Systems” (ATS), effectively mandating the same dispersed ownership structures found in traditional securities markets. And for industry leaders like Song Chi-hyung of Dunamu (holding approximately 28%) and Cha Myung-hoon of Coinone (holding over 53%), this represents a forced divestment mandate.

The Digital Asset Exchange Alliance (DAXA) has formally opposed the move, stating that “artificially altering private ownership structures threatens the foundation of an industry that has grown organically.”

Unlike global counterparts like Coinbase, which went public to diversify ownership, Korean founders now face a regulatory clock that may force them to dilute their stakes before they are ready, or even capable, of a traditional IPO.

Why the ‘Public Goods’ Narrative Alarms the Venture Ecosystem

The tension in Seoul isn’t just about crypto; it’s about the definition of private property in an “innovation-first” economy.

 By labeling high-traffic platforms as “public infrastructure,” the government has triggered what local founders call “TADA trauma”—a reference to the 2020 mobility startup that was effectively shuttered by retroactive legislation.

“The reason we lose sleep growing a service is to enjoy the fruits of that growth,” an official from a prominent fintech startup noted during recent industry consultations. If the reward for scaling a platform to 11 million users is the forced forfeiture of management rights, the psychological contract between the state and the entrepreneur is broken.

This shift suggests that in Korea, a startup is private only until it becomes successful, at which point it becomes a ward of the state.

VC Investment Logic vs. Regulatory Mandates

There is a glaring disconnect between the FSC’s governance goals and the way venture capital actually works.

VCs invest in “founder-led” companies precisely because a strong, majority-stake founder can make the rapid, high-risk pivots necessary in Web3. If a founder’s stake is capped at 15% by law, any subsequent funding rounds will inevitably dilute that stake into the single digits.

As industry veterans have pointed out, a founder with a 5% stake cannot defend a company against hostile takeovers or “giant capital” entities. This creates a “funding paradox”: VCs are hesitant to “burn cash” on companies where the management rights are legally unstable, yet the startups need that very cash to meet the high compliance costs—such as the 100% reserve requirement—mandated by the same Act.

What DABA Enables — and the Innovation It Stifles

The Digital Asset Basic Act successfully cleanses the market of “bad actors” by enforcing strict white-paper disclosures and 100% reserve audits, which will undoubtedly increase retail investor trust. It provides a clear legal path for bank-led stablecoin consortiums and institutional-grade custody.

However, it effectively stifles the “garage-to-global” startup trajectory.

By imposing the governance standards of a 50-year-old bank onto a three-year-old blockchain startup, the law ignores the “growth phase” of innovation. The result is a bifurcated market: a few “regulated giants” (the existing Big 5 exchanges and major banks) and a void where the next generation of experimental startups should be.

For a nation that prides itself on being a “startup state,” with a “startup-centered society” vision, this is a significant structural contraction.

Strategic Implications for Global Investors and Cross-Border Partners

For global stakeholders, Korea’s current climate signals a transition from a “high-growth/high-risk” market to a “low-growth/high-compliance” one. International investors should be aware of the following:

  • The Valuation Gap: Forced divestments of founder shares could lead to a secondary market glut, potentially suppressing the valuations of Korea’s top crypto entities.
  • The Singapore Pivot: There have been mentions of the emerging “Innovation Exodus.” Prominent Korean founders are increasingly registering their core IP and holding companies in Singapore or Dubai to avoid “management rights instability,” keeping only their operational branches in Seoul.
  • Regulatory Arbitrage: Foreign issuers like Circle or Tether now face a choice: set up a domestic Korean branch to comply with local rules or wait for Korean fintechs to “export” their regulated KRW-stablecoins to the global market.

Toward a Maturity Test Korea May Not Be Ready For

The Digital Asset Basic Act is a maturity test for South Korea’s status as a global tech hub. Regulation is necessary for institutional adoption, but when regulation begins to dictate ownership, it ceases to be a guardrail and becomes a barrier.

If the “reward for success” is the loss of the company you built, Korea’s brightest minds will simply build elsewhere. The question for 2026 isn’t whether Korea can regulate crypto—it has proven it can. The question is whether it can do so without killing the very entrepreneurial spirit that made Korea a digital powerhouse in the first place.

Key Takeaway: The Impact of Korea’s 2026 Digital Asset Mandate

  • Forced Divestment: Founders of major exchanges face a 15–20% ownership cap, threatening management stability and disrupting the traditional VC “founder-control” investment model.
  • The “Tada” Precedent: Retroactive “public goods” labeling is creating a trust deficit between the government and Web3 innovators.
  • Institutional Shift: While the law favors banks and established “Big 5” exchanges, it significantly raises the “cost of entry” for early-stage Web3 startups.
  • Global Positioning: The “Regulatory Exodus” to Singapore is accelerating as founders seek jurisdictions that protect private property and management rights during the growth phase.
  • Investor Warning: Expect a period of “governance restructuring” in Korea that may prioritize transparency over the rapid innovation cycles typical of the blockchain industry.

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Tags: CoinoneDigital Asset ActDigital Asset Basic ActDigital Asset Exchange Alliance (DAXA)digital asset finance Asiadigital asset financial innovationDigital Asset PolicyDigital Asset Regulationdigital asset regulation Asiadigital asset regulation Koreadigital asset tradingDigital AssetsDunamuFinancial Services Commission (FSC)InnovationKorea Digital Asset ActKorea Digital Asset MarketKorea digital asset regulationKorea Venture InvestmentKorea Venture Investment ForecastKorea Venture Investment policiesKorean digital asset ecosystemKorean StartupsUpbitVCsVenture CapitalVenture InvestmentVenture Investment ActVenture Investment Strategyvirtual assetVirtual Asset regulation
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