Collective Change of Ownership for Crypto Exchanges? The Positioning Competition Among South Korean Financial Giants
Author: Chloe, ChainCatcher
Last week, the South Korean cryptocurrency exchange Coinone officially announced the introduction of two heavyweight new shareholders. The venture capital arm of the global exchange OKX, OKX Ventures, and South Korea's major brokerage Korea Investment & Securities (KIS) will each purchase approximately 19.6% to 20% of the equity for 80 billion won (about 53 million USD), collectively acquiring nearly 40%, with OKX Ventures and KIS being tied as the third-largest shareholders.
On the surface, this transaction is a story of "foreign capital knocking on South Korea's door," as OKX becomes another international player holding significant equity in a licensed South Korean exchange following Binance's acquisition of Gopax. However, if we zoom out, the true protagonist of this transaction is actually the Korean brokerage that is同行 with OKX.
Korea Investment & Securities CEO Kim Sung-hwan also revealed the motivation: "This is our first step from traditional finance into blockchain digital financial services." For KIS, Coinone serves as a springboard, allowing it to enter new arenas such as the issuance and circulation of security tokens (STO), stablecoin-related services, digital asset brokerage, and institutional-level cryptocurrency business.
It can be said that even this deal, packaged as "foreign capital entering the market," is primarily driven by a local Korean brokerage, while foreign capital appears to be merely minority financial investors hitching a ride. Furthermore, when placed in the context of the past three months, this transaction at Coinone is just the tip of the iceberg in the entire South Korean cryptocurrency landscape.
Samsung Subsidiaries Each Bring Different Calculations to the Table
Just a day before Coinone's signing, on May 28, three companies under the Samsung Group—Samsung Securities, Samsung SDS, and Samsung Card—also jointly announced plans to invest approximately 612.8 billion won (about 408 to 446 million USD) to acquire a total of 4% equity in Dunamu, the parent company of South Korea's largest cryptocurrency exchange Upbit. Samsung Securities will acquire 2%, while Samsung SDS and Samsung Card will each take 1%. The transaction will be conducted in cash to the Kakao Group funds (including Kakao Investment, Kakao Ventures, etc.) for approximately 1.39 million shares, with completion expected by June 19.
Notably, the valuation: at a price of about 439,000 won per share, it implies that Dunamu's overall enterprise value is estimated at about 15.3 trillion won, equivalent to about 1.11 billion USD. The seller, Kakao Group funds, will fully exit Dunamu through this large transaction, symbolizing that the "old shareholders" in the South Korean cryptocurrency landscape are being replaced by "new faces."
Moreover, the three Samsung subsidiaries each bring different calculations to the table, and these calculations almost perfectly correspond to the three pillars of the "Digital Asset Basic Law" expected to be finalized in South Korea by 2026:
Samsung Securities is focused on the issuance and circulation of security tokens and virtual asset-related services, corresponding to STO and tokenized securities.
Samsung SDS, as the group's IT and cloud department, plans to integrate its capabilities in artificial intelligence, information security, and data governance into Dunamu's blockchain operational infrastructure, corresponding to underlying technology infrastructure.
Samsung Card aims at the digital asset payment ecosystem, planning to integrate cryptocurrency payments into Samsung's financial network's unified platform Monimo after the launch of the won stablecoin, corresponding to stablecoin payment tracks.
In other words, Samsung does not view this 4% stake as a mere financial investment but as a piece of the puzzle in the group's financial services strategy for the next decade. A Samsung insider told the Korea Times that this move aims to strengthen the competitiveness of each subsidiary in the digital asset business and assist the group in achieving a leadership position in the market.
For one of South Korea's most significant conglomerates, this is equivalent to announcing to the market that it is building a complete digital asset infrastructure rather than making a gamble.
Traditional Capital Enthusiastic, Virtual Assets a Blue Ocean?
Looking back a bit further, in mid-May, Hana Bank agreed to acquire a 6.55% stake in Dunamu for about 1 trillion won (approximately 670 to 720 million USD), becoming the first South Korean financial holding group to directly hold equity in a cryptocurrency exchange. Less than ten days later, Hanwha Investment & Securities approved an additional investment of about 3.90%, raising its stake to 9.84% with an extra 597.8 billion won, becoming one of Dunamu's largest non-founder shareholders.
Additionally, Mirae Asset had already signed a contract through its subsidiary Mirae Asset Consulting in February to acquire a controlling stake of up to 92.06% in Korbit, South Korea's fourth-largest exchange, for about 133.5 billion won. From the leading Upbit, the third-largest Coinone, to Korbit, almost every major exchange in South Korea has, within a few months, replaced its backers with new faces from traditional finance.
Why is traditional capital so enthusiastic? Dunamu's financial figures provide part of the answer: for the fiscal year 2025, it reported revenues of 1.56 trillion won and a net profit of 708.8 billion won, capturing over 80% of South Korea's virtual asset trading volume. The significance of this pie is naturally self-evident for banks and brokerages.
Market Landscape Chaotic, Institutions Early to Position Themselves
A report released last week by research firm Tiger Research reviewed 150 institutions and 196 partnerships in South Korea and reached a key conclusion: no single hub currently holds dominant control over the market.
The entire relationship map is complex and accurately reflects the current market chaos, indicating that various institutions are positioning themselves across different tracks before regulations are finalized.
This can be described as a "The Exchange Equity Scramble," reflecting the series of actions by Hana, Hanwha, Samsung, Mirae Asset, and KIS. Analysts believe that the essence of this competition is a "re-evaluation" of the value of cryptocurrency exchanges: exchanges are no longer just trading platforms that collect fees but are key customer touchpoints for distributing stablecoins, custody services, security tokens, and RWA products.
For banks and brokerages, acquiring stakes in exchanges is a shortcut: it allows them to indirectly obtain licenses such as VASP registration while simultaneously gaining access to the existing user base and liquidity of the exchanges.
Further analysis of this competition revolves around three fronts: stablecoins, STOs, and custody.
The maturity of these three fronts varies. The most active is the custody sector, where several players have begun providing services after crossing regulatory thresholds, with four major custodians—KODA, KDAC, BDACS, and BitGo Korea—each binding financial and technical partners; RWA and STO are mostly stuck at the contract or MOU stage, waiting for legislation to take effect; stablecoins are similarly stalled, with no party able to claim dominance in standard-setting.
The biggest bottleneck is not technical but legislative; the Bank of Korea is pushing for a "51% rule," arguing that only alliances with majority bank ownership can issue stablecoins, which has faced strong backlash from fintech players, causing negotiations in the political arena to repeatedly stall.
Currently, this wave of cooperation and acquisition should not be interpreted as ordinary business development but rather as institutions rushing to secure advantageous arrangements before regulations are finalized, using these arrangements to influence the final regulatory framework. The current alliances and collaborations are less about seizing the market and more about "designing regulation."
Supporting this judgment is the clear shift in market focus. Analysts point out that the South Korean cryptocurrency market has been significantly restructured in just six months: a custody camp has formed, STO alliances are gathering, and financial giants are competing to acquire stakes in exchanges, while retail trading volume is rapidly shrinking, with the combined trading volume of the five major exchanges decreasing by about 48% year-on-year. The market's core is quickly shifting from retail to institutional.
Conclusion
Putting together the pieces of OKX's investment in Coinone, Samsung's acquisition of Dunamu, Hana and Hanwha's increased stakes, and Mirae Asset's takeover of Korbit, one can see that they are actually different facets of the same story, led by brokerages and banks working together to reposition the South Korean cryptocurrency landscape from a "retail speculative trading ground" to a "traditional financial digital asset distribution entry."
However, since the operational integrations have not yet materialized, most collaborations remain MOUs, and STOs and stablecoins are still awaiting legislation, the market remains cautious and skeptical.
This shift also changes the way overseas cryptocurrency projects enter the South Korean market. Just as Solana has become a partner of Shinhan Card and Avalanche has partnered with Mirae Asset, projects entering the South Korean market have shifted their primary targets from exchanges to financial institutions and large enterprises.
You may also like

Morning News | CME Group launches Nasdaq Cryptocurrency Index futures; Asset management giant Janus Henderson strategically invests in Ethena

Why did Oracle deliver the strongest financial report in history, yet its stock price fell?

Bitcoin Layer 2 Network Botanix: Why Did We Choose to Dissolve?

Morning Report | OpenAI has submitted an S-1 registration statement draft to the U.S. SEC; Morpho completes $175 million financing

Galaxy Deep Research Report: How Hyperliquid's HIP-4 Upgrade Changes the Landscape of Prediction Markets?

Latest research from 13 top universities including Cornell University: The current state, challenges, and misconceptions of the fusion of Crypto and AI

Deconstructing Anthropic: The Best AI Company, Possibly Also a Type of Organizational Invention

Every exchange is a "Universal Exchange."

The counterattack of traditional finance: Alliance chains are quietly reviving

Pantera Capital Partner: How Tokenization is Restructuring the Private Equity and Early Investment Ecosystem?

Mastercard Launches Agent Pay for AI, Plans to Record AI Agent Payment Authorizations on Polygon
Mastercard launched Agent Pay for AI, a new payment protocol designed to help AI agents make small payments such as pay-per-use access to data and APIs. The system plans to record human-granted AI agent permissions on Polygon, focusing on verifiable authorization, identity, and payment controls.

Curve Deploys Llamalend v2 on Optimism With 250,000 OP Incentives
Curve launched Llamalend v2 on Optimism with 250,000 OP incentives from the Optimism Foundation. The upgrade expands Llamalend beyond its earlier crvUSD-focused model, adding broader collateral support, LlamaRisk market reviews, and the ability to use Curve LP tokens as collateral.

Raydium Old Liquidity Pool Reportedly Exploited, With $1.34 Million Moved to Ethereum and Tornado Cash
An old Raydium liquidity pool was reportedly exploited for around $1.34 million in USDC, RAY, and wSOL, with the stolen funds bridged to Ethereum and deposited into Tornado Cash. The incident highlights the tail risks of legacy DeFi pools, old contracts, and cross-chain fund laundering paths.

Kalshi Executive Challenges “SBF Backed AI Unicorns” Narrative, Says Leopold Aschenbrenner Was Key Figure
Kalshi executive John Wang questioned the “SBF backed AI unicorns” narrative, saying Leopold Aschenbrenner was the key figure behind major AI investment decisions.

New York Proposes Stricter Stablecoin Issuer Rules Aligned With Federal GENIUS Act
NYDFS proposed stricter stablecoin issuer rules aligned with the GENIUS Act, covering reserves, custody, redemption timelines, audits, and capital buffers.

CryptoQuant Says Bitcoin Profitable Supply Is Near 45% Pressure Zone as On-Chain Data Points to Market Repricing
CryptoQuant said Bitcoin’s profitable supply is nearing the 45% pressure zone, signaling rising market stress, unrealized losses, and a possible on-chain repricing phase.

Bitcoin Falls Below 200-Week Moving Average as On-Chain Data Shows Over Half of Supply in Loss
Bitcoin dropped below its 200-week moving average as on-chain data showed over 50% of circulating supply is now in loss, signaling rising market stress.

CFTC Reportedly Plans New Prediction Market Rules Focused on Manipulation Risk and Public Interest Review
The CFTC is reportedly preparing new prediction market rules focused on manipulation risk, public interest review, and retail trader protections.




