Good Morning, Asia. Here’s what’s making news in the markets:
In the lead-up to Seoul’s Korea Blockchain Week, discussions about a Korean Won stablecoin were among the leading narratives.
The idea carries political weight, positioning local currencies as digital alternatives to the U.S. dollar. However, despite the enthusiasm, most Asian currencies are hindered by capital controls that render them unsuitable for global circulation. That leaves the Hong Kong dollar as the region’s only truly usable stablecoin base.
In Korea, a bill to legalize stablecoins is making its way through the country’s legislative bodies. Lawmakers are clear that the initiative is not intended to globalize the Won; offshore use is impossible due to Korea’s post-1997 rules aimed at preventing capital flight. South America’s re-dollarization via USDT is an example of something lawmakers in Korea don’t want.
Instead, it’s being pitched as a defense of monetary sovereignty against dollar-based tokens. Korea’s central bank chief says he’s not against Won stablecoins, but has concerns over foreign convertibility.
But the same restrictions that preserve sovereignty also block international utility. Korea’s won cannot circulate offshore without triggering the same risks of capital flight that scarred the economy in 1997.
Without carving out a special jurisdiction or sandbox where such a token could flow freely, effectively mimicking Hong Kong’s SAR status, a KRW stablecoin will remain confined to the domestic market.
The paradox extends to other Asian currencies. Taiwan’s New Taiwan dollar is locked inside its borders. The renminbi is only partially convertible, restricted on the capital account, which is why Beijing relies on the offshore CNH market. In each case, local stablecoin proposals serve a domestic policy agenda, but cannot scale globally.
Hong Kong stands apart. Its dollar is fully convertible, supported by a currency board that pegs it to the U.S. dollar (within a trading band) through extensive reserves.
Capital flows are unrestricted, and the HKD is already widely used internationally in bond markets and for cross-border settlements. A tokenized HKD would be the only Asian stablecoin capable of circulating globally, bridging domestic policy needs with international liquidity.
The irony is that capital controls designed to protect monetary sovereignty ultimately reinforce the dominance of dollar-backed stablecoins. Unless regional governments are willing to liberalize, the HKD remains the only local currency that can plausibly challenge USDT and USDC on a global stage.
But then, what’s the point? With its peg, the HKD is a de-facto U.S. dollar stablecoin already.
Market Movements
BTC: Bitcoin is trading flat at $112k as ETF flows turn negative. Investors pulled $363M from BTC ETFs as the week began, according to data curated by SoSoValue.
ETH: ETH is underperforming BTC in the short term as speculative demand softens and risk sentiment weakens, even as long-term drivers like staking and DeFi remain supportive.
Gold: Gold is climbing to fresh highs, fueled by expectations of U.S. rate cuts, a weaker dollar, and demand for a safe haven amid macro uncertainty.
Nikkei 225: Asia-Pacific markets fell on Wednesday, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 down 0.33% as stocks in the region tracked their U.S. counterparts.
S&P 500: U.S. stock futures held steady Tuesday night after the S&P 500 ended a three-day winning streak and retreated from record highs.