South Korea allows division of crypto in divorce settlements
South Korean law allows spouses to claim cryptocurrency and Bitcoin holdings during divorce proceedings, recognizing them as marital assets, law firm says.
Archive context
Older archive item. Useful for background and entity history, but not a fresh market-moving signal.
South Korean law allows spouses to claim cryptocurrency and Bitcoin holdings during divorce proceedings, recognizing them as marital assets, law firm says.
Why this matters
This cryptocurrency story adds another data point to the current market tape and is useful when read alongside nearby source coverage.
Original source
Read on CointelegraphRelated market context
South Korea Super-App Toss to Run Won Stablecoin Pilot on OP Stack
Toss, the South Korean fintech app with roughly 30 million registered users, is testing a Korean won stablecoin on Optimism's OP S...
South Korea’s Gyeonggi Province to test stablecoin for public payments in August
Gyeonggi's stablecoin trial could enhance regional financial autonomy and privacy, influencing global stablecoin infrastructure st...
South Korea greenlights Mirae Asset’s acquisition of crypto exchange Korbit
Mirae Asset's acquisition of Korbit may accelerate the integration of traditional finance with digital assets, fostering innovativ...
Optimism signs MOU with Toss to explore onchain payments for 30 million users in South Korea
The MOU could revolutionize fintech in South Korea by integrating blockchain, potentially transforming payment systems and regulat...
CHART: Value of Tesla’s BTC holdings have fallen by two-thirds
Tesla became one of the early firms to embrace BTC, adding it to its balance sheet in 2021; however, it all but abandoned this ini...
Bank of Korea signals rate hikes as inflation overshoots, and Korea’s massive crypto market should pay attention
Rising interest rates in South Korea could dampen crypto enthusiasm, as higher returns on traditional savings reduce the appeal of...