Mirae Asset to buy 92% of Korbit for 133.5 billion won
Mirae Asset Consulting agreed to acquire a 92% stake in South Korean crypto exchange Korbit for approximately 133.5 billion won (about $93 million), pending regulatory clearance. As reported by Seoul Economic Daily (en.sedaily.com), the transaction is structured through Mirae Asset’s non-financial affiliate, a route that aligns with Korea’s separation principle restricting financial subsidiaries from directly owning virtual-asset businesses, and it will require Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC) approval.
Seoul Economic Daily adds that Korbit’s current major shareholders NXC (around 60.5%) and SK Planet (about 31.5%) are participating, with SK Planet utilizing tag-along rights to sell alongside the lead seller. The deal would transfer control to Mirae Asset Consulting if approved, giving the buyer operating leverage over Korbit’s licensed exchange infrastructure.
Approvals and compliance: KFTC review, FIU AML fine implications
Regulatory vetting is central to timing and terms. According to TokenPost, Korea’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) imposed a 2.73 billion won administrative fine on Korbit for violations of anti-money laundering and customer verification requirements, alongside an institutional warning and disciplinary actions against senior staff.
FinanceFeeds notes that these enforcement findings raise execution risks for the buyer, which would inherit remediation obligations and reputational exposure post-closing. The outlet indicates that strengthening internal controls, upgrading transaction monitoring, and demonstrating sustained AML/KYC effectiveness are likely to feature in pre- and post-merger remediation plans, which may influence regulatory conditions attached to approval.
Before issuing its comment, the company framed the rationale in strategic rather than transactional terms. “The acquisition is meant to secure future growth engines based on digital assets,” said a company spokesperson at Mirae Asset.
Strategic impact: Mirae Asset 3.0, STO potential, market share
The deal aligns with the company’s “Mirae Asset 3.0” vision to connect traditional finance with digital-asset infrastructure, positioning Korbit’s licensed exchange as a potential hub for future tokenized products. If security token offerings (STOs) advance in Korea, owning a regulated venue could enable closer integration of securities services with digital-asset trading, subject to evolving rules and supervisory expectations.
As reported by The Korea Times, Korbit has operated with under 1% domestic market share, far behind leaders like Upbit and Bithumb, which underscores that the asset in play is regulatory licensing and infrastructure rather than current volume. The Korea Times also notes that even a low–single-digit share, around 5%, could alter competitive dynamics over time, though achieving that would require significant investment, stronger compliance, and careful navigation of the KFTC and FIU landscape.
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