South Korea Tells Crypto Firms to Stop Launching New Lending Products as Leverage Risk Builds
Regulators froze new lending products after forced liquidations and market distortions, but some analysts say improvements, not shutdowns, are the smarter path forward.

What to know:
- South Korea's Financial Services Commission has suspended new crypto lending products to mitigate risks to users and market stability.
- The decision follows concerns about increasing leverage in crypto markets and a recent $1 billion liquidation event.
- Critics argue for improved safeguards and transparency rather than a complete shutdown of lending services.
South Korea’s Financial Services Commission (FSC) has ordered exchanges to suspend new crypto lending products until formal guidelines are in place, citing mounting risks to users and market stability.
Regulators pointed to a recent incident at Bithumb where more than 27,000 customers tapped lending services in June, with 13% forced into liquidation after collateral values swung against them.
The move by the FSC comes days after analysts at Galaxy Digital published a report where they flagged the growing amount of leverage in crypto markets as a concern.
The administrative guidance, from the FSC allows existing loans to run their course but bars the rollout of new lending services. Officials said that if platforms ignore the directive, on-site inspections and other supervisory actions will follow. Formal lending guidelines are expected in the coming months.
Korea's crackdown lands as crypto leverage globally surges back toward bull-market levels. Galaxy's report shows crypto-collateralized loans jumped 27% in Q2 to $53.1 billion, the highest since early 2022.
Last week’s $1 billion liquidation wave, sparked by bitcoin’s retreat from $124,000 to $118,000, highlighted how quickly overstretched bets can unwind.
Analysts warn that stress points are already showing across the system: DeFi liquidity crunches, ETH staking exit queues, and widening spreads between on-chain and over-the-counter dollar lending rates.
However, not everyone agrees with the approach the Korean authorities are taking. DNTV Research's Bradley Park argues that better safeguards are needed, and not a shutdown.
“The rational approach is to upgrade UI/UX, risk disclosures, and LTV controls to manage exposure safely,” Park told CoinDesk in a note, noting that most exchange lending is in stablecoins used to build short positions.
He added that the regulator’s real concern may be market-structure distortions, such as the negative kimchi premium, rather than the service itself.

Park said that transparency gaps also complicate oversight: Bithumb discloses the scale of its lending activity, but Upbit, the country’s largest exchange, does not. That opacity could make it harder for regulators to judge systemic risks and may be a key factor behind the blanket suspension.
“Until these structural issues are addressed, reopening may take time; priority should be understanding the mechanism and adopting a data-driven design, rather than blanket restrictions,” he concluded.
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