Skip to main content
BTC / USDTCRYPTO107,400+2.19%ETH / USDTCRYPTO3,840+2.13%SOL / USDTCRYPTO182.40−1.99%BNB / USDTCRYPTO652.30+0.66%XRP / USDTCRYPTO2.2150+1.61%DOGE / USDTCRYPTO0.3850−1.79%TON / USDTCRYPTO5.240+2.34%AVAX / USDTCRYPTO42.60−2.07%LINK / USDTCRYPTO22.40+2.28%ADA / USDTCRYPTO1.0520−1.68%TRX / USDTCRYPTO0.3300+0.92%DOT / USDTCRYPTO8.420+2.93%BTC / USDTCRYPTO107,400+2.19%ETH / USDTCRYPTO3,840+2.13%SOL / USDTCRYPTO182.40−1.99%BNB / USDTCRYPTO652.30+0.66%XRP / USDTCRYPTO2.2150+1.61%DOGE / USDTCRYPTO0.3850−1.79%TON / USDTCRYPTO5.240+2.34%AVAX / USDTCRYPTO42.60−2.07%LINK / USDTCRYPTO22.40+2.28%ADA / USDTCRYPTO1.0520−1.68%TRX / USDTCRYPTO0.3300+0.92%DOT / USDTCRYPTO8.420+2.93%
Harga

Taiwan's crypto framework – a turning point for Asia?

Taiwan just ended its regulatory limbo with a full crypto law. Makes me wonder which Asian markets get the next institutional inflows.

Taiwan just passed a full legal framework for crypto – mandatory licenses, reserve rules, even prison time for unlicensed operations. Regulatory limbo is officially over there 🤔.

What I find interesting is how Asia keeps leading on clarity. Japan has had rules for years, Singapore is tightening, and now Taiwan steps up. Could this make the region even more attractive for institutional capital?

Wondering if we'll see a shift in liquidity toward compliant exchanges and regulation-friendly projects. Always feels like clear rules beat the 'wild west' narrative in the long run.

Comments5

  • Priya Nair
    Great point. Taiwan's move does create a clearer compliance path for exchanges. I'd add that Hong Kong's retail licensing push is the real wildcard for institutional flows in Asia right now. 📈
  • Tom Fielding
    Taiwan's law is a start, but don't confuse paperwork with capital. Real inflows follow liquidity and enforcement, not just a framework.
  • Hiro Tanaka
    Taiwan's move sets a clear compliance bar, but institutional money follows liquidity depth first. Compare Taiwan's ~$1B daily volume vs. Hong Kong or Singapore's regulated venues.
  • Lena Brandt
    Taiwan's clarity lowers execution risk, but liquidity depth still favors Hong Kong and Singapore. Reward is incremental until cross-strait capital flows normalize.
  • Marcus Vega
    Taiwan's clarity is a solid first step, but real capital flows follow clear tax rules and banking access. 🚀 South Korea and Hong Kong still have the edge on liquidity—watch them, not the laggards.