South Korean Card Giant Completes Stablecoin Payments Pilot For...

South Korean Card Giant Completes Stablecoin Payments Pilot For...

South Korean payments giant BC Card has completed a pilot allowing foreign users to pay local merchants via stablecoins.

South Korean payments processor BC Card has completed a pilot project that enabled foreign users to pay local merchants using stablecoins.

BC Card’s pilot project was announced Tuesday and was conducted with blockchain company Wavebridge, wallet provider Aaron group and cross-border remittance provider Global Money Express. The companies had foreign users convert their stablecoins held in overseas wallets, which were partnered with BC Card, into digital prepaid cards.

The company said this pilot was not a short-term project, but part of preparations to implement a stablecoin payment structure. The change is a response to the evolution of South Korean stablecoin regulations, it said.

BC Card is one of South Korea’s largest payment companies, which reportedly processes over 20% of South Korea’s card transactions and covers 3.4 million domestic merchants. Its majority owner is KT Corp, one of the country’s three major telecom companies.

Shehram Khattak, general counsel at Trust Wallet, told Cointelegraph:

Related: US lawmakers propose tax break for small stablecoin payments, staking rewards

In late July, local media reported that credit card companies were scrambling to respond to perceived threats from stablecoins. The nation’s credit card industry reportedly formed a joint task force as local regulators opened discussions regarding the introduction of won-based stablecoins.

BC Card reportedly launched an internal team dedicated to tracking trends in both the domestic and international stablecoin markets. Still, local stablecoin regulations are taking longer to take shape than anticipated.

Earlier this month, South Korea’s Financial Services Commission (FSC) failed to submit a draft proposal on stablecoin regulations by the deadline requested by the country’s ruling Democratic Party. Lawmakers said that the delay was caused by disagreements between the FSC and the Bank of Korea (BOK), the nation’s central bank.

Source: CoinTelegraph