A newly published report from Newspim’s Jeon Mi-ok confirms that the digital bank has entered the build-it-for-real phase, supported by internal documents outlining new blockchain engineering roles and system designs. The shift signals that Kakaobank is no longer simply exploring the idea of a local-currency stablecoin — it’s assembling the machinery to launch one.
According to the report, Kakaobank recently began recruiting blockchain backend developers responsible for designing new service architectures, managing cryptographic keys, and building transaction-processing systems. These roles require expertise in smart contracts, token standards, full-node operations, and onchain infrastructure — essentially, the full toolbox needed to run a stablecoin and tokenized securities platform.
The renewed momentum follows a major legal sigh of relief for Kakao founder Kim Beom-soo, who was acquitted in October of alleged stock-manipulation charges. That decision removed a regulatory cloud hanging over Kakaobank, which relies on Kim’s eligibility as a major shareholder to pursue new digital-asset initiatives. Newspim says Financial authorities review his status twice a year, and any disqualification could have forced Kakao to cut its stake in the bank from 27.16% to 10%, essentially derailing innovation plans.
Kim, who also leads Kakao’s Future Initiative Center, directly oversees new businesses, including the stablecoin strategy. Under his supervision, the company launched a Korean won stablecoin joint task force in August, bringing together Kakao, Kakaobank, and Kakao Pay for weekly planning sessions aimed at building a unified digital-finance ecosystem involving payments, settlement rails, and tokenization.
Read more: U.S. Bank Explores Stablecoin Issuance on Stellar Network
Beyond the stablecoin push, Jeon Mi-ok reports that Kakaobank is simultaneously laying groundwork for security token offerings. Partnerships with Korea Investment & Securities and Lucent Block are already underway to develop STO systems using distributed-ledger infrastructure, smart contract–based issuance, and onchain verification of ownership and dividend rights.
Industry observers cited by Newspim say the new hiring wave is evidence that conceptual debates have officially transformed into construction plans. The move also coincides with South Korea’s regulatory pivot: the ruling party is advancing stablecoin legislation, and the Financial Services Commission is preparing phase two of the Virtual Asset User Protection Act, which will include stablecoin oversight. A separate bill to institutionalize tokenized securities has cleared committee review and awaits a plenary vote.
- What stablecoin is Kakaobank developing?
Kakaobank is building a Korean won–pegged stablecoin as part of a broader digital-finance strategy. - Why is the project advancing now?
Momentum increased after founder Kim Beom-soo’s legal clearance removed regulatory uncertainty around Kakaobank’s shareholder eligibility. - What technology is Kakaobank hiring for?
The bank is recruiting blockchain engineers skilled in smart contracts, token standards, and full-node operations. - How does regulation fit into this?
South Korea is drafting new rules for stablecoins and tokenized securities, aligning closely with Kakaobank’s development timeline.
免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。