January 02, 2025
11 11 11 AM
Latest Post
Tether’s Market Value Sees Sharpest Decline Since FTX Crash as MiCA Kicks In KuCoin Enables Crypto Point-of-Sale Payments by QR-Code XRP Rockets 11% as Bitcoin Starts New Year With Bullish Bang Bitcoin-Leveraged Play MicroStrategy’s Bullish Call Skew Disappears in Cautious Market Sentiment Garanti BBVA’s to Provide Crypto Trading Services in Hint of Things to Come A Year of Crypto Tech In Review How Web3 Is Disrupting AI Cloud Computing Three Questions Reveal Your Ideal Bitcoin Allocation Why a U.S. Bitcoin Strategic Reserve Is Critical to Fending Off China Blockchain Fragmentation Is a Major Problem That Must Be Addressed in 2025

Bitcoin Kimchi Premium Spikes as South Korea’s Political Turmoil Escalates

South Koreans are paying a full 3% more to buy bitcoin (BTC) than their U.S. counterparts as they seek protection from the plummeting won, CryptoQuant data show.

Priced in won, the largest cryptocurrency is valued at 145,000,000 ($98,600) on the country’s largest crypto exchange, Upbit. That compares with about $96,700 on Coinbase (COIN).

The move follows a vote by the South Korean parliament to impeach Han Duck-soo, the prime minister and acting president, just weeks after impeaching President Yoon Suk Yeol. The won slumped a 15-year low against the dollar.

“This unfolding saga is fundamentally about election fraud and the erosion of trust in South Korea’s National Election Commission (NEC),” said Jeff Park, head of alpha strategies at investment manager Bitwise, in a post on X. “The use of impeachment as a political tool, combined with allegations of foreign election interference, underscores the fragility of democracy in the face of disinformation. This is not just a Korean story; it’s a warning for democracies worldwide.”

This post was originally published on this site