South Korea bans raising money through initial coin offerings

SEOUL (Reuters) – South Korea’s financial regulator on Friday said it will ban raising money through all forms of virtual currencies, a move that follows similar restrictions in China on initial coin offerings.

The Financial Services Commission said all kinds of initial coin offerings (ICO) will be banned as trading of virtual currencies needs to be tightly controlled and monitored.

“Raising funds through ICOs seem to be on the rise globally, and our assessment is that ICOs are increasing in South Korea as well,” the regulator said in a statement after a meeting with the finance ministry, the Bank of Korea and the National Tax Service.

“Stern penalties” will be issued on financial institutions and any parties involved in issuing of ICOs, the statement added, without elaborating further on the details of those penalties.

The decision to ban ICOs as a fundraising tool was made as the government sees such issues as increasing the risk of financial scams. The decision tracks similar announcements in the U.S. and China where increasing trading volumes of cryptocurrencies are sparking concerns.

It added Friday’s announcement doesn’t mean the government has implicitly accepted trading of virtual currencies as part of its financial system, and will continue to monitor markets to see additional regulations are needed.

Reporting by Cynthia Kim; Editing by Sam Holmes

Our Standards:The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Tech

Netflix has a ‘mo money, mo problems’ problem

Frank

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It’s hard to be the king. 

You could make a case that Netflix has been the most successful company of the past few years, reaching a massive number of subscribers around the world and successfully pushing into original video.

That success has led to even loftier expectations. And those expectations caught up with the company on Monday. 

Netflix reported earnings for the first quarter of 2016 that disappointed investors, sending its stock tumbling more than 10% in after-hours trading.

For that kind of action, one might expect a disaster. Instead, Netflix added 6.7 million new customers around the world in the quarter. It also logged more profit than expected.  Read more…

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