【Crypto World】 Recently, I heard that a digital asset company is planning a major event—launching a counterfeit-proof stablecoin backed by the US dollar, with a scale equivalent to 750 trillion Korean won. It sounds quite ambitious.
Their ambitions don’t stop there. In addition to the stablecoin, they also plan to develop a global digital asset service card. Interestingly, this project integrates tokenized mineral resources from the Democratic Republic of the Congo— in other words, they are attempting to connect real-world assets with on-chain assets.
The real innovation lies here: they aim to enable direct exchange between USD stablecoins and KRW stablecoins. If this can be implemented, it could introduce a new way for cross-border payments and settlements. The project leader stated that the entire plan already complies with regulatory frameworks in Korea and the US, and they have even received requests from multiple countries to issue local stablecoins.
From a macro perspective, this move aims to carve out a new path in global digital asset governance. Whether it will succeed depends on subsequent developments, but this cross-chain, cross-national, and real-asset-integrated approach is indeed worth industry attention.
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GasDevourer
· 12-21 03:30
750 trillion Korean Won? How is this number calculated? It feels a bit exaggerated.
I have a positive view on the tokenization of real assets, but we need to be cautious with the mineral resources in Congo. How can we ensure the transparency of the Supply Chain?
If the direct exchange of US-Korea stablecoins can really work, that would be great. Cross-border payments indeed need this kind of solution.
Has the regulatory framework been approved? I'm not too convinced; these matters often get stuck in the details.
I want to see the tokenization of mineral resources. Should the team disclose the on-chain data?
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ForkMaster
· 12-20 14:53
7.5 quadrillion Korean won sounds impressive, but when converted to USD, it's just so-so. It's about real assets being on the blockchain and cross-border exchanges. I always feel like this set of explanations is only reliable on PPT slides.
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OnchainSniper
· 12-19 02:53
7.5 quadrillion KRW? Damn, that number sounds outrageous. Gotta dig into the logic behind it carefully.
Direct USD-KRW exchange sounds great, but I'm worried it might just be the same old PPT financing tricks...
Tokenizing real-world assets + stablecoins? Wow, if that really materializes, it could be something substantial.
Regulatory framework approved? Hope this time it won't be another missed deadline. Been burned too many times.
Congo mineral tokenization—does this logic hold up? Feels like there might be some pitfalls.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 12-18 06:10
7.5 quadrillion KRW? Dude, did you get that number wrong? Recalculate it.
Really daring to boast, directly converting to stablecoins sounds easy, but what about risk control? Can the regulatory framework ensure no crashes?
If this combination can really be implemented smoothly, it’s indeed promising, but it’s still early to say it’s practical.
Congo mineral on the chain? Same old story, RWA concepts are everywhere, but who has actually used them?
New ways of cross-border payments? Honestly, it still depends on who can first capitalize on policy benefits.
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FlashLoanLarry
· 12-18 06:09
ngl the usd-krw direct swap mechanic is interesting from a capital utilization standpoint... but 750 trillion won backing feels like theater if they're banking on drc tokenized minerals lmao. that's where it gets spicy 👀
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DegenWhisperer
· 12-18 06:02
7.5 quadrillion Korean Won? This scale really can't be sustained anymore, just go straight to the altcoin routine.
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BoredApeResistance
· 12-18 05:41
Another big project, 750 trillion Korean won sounds impressive but when you do the math, it's not that much...
Can this stablecoin directly convert and really be implemented? I feel like it's all just on paper...
If the regulatory framework is compliant, then why haven't I heard of it? It's hard to tell what's real and what's fake.
Everyone talks about bringing real assets on-chain, but no one has actually done it successfully.
It's somewhat interesting, but I remain skeptical. Let's wait and see.
New way to swap USD-KRW stablecoins? This project aims to connect digital assets across countries.
【Crypto World】 Recently, I heard that a digital asset company is planning a major event—launching a counterfeit-proof stablecoin backed by the US dollar, with a scale equivalent to 750 trillion Korean won. It sounds quite ambitious.
Their ambitions don’t stop there. In addition to the stablecoin, they also plan to develop a global digital asset service card. Interestingly, this project integrates tokenized mineral resources from the Democratic Republic of the Congo— in other words, they are attempting to connect real-world assets with on-chain assets.
The real innovation lies here: they aim to enable direct exchange between USD stablecoins and KRW stablecoins. If this can be implemented, it could introduce a new way for cross-border payments and settlements. The project leader stated that the entire plan already complies with regulatory frameworks in Korea and the US, and they have even received requests from multiple countries to issue local stablecoins.
From a macro perspective, this move aims to carve out a new path in global digital asset governance. Whether it will succeed depends on subsequent developments, but this cross-chain, cross-national, and real-asset-integrated approach is indeed worth industry attention.