Japanese Regulators Grant Cryptocurrency Exchange License to Coincheck

Japan’s finance regulator, the Financial Services Agency (FSA), has granted full permission for cryptocurrency exchange Coincheck to continue operating in the country. Cointelegraph Japan reported on the development on Jan. 11, quoting an official communique.

Coincheck, which was hacked in January 2018, losing altcoin tokens worth $530 million at the time, now joins the slowly increasing number of officially sanctioned exchanges serving the Japanese market.

The step is a milestone for the exchange and for online broker Monex Group, which bought Coincheck for a nominal $33.5 million in April.

According to a Jan. 11 press release from Monex Group, Coincheck has registered specifically with the Kanto Financial Bureau.

Since the interim period, developers have slowly returned functionality to users and organized refunds of stolen coins.

Japan has sought to implement a licensing scheme over the past year in the wake of unease about exchanges’ security setups. Despite heightened legislation, smaller-scale hacks have continued, with fellow platform Zaif losing around $20 million last September.

On Friday, Cointelegraph also reported on a government investigation into crypto exchange security in South Korea, which found satisfactory compliance in less than a third of platforms.

Cryptocurrency News From Japan: June 21 - June 27 in Review   June 27, 2020
Japan’s Exchanges Regulatory Turning Point: How and Why Authorities Wrested Control   June 27, 2018
Japan’s Finance Minister Wants to Change Crypto Taxation, Doubts Public Acceptance   June 25, 2018
Japan: Financial Watchdog to Issue Business Improvement Notices to 5 Crypto Exchanges   June 19, 2018
Post-Hack, Coincheck Reveals Plans to Expand to U.S. Market   May 18, 2018