#密码资产动态追踪 I heard that the Korean Financial Services Commission recently made a big move — listed companies and professional investors can finally officially trade cryptocurrencies. This is not a pilot program; it's the real deal.
Key figures you need to pay attention to: approximately 3,500 eligible companies, each can invest up to 5% of their own capital. Just do the math — how much liquidity is entering the market?
But there's a "catch" — funds can only be invested in the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market cap on Korea’s five major exchanges, and the list is rebalanced every six months. What does this mean? Institutional funds won't spread across small coins; they'll focus on leading ones like BTC, ETH.
In other words, the crypto world will be torn apart in the future. Big coins will be strong, small coins will be lonely. Coins not in the top 20 are destined to be neglected by institutions. The question is — is your coin on that "top 20" list? That will determine whether you can benefit from institutional capital in the future.
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MevWhisperer
· 23h ago
The leading cryptocurrencies are about to take off again, while small coins are being eliminated directly. This is the Matthew Effect.
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gas_fee_trauma
· 23h ago
Wow, Korea is really selectively opening up this time. The top 20 list has completely frozen out all small coins.
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LightningHarvester
· 23h ago
Korea's move is really clever; institutions entering the market have to buy top-tier coins, while smaller tokens directly cool off.
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FloorSweeper
· 23h ago
lmao korea finally catching up, but that top 20 gatekeeping is such a joke—basically just funneling everything into btc/eth while the rest bleed out 💀
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TokenAlchemist
· 23h ago
so korea's basically just codifying what we already knew—institutional capital only flows to the top of the efficiency curve. the 5% cap per entity is honestly hilarious if you do the math on actual liquidity vectors. not asymmetric returns, just... asymmetric access. tier-1 tokens eat, everything else becomes background noise. been saying this since the MEV extraction days lol
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GateUser-c802f0e8
· 23h ago
Another new way for institutions to harvest profits: is the top 20 list still a fixed list or just a disguised way to expand their territory?
#密码资产动态追踪 I heard that the Korean Financial Services Commission recently made a big move — listed companies and professional investors can finally officially trade cryptocurrencies. This is not a pilot program; it's the real deal.
Key figures you need to pay attention to: approximately 3,500 eligible companies, each can invest up to 5% of their own capital. Just do the math — how much liquidity is entering the market?
But there's a "catch" — funds can only be invested in the top 20 cryptocurrencies by market cap on Korea’s five major exchanges, and the list is rebalanced every six months. What does this mean? Institutional funds won't spread across small coins; they'll focus on leading ones like BTC, ETH.
In other words, the crypto world will be torn apart in the future. Big coins will be strong, small coins will be lonely. Coins not in the top 20 are destined to be neglected by institutions. The question is — is your coin on that "top 20" list? That will determine whether you can benefit from institutional capital in the future.
$BTC