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Wall Street Crypto Takes On The World’s Biggest FX Market

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A crypto exchange with deep Wall Street roots just announced a product that could reshape how institutions bet on the Korean won (KRW).

EDXM International, backed by Citadel Securities and based in Singapore, is preparing to launch a KRW-linked perpetual futures contract. Bloomberg reported the news on Tuesday, citing EDXM CEO Kai Kono. The product would arrive by early April, making it the first blockchain-native instrument designed to compete directly with the offshore KRW derivatives market.

The World’s Largest Hidden FX Market

Most crypto traders have never encountered a non-deliverable forward, or NDF, but the market is enormous. When a currency like the KRW cannot be freely traded outside its home country, global investors who need exposure use NDFs instead. These are contracts that track currency movements and pay out in dollars, with no physical KRW ever leaving Korea — hence “non-deliverable.” According to Bloomberg, the KRW NDF market processes around $27 billion in average daily trading volume, making it the largest such market in the world.

The reason Korea tops this list comes down to a mismatch. South Korea’s economy is deeply woven into global supply chains — semiconductors, shipbuilding, auto parts — meaning foreign investors carry enormous KRW exposure. But KRW convertibility outside the country remains tightly restricted. Hedge funds and macro traders need somewhere to hedge that exposure, and for decades, the NDF market has been their only real option.

EDXM’s Product Is A First — Even For EDXM

When EDXM launched its perpetual futures platform in July 2025, every single one of its 44 trading pairs was a crypto asset. Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana, XRP. Nothing connected to traditional foreign exchange. The KRWQ perpetual would mark a genuine departure — the first time the exchange has built a product aimed squarely at a conventional currency market.

The mechanics rely on KRWQ, a KRW-backed stablecoin created offshore by Cayman Islands-based Brainpower Labs and launched in October 2025. Traders go long or short KRWQ against $USDC, the dollar stablecoin from Circle, with the price spread tracking the live KRW/USD rate. Settlement happens entirely in $USDC.

Like an NDF, no actual KRW moves anywhere. Kono told Bloomberg the cost structure should come in 50% to 75% below what institutions currently pay for traditional KRW NDFs, with instant settlement replacing the multi-day banking processes involved in conventional forwards.

The dual-market setup also creates an arbitrage lane between the blockchain product and the traditional NDF market, potentially linking the two rather than simply replacing one with the other.

Regulators Are Watching, But Haven’t Moved

The legal foundation rests on a straightforward argument. Because KRWQ is minted by a Cayman entity and settlement never involves the physical delivery of KRW, Brainpower Labs maintains that the product operates outside the reach of Korean capital control rules. South Korea’s Financial Services Commission declined to comment when Bloomberg contacted them.

That silence reflects a broader regulatory impasse. Seoul is planning to introduce 24-hour KRW trading this summer, and the country’s Digital Asset Basic Act remains stalled, with the Bank of Korea and the FSC publicly divided over the authority for stablecoin oversight. If meaningful trading volume materializes on EDXM’s new product, that legislative deadlock could become considerably harder to maintain.

EDXM is pressing ahead regardless. The platform has spent three years proving that institutional-grade infrastructure can work in crypto markets. Targeting a $27 billion-a-day currency market that traditional finance built on paper and phone calls is a very different challenge — and April will be an early test of whether Wall Street’s blockchain bet can translate beyond Bitcoin.

A Race That Was Already Underway

KRWQ is one of several KRW stablecoin efforts taking shape across South Korea’s private sector since 2025. In September, crypto custody firm BDACS launched KRW1 on the Avalanche blockchain, fully backed by KRW deposits held at Woori Bank — but the project remained in a proof-of-concept stage, waiting on regulatory clarity.

Last year, a coalition of eight major Korean banks formed a working group to develop a shared KRW stablecoin infrastructure, though subsequent debate over whether banks should hold majority control has slowed progress. KakaoBank met with global custody firm Fireblocks in early 2026 to explore technical groundwork for a potential stablecoin. Naver has been eyeing the space following its acquisition of crypto exchange Dunamu, but neither has moved beyond early-stage preparation.

What sets KRWQ apart from all of these is its offshore structure, its explicit focus on trading, and now its connection to Wall Street’s institutional derivatives market.

The post Wall Street Crypto Takes On The World’s Biggest FX Market appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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