Korbit, the South Korean cryptocurrency exchange in talks to be bought by Mirae Asset, was fined 2.73 billion won ($1.9 million) by the country’s regulator for multiple anti-money laundering and customer verification violations.
The Financial Intelligence Unit said the exchange violated key provisions of the country’s Special Financial Transactions Act, including failures in customer due diligence and transaction restrictions. In addition to the fine, he imposed an institutional warning and issued personal disciplinary measures against senior Korbit executives, he said Wednesday.
The enforcement action comes as Mirae Asset, a Seoul-based financial group with no prior involvement in cryptocurrency-related businesses, holds talks to acquire a majority stake in Korbit in a deal reportedly worth up to $98 million.
The FIU also “decided to impose sanctions on related executives and employees, including a warning to the CEO and a reprimand to the person responsible for reporting,” the regulator’s notice said.
The FIU said it conducted an on-site inspection of Korbit in October 2024 and found thousands of anti-money laundering (AML) and know-your-customer (KYC) verification violations.
It noted that the enforcement action is part of its efforts to “strengthen the anti-money laundering capabilities and legal compliance systems of companies so that the virtual asset market can grow with public trust.” In November, the FIU imposed a $25 million fine and other sanctions on Dunamu, the operator of Upbit, South Korea’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, for similar violations.




