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Home Editor's Pick

South Korea Refers Two Crypto Manipulation Cases to…

informedamericantoday by informedamericantoday
July 1, 2026
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South Korea Refers Two Crypto Manipulation Cases to…

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Why Is South Korea Escalating Crypto Market Abuse Cases?

South Korea’s Financial Services Commission has referred suspects in two separate crypto market manipulation cases to prosecutors, marking another step in the country’s effort to police unfair trading in digital asset markets.

The financial watchdog said Wednesday that it approved the referrals after discussions at its 12th regular meeting. The cases involve two individuals accused of using different methods to distort crypto prices, attract retail buyers, and profit from artificial market activity.

The referrals come as South Korea continues tightening oversight of virtual assets after years of heavy retail participation in crypto trading. Domestic exchanges remain active venues for speculative tokens, making price manipulation a priority for regulators seeking to protect smaller investors from schemes that can move quickly across local and overseas markets.

The cases also show how crypto market abuse can combine familiar tactics from traditional securities fraud with features unique to digital assets, including fragmented liquidity, exchange arbitrage, API-based trading, and concentrated token ownership.

How Did the Alleged Pump-and-Dump Scheme Work?

In one case, the FSC accused a crypto whale of using tens of billions of Korean won over roughly two months to manipulate the price of a token listed on both domestic and overseas exchanges. Based on current rates, 10 billion won is equivalent to about $6.4 million.

The suspect allegedly accumulated nearly half of the token’s circulating supply, giving them significant control over available market liquidity. According to the FSC, the suspect then pushed the token price higher on overseas exchanges, encouraged domestic investors to buy, and later sold their holdings on a local exchange.

The alleged structure is important because it shows how manipulation can move across jurisdictions. A price increase on overseas venues can create the appearance of global demand, while domestic investors may react to the price movement without seeing how concentrated the supply has become.

Once the suspect sold into the demand they helped create, retail investors suffered significant losses, according to the regulator. The case highlights the risk of thinly traded tokens where a single large holder can restrict supply, influence price discovery, and exit before smaller buyers understand the source of the move.

Investor Takeaway

The key risk is concentration. When one trader controls a large share of circulating supply, price increases can reflect engineered scarcity rather than real demand. Retail investors face the greatest exposure when they chase sudden moves without understanding ownership and liquidity conditions.

What Was the Second Manipulation Method?

The second case involved a different trading pattern. The FSC said another individual allegedly used API channels to repeatedly place small market buy and sell orders, creating the appearance of active trading. At the same time, the suspect allegedly submitted high-priced limit buy orders through a web channel to push the price higher.

That type of activity can create a false impression of liquidity and momentum. Small repeated trades may make a token look active, while aggressive limit orders can suggest stronger demand than actually exists. Other investors may then enter the market believing the price move is supported by genuine buying interest.

After attracting buyers, the suspect allegedly sold holdings in portions to realize profits. The staged selling approach can help avoid an immediate collapse while still allowing the manipulator to exit into artificial demand.

The case shows why regulators are paying closer attention to order-book behavior, API usage, and the difference between visible trading activity and genuine market interest. In crypto markets, where many investors rely on short-term volume spikes and price momentum, artificial activity can quickly pull in retail buyers.

How Is The FSC Responding?

The FSC warned investors against chasing virtual assets whose prices and trading volumes rise sharply without a reasonable cause. “Investors should refrain from chasing virtual assets whose prices and trading volumes surge (or spike sharply) without any reasonable cause,” the regulator said in a translated statement.

The agency specifically pointed to pump-and-dump schemes that reduce available supply to inflate prices before a sell-off. “In particular, the so-called ‘pump-and-dump’ schemes … artificially reduce available supply to inflate prices, and the subsequent sell-off often leads to a sharp price collapse,” the FSC said.

The watchdog also said it plans to improve its warning system for highly concentrated crypto trading and strengthen its investigative framework to detect unfair practices more quickly. That focus suggests regulators are moving beyond post-event enforcement toward earlier detection of unusual concentration, volume spikes, and order-book manipulation.

For exchanges, the cases increase pressure to monitor suspicious trading patterns and identify concentration risk before retail losses widen. For investors, they reinforce a basic market warning: sudden token rallies, especially in assets with limited float and unexplained volume, can be driven by manipulation rather than new fundamentals.

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