The Thai SEC is rewriting the rules for crypto exchanges — giving Web3 a green light while cracking down on shady listings. Here’s what it means for the future of DeFi in Asia.
The Thai Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) isn’t sitting still. It just launched a public consultation for new token listing rules — and it’s a big deal.
The goal? Balance freedom and fairness. Let Web3 grow — but keep scammers out.
You’ve got until July 21, 2025, to drop your opinion. After that, it’s game on.
Let’s break down what’s actually in these new rules — and why it matters for everyone from builders to retail bag-holders.
Under the new rules, exchanges can list tokens they or their affiliates created, as long as the token has actual on-chain utility — think gas tokens, in-app currencies, or DApp access passes.
💡 Translation: Binance Thailand could list its own utility coin. Game changer.
Any token listed must now come with a public disclosure of affiliated persons — even if it’s not an internal project.
That means:
💡 Translation: Insider trading just got harder. Transparency just got real.
For all tokens already live on Thai exchanges, issuers now have 90 days to hand over affiliate info. No excuses. No gray zones.
This isn’t just about token checklists.
Thailand’s playing the long game. In May 2025, it dropped G-Token — a government-backed blockchain asset designed to fund the national budget. You can’t use it for payments yet, but the message is loud:
“We’re building a digital financial system — and we’re doing it on-chain.”
With a rising crypto-literate population and booming DeFi interest, Thailand could become Southeast Asia’s regulatory trendsetter — if it gets this right.
This is the future of crypto regulation: not anti-crypto, just smarter crypto.
Have questions or want to collaborate? Reach us at: info@ath.live