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Seoul Sends Delegation to DC: Crypto Implications Loom Over US-South Korea Trade Talks

Seoul Sends Delegation to DC: Crypto Implications Loom Over US-South Korea Trade Talks

Published:
2025-04-30 05:55:34
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South Korean officials to discuss trade deals with the U.S. in Washington today

Washington braces for high-stakes negotiations as South Korean officials land to rework trade terms—while crypto traders watch for any mention of digital asset regulations.

Behind the handshakes: Seoul’s aggressive blockchain adoption could clash with US regulators’ slower approach. Will this be another case of ’innovation vs. oversight’?

Bonus jab: At least these trade deals won’t get rug-pulled—unlike your altcoin portfolio last bull run.

Negotiations between South Korea and the U.S. have not begun yet

Officials in Seoul stress negotiations have not yet begun. Instead, both sides are laying the groundwork for future talks, likely to stretch beyond South Korea’s 3 June presidential election and the seating of a new government.

Domestic politics are a factor in Washington. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told reporters on Tuesday that some partners are “much more keen to come to the table, get this done, and then go home and campaign on it.” Asked whether the remark pointed at Seoul, Choi replied that progress is “moving very slowly” and said Bessent’s words were not aimed at South Korea.

Seoul has asked for exemptions on cars, steel and several other items and has offered cooperation on shipbuilding, energy projects and the reduction of trade imbalances. The ministry’s submission lists electric vehicles, steel sheets, ship components and consumer electronics among the goods it wants spared.

Vice Industry Minister Park Sung-taek told parliament this week that U.S. red tape blocks shipbuilding discussions. He pointed to the Jones Act, which requires vessels carrying goods between U.S. ports to be built domestically, and said the rule must be eased before discussions can move forward. “So we are conveying this to the U.S. and expect to discuss them going forward,” Park said.

Separately, South Korea is in talks with Alaska over a USD $44 billion liquefied natural gas project that Washington hopes to finance with funds from South Korea and Japan.

The two countries plan to review what Washington calls non-tariff barriers, including currency practices and regulations affecting automobiles, rice and beef imports over the coming months.

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