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Japan Plans Mandatory Liability Reserves for Crypto Exchanges in 2026 Overhaul

Driven by recent hacks, the measure aims to create securities‑style buffers for fast customer repayment.

Overview

  • Japan’s Financial Services Agency plans to submit a 2026 bill requiring exchanges to hold dedicated reserves to compensate users after hacks, modeled on securities‑firm benchmarks of roughly ¥2 billion to ¥40 billion based on scale.
  • The framework would end the de facto cold‑wallet exemption by adding capital backstops and formalize bankruptcy procedures with court‑appointed administrators to return customer assets.
  • Exchanges could offset part of the reserve requirement with insurance, and stricter asset‑segregation and rapid‑reimbursement rules are being designed to reduce delays seen after past incidents.
  • Regulators are also weighing tighter oversight of third‑party vendors and custodians after breaches tied to outsourced wallet software, moving toward mandatory registration or prior notification for such providers.
  • The reserve plan sits within a broader FSA push to reclassify roughly 105 major tokens under securities‑style rules with a proposed 20% flat tax in 2026, as leading asset managers prepare ETFs and investment trusts under the expected regime.