The Quiet Pivot: How London and Seoul Just Rewrote the Stablecoin Map
On the same morning, the Bank of England softened its reserve rules and a South Korean neobank announced a Solana-based remittance rail. Read together, the signal is harder to ignore than either headline alone.

Two announcements landed within four hours of each other on 22 June 2026, and the smart money is treating them as one story. At 08:07 UTC, the Bank of England softened its stablecoin regime, requiring issuers to hold at least 30% of reserves at the central bank and signalling that regulated UK stablecoins will arrive from 2027. At 04:54 UTC the same morning, Cointelegraph reported that South Korea's Toss Bank will use Solana for a cross-border remittance proof of concept, putting faster settlement in front of roughly 15 million customers.
Read in isolation, either item is a routine regulatory or partnership note. Read together, they sketch the outline of a payments architecture that is being negotiated in real time — outside the dollar corridor.
What the Bank of England actually did
The "softer" framing in the wires is doing a lot of work. The previous direction of travel in the UK, as in the EU under MiCA, was full backing in high-quality liquid assets, with token-by-token authorisation. A 30% reserve requirement held at the central bank is a different shape of policy. It concedes that issuers will operate like narrow banks — quasi-depositors at the Bank of England itself — rather than like money-market funds parked in gilts and reverse repos. That gives the regulator a clean dial: in a stress event, the central bank already holds the collateral. It also means the issuer's balance sheet is partly the state's balance sheet, which is exactly the reassurance a Conservative-leaning Treasury wants before letting private tokens touch sterling-denominated commerce.
The second clause — regulated UK stablecoins expected from 2027 — is the tell. It admits that the previous timetable, which had been drifting right since the 2023 consultation, is now firm. A two-year runway from announcement is regulator-speak for "we have decided".
What Toss Bank is signalling from Seoul
Toss is not a fringe actor. Its 15 million customers make it one of the larger digital-first banks on the Korean peninsula, and its parent, Viva Republica, sits inside a chaebol-adjacent fintech ecosystem that has spent five years pushing into remittance corridors across Southeast Asia and the Korean diaspora in the United States. Choosing Solana for a proof of concept is a deliberately non-Ethereum choice — lower per-transaction cost, faster finality, and a developer ecosystem that has spent the last year marketing itself to exactly this kind of institutional counterparty.
What is being tested is whether a permissioned rail on a public chain can move money across borders at sub-second cost without the SWIFT correspondent-bank markup. If it works, the playbook travels — to Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia, the Gulf. If it fails, the failure mode itself (which chain, which compliance wrapper, which FX hedging partner) becomes a data point for the next neobank in line.
The structural frame, in plain prose
What we are watching is the slow unbundling of the dollar's stranglehold on cross-border retail flows. For seventy years, a remittance from Seoul to Manila has travelled New York: Korean won converted to dollars at a Korean bank, dollars cleared through a US correspondent, dollars converted to pesos in Manila. Each hop is a fee, each fee is a margin, and the dollar is the intermediate currency whether or not either end of the transaction has any economic relationship to the United States.
Stablecoins — properly reserved, properly supervised — let you skip the intermediate currency entirely. The Bank of England's move gives that idea a sterling-shaped blessing. Toss's move gives it a working pilot in one of Asia's most demanding retail-payments markets. The two together are not a coincidence; they are two regulators and two commercial actors arriving at the same conclusion from different doors.
Who wins, who loses, and what remains uncertain
The winners are obvious: issuers who can meet a 30% central-bank reserve test (the field narrows to balance-sheet-heavy banks and a handful of well-capitalised crypto-native firms); chains that can prove sub-second settlement at production cost (Solana is first through the door but not the last); and the corridors themselves — every basis point shaved off a $600bn global remittance market is a basis point that does not sit in a Western correspondent bank's treasury.
The losers are the incumbents: correspondent banks, card networks taking a slice of cross-border consumer payments, and the US policy establishment that has historically treated dollar-cleared flows as a soft-power instrument. None of those interests are going quietly. Expect a louder US Treasury commentary cycle through the autumn as the 2027 UK launch window approaches, framed in the familiar language of "financial stability" and "monetary sovereignty" — language that, fairly or not, will read to non-aligned capitals as defence of an incumbent rent.
What remains genuinely uncertain is interoperability. A sterling-backed token landing in Manila does not, on its own, solve the last-mile conversion. Someone still has to be the off-ramp, and that someone still has to clear the local regulator. Toss's proof of concept will tell us whether the bottleneck has moved — or whether it has simply been re-priced.
Monexus framed this as one story rather than two — the BoE softening and Toss's Solana pilot read together, against the grain of the wire-by-wire coverage, which treated them as unrelated beats.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/cointelegraph
- https://t.me/cointelegraph