
Japan’s Financial Regulator Tightens Crypto Security Rules
Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) is implementing groundbreaking regulations that will require cryptocurrency exchanges to maintain liability reserves to protect customers from losses resulting from security breaches and hacks. This move represents one of the most significant regulatory shifts in Japan’s crypto landscape since the Mt. Gox collapse and comes as the country seeks to restore confidence in digital asset markets.
New Reserve Requirements and Legislative Timeline
The FSA plans to submit comprehensive legislation to parliament in 2026 that would mandate exchanges to set aside specific reserves for compensating customers in case of cyberattacks or operational failures. The proposed framework would eliminate the current cold-wallet exemption that has allowed exchanges to avoid reserve requirements.
Traditional Finance Parallels
The new system mirrors requirements already in place for traditional securities firms, which currently maintain reserves ranging from $12.7 million to $255 million (¥2 billion to ¥40 billion) depending on their trading volume. This alignment with conventional financial standards represents a significant step toward mainstreaming crypto regulation.
Bankruptcy Protection Enhancements
The legislation would establish formal procedures for returning customer assets during exchange bankruptcies, including allowing court-appointed administrators to handle customer payouts. This addresses a critical gap exposed during previous exchange failures where customer recovery processes were unclear and protracted.
Context: A Decade of Security Breaches
The regulatory push follows a series of devastating security breaches that have plagued Japan’s cryptocurrency sector, highlighting the urgent need for enhanced consumer protections.
Historical Precedents: Mt. Gox to Recent Hacks
Japan’s crypto industry still bears the scars of the 2014 Mt. Gox collapse, where hackers stole 850,000 BTC, pushing the exchange into bankruptcy. More recently, in May 2024, DMM Bitcoin suffered a $305 million hack when North Korean hackers compromised an employee at their wallet software provider, Ginco. Just last month, SBI Crypto lost approximately $21 million in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, with blockchain investigators identifying potential North Korean connections.
Industry Expert Perspective
Musheer Ahmed, founder and managing director of Finstep Asia, told Decrypt that the reserve requirement could help restore user confidence. “Liability reserves could function the same way insurance works when it comes to bank accounts,” he explained, though he noted the extra capital obligation “will make it relatively more expensive to operate crypto exchanges.”
Broader Regulatory Framework Expansion
The FSA’s initiative extends beyond reserve requirements, reflecting comprehensive concerns about security vulnerabilities throughout the crypto ecosystem.
Vendor Management Regulations
Earlier this month, Japan’s FSA began considering rules that would require companies providing crypto-management systems to file prior notice with regulators. This move addresses concerns that outsourced software has become a critical weak link, as demonstrated by the DMM Bitcoin breach.
Insurance Alternatives
To ease the financial burden on exchanges, the FSA is considering allowing platforms to purchase insurance rather than holding full cash reserves. This flexibility could help smaller exchanges comply with the new requirements while maintaining operational viability.
Regional Security Context
According to blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis’s mid-year 2025 update, the Asia-Pacific region now leads in crypto thefts, with Japan, Indonesia, and South Korea among the countries with the highest victim counts. This regional context underscores the importance of Japan’s proactive regulatory approach.
As Japan continues to navigate the aftermath of multiple high-profile breaches, these proposed regulations represent a significant step toward creating a more secure and trustworthy cryptocurrency ecosystem, potentially setting a global standard for exchange accountability and consumer protection.



