Authorities in Thailand will permit virtual tokens to collateralize supervised financial instruments, a move by which the integration of blockchain assets within the nation’s investment sector is strengthened.
Bangkok’s Cabinet has endorsed vital revisions to broaden the category of instruments recognized under the national Derivatives Trading Act.
In the updated legal environment, cryptocurrencies are authorized to function as reference assets for supervised derivative offerings, which bolsters their standing as a legitimate category of investment within the official financial markets of the country.
“This development will help promote more inclusive market growth, facilitate diversification and more effective risk management, and expand investment opportunities for a broader range of investors,”
SEC Secretary-General Pornanong Budsaratragoon said in a statement.
A three-year strategic blueprint for the capital markets was detailed by Thailand’s SEC earlier this year, encompassing tokenization projects and the creation of crypto exchange-traded funds to signal a concerted effort toward embedding digital assets within the nation’s supervised investment landscape.
The regulatory body announced on Wednesday its intention to formulate supplementary guidelines to update derivative authorizations, enabling blockchain service providers to present crypto-based agreements. Furthermore, an assessment of oversight standards for trading platforms and settlement hubs is being conducted, alongside a partnership with the Thailand Futures Exchange (TFEX) to define contract parameters that correspond with the unique hazards of virtual currencies.
Domestic analysts in dialogue with suggested that the overhaul is long-awaited and primarily mirrors a drive to pull virtual-currency operations into a more transparent statutory structure while ensuring that protections regarding transparency and reserve requirements are maintained.
“Digital assets already function as financial instruments in practice,”
Pichapen Prateepavanich, policy strategist and founder of infrastructure firm Gather Beyond.
Broadening the Derivatives Act signifies that the Thai SEC is “synchronizing oversight with current industry conditions.” Through this expansion, financial activity is transitioned into a transparent statutory framework, Prateepavanich noted.
“If properly structured, they allow for hedging, better liquidity, and the kind of institutional participation we need. Otherwise, our markets remain thin and reactive as now,”
she said.
Nevertheless, widening the purview “without concurrently bolstering transparency criteria and reserve mandates would escalate structural hazards,” she observed, though a safeguard is provided through the inclusion of these rigorous standards.
The core tenet to uphold is that progress must remain anchored within the legal code and consumer safety, she remarked, noting that the country’s reputation as a credible hub is bolstered by the overhaul if implementation occurs with precision.
Thailand’s Approach to Crypto Regulation
The kingdom’s crypto regulations originated in 2018 via the Emergency Decree on Digital Asset Businesses, which granted the SEC oversight and prosecution powers regarding trading hubs and token originators. While the agency authorized local storefronts, a legal grievance was filed against Binance during subsequent years as the regulator targeted unsanctioned enterprises.
In subsequent years, supervision broadened to encompass consumer security and market behavior, featuring a prohibition on utilizing tokens for commerce and more rigorous protocols for authorized entities. Furthermore, the inclusion of digital assets within investment vehicles is facilitated by updated mandates, while the agency authorized stablecoin transactions on domestic platforms last year.
Since that period, the supervisory body has coupled more stringent international monitoring with expanded sector inclusion, while a framework is proposed to permit investment vehicles to hold virtual currencies alongside strategic roadmaps for tokenization and crypto exchange-traded funds.



