Ripple said this week that it had partnered with Kyobo Life Insurance, one of Korea’s largest life insurers, to tokenize government bond settlement using the firm’s Ripple Custody platform.
According to a release, the deal is Ripple’s first with a Korean insurance institution and is positioned as a step toward compressing Korea’s standard T+2 bond settlement cycle to near real-time execution.
The announcement does not specify transaction sizes, a start date or which Korean government bond series will be settled on the chain. Both parties describe the arrangement as a strategic partnership that will also “assess the technical and regulatory feasibility” of broader tokenized financial management, language that typically indicates a pilot framework rather than production infrastructure.
Kyobo Life will also explore stablecoin-based payment rails through Ripple, the release said, without specifying the stablecoin or timelines.
The deal adds to a growing set of institutional tokenization efforts across Asia, where regulators in Korea, Japan, Hong Kong and Singapore have moved faster than US counterparts in building frameworks for regulated digital asset activity.
Korea has licensed remittance payment providers since 2017 and has emerged as one of the region’s more active markets for regulated crypto adoption, with local exchanges among the highest volumes in the world and recent regulatory moves against won-denominated stablecoins.
For Ripple, the Kyobo partnership extends a push into Asian institutional infrastructure that has accelerated since the SEC dropped its lawsuit against the company in 2024.
The firm has announced custody and payment partnerships across Japan, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates over the past 18 months, positioning Ripple Custody as a settlement layer for regulated financial institutions rather than a retail-facing product.



