Ripple has signed a strategic partnership with Kyobo Life Insurance to pilot tokenized settlement of Korean government bonds. Kyobo Life is one of Korea’s largest life insurers, and this marks Ripple’s first deal with a Korean insurance company.
The partnership uses Ripple’s Custody platform, which is built for regulated financial institutions. It handles the secure transfer, settlement, and management of digital assets on-chain.

The main goal is to shorten Korea’s standard bond settlement window. Currently, government bond transactions settle on a T+2 cycle, meaning two business days after a trade. The pilot aims to compress that to near real-time.
Both companies say the arrangement will also assess the technical and regulatory feasibility of tokenized treasury settlement more broadly. That kind of language typically signals a pilot phase rather than a fully live system.
No specific transaction sizes have been announced. There is also no confirmed go-live date, and the release does not name which Korean government bond series will be settled on-chain.
Ripple will also help Kyobo Life explore stablecoin-based payment rails. The goal is to enable 24/7 transaction capability within a compliant, regulated framework. No specific stablecoin or timeline was named.
Jin Ho Park, Senior Executive Vice President at Kyobo Life Insurance, said the partnership is about validating how traditional financial instruments can operate securely and efficiently on blockchain.
Fiona Murray, Managing Director of Asia Pacific at Ripple, said Korea’s institutional financial market is at an “inflection point” and called Kyobo the first major insurer in the country to take this step with Ripple.
Korea has been licensing payment providers for cross-border remittance since 2017. It has since become one of the more active regulated crypto markets in the world, with high-volume local exchanges and growing regulatory movement toward won-denominated stablecoins.
This deal fits into a broader pattern for Ripple in Asia. Since the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dropped its lawsuit against Ripple in 2024, the company has moved quickly to build institutional partnerships across the region.
Over the past 18 months, Ripple has announced custody and payment deals in Japan, Singapore, and the UAE.
The company is positioning Ripple Custody as a settlement layer for regulated financial institutions, rather than a retail product.
The Kyobo partnership is the latest step in that strategy, bringing Ripple into the Korean institutional market for the first time through an insurance company rather than a bank or exchange.
The announcement was made on April 15, 2026, in Seoul, Korea.
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