Thailand SEC Seeks to Expand Crypto Shareholder Approval Rules
Thailand’s Securities and Exchange Commission is moving to tighten who must be vetted before taking influential stakes in securities and digital-asset operators, expanding scrutiny beyond named shareholders to the financiers behind them.
What the Thailand SEC Is Proposing
In News No. 71/2026 dated 7 April 2026, the Thai SEC said it is proposing additional principles so funding providers and financial supporters of major shareholders are treated as major shareholders who must obtain approval.
Before this consultation, approval checks were centered on direct major shareholders, while the new draft extends scrutiny to direct and indirect financing structures tied to share acquisitions in operators and in entities that hold operator shares, according to the official hearing paper.
The regulator said this expansion is designed to keep capital and digital-asset markets from being channels for technology-related crime and money laundering in the same 7 April 2026 announcement.
Who Could Be Affected Across Thailand’s Crypto Ecosystem
The consultation paper says significant support can include guarantors, contractual arrangements, and investment structures that effectively make a party a funding provider, including indirect structures, as described in the SEC consultation document.
It also carves out ordinary financing channels, including lending by Thai financial institutions or equivalent foreign institutions from BCBS jurisdictions and margin loans for securities trading, based on the same official policy paper.
Stakeholders likely to face the biggest near-term compliance work include:
- Boards and legal teams at digital-asset business operators assessing whether current capital relationships trigger approval.
- Major shareholders and their financiers needing to map direct and indirect funding paths before transactions proceed.
- Minority investors monitoring whether stricter approval screening improves transparency in control structures.
This direction matches a broader regulatory pattern where firms adjust governance processes across jurisdictions, including licensing-linked compliance buildouts such as Coinbase’s AFSL pathway in Australia and bank-led testing frameworks like the Swiss franc stablecoin sandbox involving UBS and PostFinance.
Patcharaporn Pootranon et al., Tilleke & Gibbins
What Happens Next and What to Watch
The public hearing on the additional principles is open until 22 April 2026.
Implementation risk will likely hinge on how final definitions are drafted after consultation feedback, especially because Thailand’s revised major-shareholder framework only recently took effect on 4 March 2026, according to legal analysis from Tilleke & Gibbins.
For near-term monitoring, market participants can track the SEC’s post-hearing publication, operator disclosure updates on shareholder funding structures, and whether enforcement outcomes address investor benefit concerns highlighted in other jurisdictions, including debates covered in recent U.S. SEC crypto enforcement analysis.
Secondary reporting by Cointelegraph’s coverage of the Thai SEC consultation aligns with the regulator’s framing that both direct and indirect backers could fall under approval rules during the current hearing window.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
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