Dusk has an important expansion plan in 2026, aiming to bring the mature compliant financial blockchain experience from the EU to Southeast Asia. It sounds easy, but in reality, it's quite challenging.
Why? The EU has a unified MiCA regulation with clear rules. But Southeast Asia is completely different—places like Singapore and Malaysia are relatively open to cryptocurrencies and encourage fintech innovation; turn to Indonesia and Thailand, and the regulatory attitude becomes much stricter, with restrictions on crypto trading. One-size-fits-all solutions clearly won't work.
Dusk's response is "one country, one policy." For countries with friendly regulations, they directly implement the EU's mature compliance solutions to quickly connect with local financial institutions. In stricter regulatory environments, they collaborate with local fintech companies to develop "light compliance" modules that meet domestic requirements, reducing the entry cost for institutions. This approach preserves compliance advantages without enforcing a one-size-fits-all solution.
On the business side, Dusk focuses on the two most urgent pain points in Southeast Asia—difficulties in financing small and micro enterprises and poor liquidity in real estate. Small and micro enterprises here generally lack funds, traditional banks have high thresholds, and financing costs are high. Although the real estate market is large, transactions are inactive, and capital is locked up. Asset tokenization is a perfect solution—bringing these assets onto the blockchain to activate liquidity. Dusk's solutions can help these enterprises and developers solve financing problems while opening new financing channels.
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PonziWhisperer
· 01-19 04:04
A one-country-one-policy approach is clever, but the problem is that the financial infrastructure differences among Southeast Asian countries are too great. Will it really be implementable?
Regarding real estate tokenization, Thailand will definitely put up barriers.
Dusk has thought it through, but will the compliance costs ultimately be passed on to small and medium-sized enterprises?
The "light compliance" approach in Southeast Asia sounds good, but the key is who will define what "light" means.
Asset tokenization indeed addresses pain points, but will liquidity truly improve? Or will it be another empty effort?
Moving the MiCA framework to Southeast Asia might not be well-suited to local conditions.
However, I am optimistic about this differentiated approach; it's definitely better than rigid copying.
Funding in Southeast Asia is really difficult, and I worry this plan might become just another tool to cut the leeks.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 01-19 02:21
A one-country-one-policy approach is really smart; blindly copying the EU's model has long backfired.
The opportunities in fintech here in Southeast Asia are indeed significant, and the urgent need for financing solutions for small and micro enterprises is real.
Tokenizing real estate to activate liquidity is a good idea, but the execution might still get stuck on compliance...
Compliance-friendly countries can implement it directly, while stricter ones should proceed slowly. This strategy shows a clear understanding of the reality.
Asset tokenization sounds promising, but the key still depends on local acceptance and policy changes.
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ser_we_are_ngmi
· 01-16 05:52
The one-country-one-policy move is clever, just afraid that local governments might suddenly change their stance.
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BearMarketBarber
· 01-16 05:44
The idea of one country, one policy is good, but the real bottleneck is in execution.
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FrogInTheWell
· 01-16 05:39
The one-country-one-policy move is indeed brilliant; regulatory fragmentation is too obvious, and pushing hard will definitely backfire.
Asset tokenization is quite interesting, but the execution in Southeast Asia varies greatly. Can it really activate liquidity?
Moving the EU’s MiCA over? Uh... the approach in Southeast Asia is completely different from Europe.
The idea of a lightweight compliance sector is okay, at least it’s not a strict one-size-fits-all, smart move.
On-chain real estate, I just worry it will become a new way to scam investors again...
Dusk’s strategy is quite detailed, but the execution phase is prone to falling apart.
Small and micro financing is indeed a pain point, but what about after going on-chain? Who bears the risks?
If this set of ideas is to truly take off, it depends on whether Southeast Asian fintech companies are willing to cooperate. Feels like collaboration won’t be easy.
Light compliance... sounds like a euphemism for avoiding problems?
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GasFeeAssassin
· 01-16 05:31
A one-country-one-policy move is indeed clever, but the waters in Southeast Asia are too muddy.
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The idea of on-chain real estate sounds good, but I'm worried it might just become a new way to cut leeks.
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Whether the lightweight blockchain sector can truly land is the key; don't just draw pie-in-the-sky plans.
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Financing difficulties for small and micro enterprises are indeed a pain point, but how much cheaper can on-chain financing be compared to banks? That's the real issue.
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Feels like Dusk is overthinking a bit; policies in Southeast Asian countries can change at any time, betting on this is a bit risky.
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Tokenizing assets to activate liquidity sounds easy, but can it really work in practice?
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Singapore is friendly, but competition there is fierce. Why would Dusk be able to beat others?
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In strict regulatory places like Indonesia and Thailand, compliance costs might even be higher than financing costs.
Dusk has an important expansion plan in 2026, aiming to bring the mature compliant financial blockchain experience from the EU to Southeast Asia. It sounds easy, but in reality, it's quite challenging.
Why? The EU has a unified MiCA regulation with clear rules. But Southeast Asia is completely different—places like Singapore and Malaysia are relatively open to cryptocurrencies and encourage fintech innovation; turn to Indonesia and Thailand, and the regulatory attitude becomes much stricter, with restrictions on crypto trading. One-size-fits-all solutions clearly won't work.
Dusk's response is "one country, one policy." For countries with friendly regulations, they directly implement the EU's mature compliance solutions to quickly connect with local financial institutions. In stricter regulatory environments, they collaborate with local fintech companies to develop "light compliance" modules that meet domestic requirements, reducing the entry cost for institutions. This approach preserves compliance advantages without enforcing a one-size-fits-all solution.
On the business side, Dusk focuses on the two most urgent pain points in Southeast Asia—difficulties in financing small and micro enterprises and poor liquidity in real estate. Small and micro enterprises here generally lack funds, traditional banks have high thresholds, and financing costs are high. Although the real estate market is large, transactions are inactive, and capital is locked up. Asset tokenization is a perfect solution—bringing these assets onto the blockchain to activate liquidity. Dusk's solutions can help these enterprises and developers solve financing problems while opening new financing channels.