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Korean blockchain firms Creder and ITCEN partner with Malaysia STO exchange Green-X

Web3 & Enterprise·March 07, 2024, 6:46 AM

South Korea’s blockchain venture Creder and IT solution company ITCEN Group (ITCEN) announced today their partnership with Green-X, a Malaysia-based exchange, local media outlet Decenter reported. Through the partnership, the three companies plan to launch a security token offering (STO) business, introducing tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) to investors. Creder is a joint venture founded in 2022 by ITCEN and blockchain service developer BPMG. 

 

The planned business aims to tokenize various RWAs – including jewelry, real estate, rare earth, antique goods – and issue them in the form of NFTs, which will then be fractionalized and traded on Goldstation, the gold-pegged coin (GPC)-centered DeFi platform developed by Creder. 

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Photo by Jingming Pan on Unsplash

The initial project of the RWA business would be to offer trading services for Dignity gold tokens (DIGNITY) on Goldstation, a digital token issued by Dignity Gold LLC. The company owns a gold mine valued at over $6 billion in Nevada, U.S., according to data from Green-X. As of March 26, gold reserves yet to be excavated from the mine reportedly stand at 3.44 million ounces.

 

Green-X, a Malaysia STO exchange accredited by Sharia certificate 

The Malaysia-based STO exchange Green-X is a wholly owned subsidiary of Greenpro Captial Corp., a company listed on Nasdaq. In February 2022, Green-X received an STO exchange license along with Sharia certificate, a proof of compliance that is only given to firms that follow the Islamic law, Sharia. This religious certificate is known to serve as a significant criterion for Islamic investors. 

 

James Lim, CEO of Creder, said that the company aims to expand its business to the global market by further introducing more RWAs in cooperation with Green-X. 

 

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Crypto policy and profitability in focus as market faces global crosswinds

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Policy & Regulation·

Oct 16, 2025

U.S. seizes $14B in Bitcoin from crypto scheme linked to Cambodia conglomerate

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Policy & Regulation·

Jul 11, 2023

Hong Kong Crypto Licensing Yet to Result in Job Surge

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