TL;DR:
Tether filed seven trademark applications with the Korean Intellectual Property Office, covering its corporate name, its logo and XAUT, the company’s gold-backed stablecoin. The move is interpreted by industry analysts as a signal of strategic positioning in one of Asia’s most important crypto markets.
What sets this filing apart from previous ones is its scope. In earlier rounds, Tether had limited its applications in Korea to specific product names. This time, the protection extends to the full corporate identity, a decision that financial industry sources read as the beginning of concrete plans to establish an operational presence in the country.
The regulatory context has been decisive. South Korea’s Digital Asset Basic Act, whose approval the industry anticipates, would contemplate the requirement that foreign stablecoin issuers establish local branches in order to operate their distribution business within the country.

Against that backdrop, Tether’s trademark filings should be understood as a preemptive action aimed at securing its ground before the legal requirements take effect.
According to an industry source cited by the Seoul Economic Daily, Jeremy Allaire, founder of Circle—the other major global stablecoin issuer—, visited Korea in person to meet with financial companies and cryptocurrency exchanges and explore potential cooperation agreements. The source noted that both Tether and Circle appear to be competing to gain ground in the Korean market even before the new regulatory framework is finalized.
Meanwhile, the inclusion of an asset such as XAUT alongside the USDT stablecoin, combined with the range of filings, suggests a brand strategy covering multiple segments of the company’s business, ready for a full-scale market entry.