Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
5-2025
Abstract
The emergent phenomenon of decentralised finance (“DeFi”) can be understood as the performance of financial functions through applications that are built on distributed ledger technology and operate using cryptoassets and smart contracts, without the need for traditional centralised intermediaries. In what ways does DeFi challenge existing financial regulation, and how should regulation develop in light of the DeFi phenomenon? In addressing this question, this article provides an overview of DeFi, surveys the current regulatory landscape in Singapore, considers key regulatory issues and policy considerations associated with DeFi, and discusses some potential directions for the future development of the regulation of DeFi. It assesses (a) the justification for DeFi regulation; (b) the scope for applicability of traditional intermediary-based regulation of points of centralisation in the DeFi context; (c) the scope for introduction of new forms of DeFi regulation (such as “embedded regulation” and “compliance by design”); and (d) DeFi’s implications for traditional financial regulation – focusing particularly on DeFi in the context of Singapore.
Keywords
decentralised finance, DeFi, financial regulation, fintech regulation
Discipline
Banking and Finance Law | Business Organizations Law
Research Areas
Corporate, Finance and Securities Law; Private Law
Publication
Singapore Academy of Law Journal
Volume
37
First Page
464
Last Page
507
ISSN
0218-2009
Publisher
Singapore Academy of Law
Citation
PHANG, Rachel.
Regulating decentralised finance? A Singapore perspective. (2025). Singapore Academy of Law Journal. 37, 464-507.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/sol_research/4703
Copyright Owner and License
Contributor and Singapore Academy of Law
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.