Household Loan Growth Remains Unstable, Says Chief Regulator | Be Korea-savvy

Household Loan Growth Remains Unstable, Says Chief Regulator


This file photo, taken Oct. 3, 2021, shows information on a bank's loan programs on the exterior of a lender in Seoul. South Korea's financial regulator is reviewing further tightening rules on household loans in a bid to curb the fast growth of household debt. (Yonhap)

This file photo, taken Oct. 3, 2021, shows information on a bank’s loan programs on the exterior of a lender in Seoul. South Korea’s financial regulator is reviewing further tightening rules on household loans in a bid to curb the fast growth of household debt. (Yonhap)

SEOUL, Oct. 30 (Korea Bizwire) – Household loan growth continued in October, rising slightly higher than the previous month, the country’s chief regulator said Wednesday, but added that it is unclear whether tightened curbs on loans for home rent would be implemented this year.

Kim Byoung-hwan, head of the Financial Services Commission (FSC), told reporters that the final data is being compiled and any measures aimed at curbing household loans will be reviewed later.

“We see that household loan growth (in October) was a bit higher than September, but we don’t expect any gains to be high,” Kim said.

He noted that the non-banking sector extended more household loans this month than the previous month.

Data showed that household loans extended by banks in South Korea rose for the sixth straight month in September, led by an increase in mortgages.

Banks’ outstanding household loans also increased 5.7 trillion won (US$4.13 billion), marking a sharp deceleration from a 9.2 trillion-won gain in August, the highest on-month increase in 37 months.

Banks’ home-backed loans increased 6.2 trillion won from a month earlier to 896.8 trillion won in September, also slowing from an 8.2 trillion-won rise, the highest on-month increase in the country’s history.

Policymakers have blamed a recent rise in home prices, especially in the Seoul metropolitan area, for the sharp increase in mortgages.

Earlier this month, the Bank of Korea slashed its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point to 3.25 percent for the first time in 38 months amid slackening domestic demand and moderating inflation.

But the FSC chief said it is unclear whether tightened curbs on loans for “jeonse” would be implemented this year. Jeonse refers to a unique Korean system in which renters give landlords a large returnable deposit instead of paying monthly rent.

(Yonhap)

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