Borrowing money to trade stocks becomes a pipe dream? Korean media reports: South Korea's top five commercial banks have used up 85% of their annual household loan quota
Odaily Planet Daily News According to data disclosed by the Korean financial industry on July 12, as of the end of June, the combined household loan balance (excluding policy loans) of the five major commercial banks—KB Kookmin Bank, Shinhan Bank, Hana Bank, Woori Bank, and NH Nonghyup Bank—stood at 647.58 trillion won, an increase of 3.70 trillion won compared to the end of last year. Earlier this year, South Korea's financial regulatory authorities set a total household loan growth cap for financial institutions at 1.5% for the year, lower than the actual growth rate of 1.7% last year, aiming to curb the overly rapid expansion of household debt.
Calculated based on this target, the total annual new household loan ceiling for the five major banks is approximately 4.34 trillion won. Broken down by bank: KB Kookmin Bank 909.2 billion won, Shinhan Bank 850 billion won, Hana Bank 880.5 billion won, Woori Bank 826.6 billion won, and NH Nonghyup Bank 870 billion won. However, the actual increase of 3.70 trillion won in the first half alone already accounts for 85.3% of the annual ceiling. The remaining quota for the year is only about 639.5 billion won, spread over the six months of the second half, making the available room extremely limited. (Wall Street CN)
