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Financial Services Commission (Yonhap) |
South Korea’s top financial regulator has advised the nation’s internet-only lenders to expand the supply of loan products for borrowers with low to moderate credit scores, officials said Wednesday.
“While the percentage of those with credit scores below 4 on a scale of 1 to 10 accounted for nearly 40 percent of all borrowers at first-tier banks, the country’s existing internet-only lenders Kakao Bank and K bank posted some 36 percent and 20 percent, respectively,” said Kwon Dae-young, director general of the Financial Services Commission‘s financial industry bureau during a press conference on the division’s policy direction for 2021 to foster the local finance sector.
“(The FSC) has been in talks with the internet-only banks about this issue and they have pledged to increase mid-interest-rate products. We will continue to encourage them to strengthen businesses for the low- and mid-credit borrowers.”
The move came amid rising concerns that the online-only banks have moved away from their established purpose, which was offering loans with relatively more favorable interest rates than conventional banks to support mid-credit borrowers like young people and small business owners.
Toss Bank, the nation’s third internet-only bank expected to begin operation in July, will be also subject to the authorities’ guidance on mid-interest-rate lending business, Kwon added.
Responding to the authority’s recommendation, Yoon Ho-young, CEO of Kakao Bank, the second internet-only lender that was launched in July 2017, said Tuesday the company will drastically extend the supply of mid-interest-rate loan products this year from last year’s 1.38 trillion won ($1.23 billion).
By Choi Jae-hee (
cjh@heraldcorp.com)