SME loans from nonbank lenders soar amid restructuring in South Korea

A growing number of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in South Korea are turning to high-interest loans from nonbank lenders as banks tighten their loan screening, data showed Tuesday.
As of end-October, outstanding SME loans from nonbank financial institutions came to 76.6 trillion won ($64.4 billion), up 31.2 percent from a year earlier, according to the data by the central Bank of Korea. The amount also marks a 2 percent increase from the previous month.
The jump in high-interest lending sparks concerns that local smaller firms, already stung by a prolonged period of economic sluggishness, may find it more difficult to stay afloat.
Nonbank financial institutions, including savings banks, usually charge interest roughly twice as high as bank lending rates.
In comparison, local banks' lending to SMEs rose 6 percent from a year earlier as of the end of October, according to the data. 
Analysts attributed the surge in SMEs' high-interest loans to banks' stricter loan standards in the wake of a government-led drive to restructure shipbuilding, steelmaking, shipping and other vulnerable industries.
 

Topics
Region
Type
Our Poblications
0
Promote to Editors
0
Images
Image