Key Points

South Korea's Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) has placed 41 conglomerates under enhanced scrutiny due to significant debt levels exceeding 2.4 trillion won. This marks the largest number of such groups in a decade, signaling heightened financial oversight. Newly listed firms include Hyundai Department Store and Booyoung, while some others have been delisted. The country is also encouraging a shift towards using a newly introduced reference rate to align with global financial trends.

Key Points: South Korea Scrutinizes 41 Conglomerates Over Rising Debt

  • 41 conglomerates designated as heavy debtors by FSS
  • Total debts exceed 2.4 trillion won
  • Hyundai Department Store and Booyoung newly listed
  • New reference rate to boost financial efficiency from July
2 min read

41 conglomerates under tight scrutiny on heavy debts: South Korea

South Korea's FSS places 41 conglomerates under watch for debt management amid rising financial burdens.

"The principal creditor banks will evaluate the financial stability of the selected 41 groups. - Financial Supervisory Service"

Seoul, May 29

South Korea's financial watchdog said on Thursday it has placed 41 highly indebted conglomerates under closer watch for debt reductions.

According to the Financial Supervisory Service (FSS), the conglomerates that owe more than 2.4 trillion won ($1.74 billion) in total to local banks have been designated as heavy corporate debtors this year.

The number of heavily indebted conglomerates marks the largest ever in a decade. This compares with 36 such business groups last year, reports Yonhap news agency.

Hyundai Department Store, Booyoung and seven others were among the firms that were newly included on the list, while Kumho Asiana, SM and two others were delisted, the FSS said.

The outstanding amount of the 32 business groups' combined loans had totalled 371.8 trillion won as of the end of 2024, up 33 trillion won, or 9.7 percent, from a year earlier, the FSS said.

"The principal creditor banks will evaluate the financial stability of the selected 41 groups, signing a restructuring and turnaround agreement with financially vulnerable groups to manage credit risks systemically," the FSS said in a statement.

Meanwhile, South Korea's financial regulator said on Thursday it will boost the use of a newly introduced reference rate in transactions by major financial institutions starting in July in an effort to align with global trends and strengthen efficiency.

In 2021, the country's Financial Services Commission and the Bank of Korea (BOK) unveiled the Korea Overnight Financing Repo Rate (KOFR) to replace the decades-old short-term benchmark rate, the 91-day Certificate of Deposit (CD) rate, in the derivatives market, but financial institutions are still widely adopting the CD rate as the benchmark rate.

In a move to promote its adoption, the BOK and 28 major financial institutions have agreed to have at least 10 percent of interest rate swap transactions be based on the new rate system starting in July.

The rate will be set at over 50 percent by 2030, according to the regulator.

—IANS

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
Interesting to see South Korea taking proactive steps on corporate debt. India could learn from this approach - our corporate debt situation isn't much better. Maybe RBI should implement similar monitoring for our big business houses. 🇮🇳
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Priya M.
$1.74 billion debt threshold seems quite high! Shows how big their conglomerates are. In India, we need to be careful about such massive corporate debts - remember what happened with some of our airlines and telecom companies?
A
Amit S.
The debt increase of 9.7% in one year is alarming! South Korea is smart to act now before it becomes a crisis. Our financial regulators should be more proactive like this instead of waiting for defaults to happen. Prevention is better than cure!
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Neha T.
Interesting to see Hyundai Department Store on the list - their Indian operations seem strong. Makes me wonder if their global parent company's troubles might affect us here. 🤔
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Sanjay P.
While the debt monitoring is good, I'm more interested in their new reference rate system. India has been slow in financial modernization - we're still stuck with old systems while other Asian countries are innovating.
K
Kavita R.
This shows even developed economies like South Korea face debt challenges. We often think only developing countries have such problems. Important lesson in financial discipline for all nations!

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