ID :
207960
Mon, 09/19/2011 - 08:51
Auther :
Shortlink :
http://m.oananews.org//node/207960
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Savings banks' massive illegal loans revealed
SEOUL, Sept. 19 (Yonhap) -- South Korean savings banks were discovered to have extended illegal loans to their major shareholders, financial regulators said Monday, angering depositors and fueling anxiety following the suspension of seven local savings banks.
The data comes a day after the Financial Services Commission (FSC), the country's financial watchdog, suspended the business operations of seven savings banks for six months, citing their insufficient capital adequacy ratios and heavy debts.
The suspended institutions, including major players such as Tomato and Jeil whose assets exceed 3 trillion won (US$2.7 billion), were singled out by the Financial Supervisory Service, the FSC's executive body, after a seven-week inspection of 85 local savings banks. The focus of the inspections were to see if the savings banks kept their debt under control and maintained capital adequacy ratios as stipulated by the Bank for International Settlement (BIS) standards.
A number of the inspected savings banks, including three suspended players, were discovered to have extended illegal loans, ranging from tens of billions of won to as much as hundreds of billions of won to their key shareholders.
One savings bank extended loans worth 640 billion won, or nearly 70 percent of its total assets, to two urban development projects virtually linked with the savings bank.
The inspection results showed that more than 90 percent of the savings banks' irregularities exceeded the legal range. According to local finance industry law, savings banks are not allowed to extend loans worth more than 20 percent of its equity capital to a single borrower.
The financial watchdog, however, said it did not discover any special purpose companies used for illegal loan extensions as was the case in the Busan Savings Bank scandal.
Financial regulators plan to ask prosecutors to investigate the cases. On Sunday, the financial regulators said they will conduct an in-depth probe into the seven suspended savings banks' irregularities.
The data comes a day after the Financial Services Commission (FSC), the country's financial watchdog, suspended the business operations of seven savings banks for six months, citing their insufficient capital adequacy ratios and heavy debts.
The suspended institutions, including major players such as Tomato and Jeil whose assets exceed 3 trillion won (US$2.7 billion), were singled out by the Financial Supervisory Service, the FSC's executive body, after a seven-week inspection of 85 local savings banks. The focus of the inspections were to see if the savings banks kept their debt under control and maintained capital adequacy ratios as stipulated by the Bank for International Settlement (BIS) standards.
A number of the inspected savings banks, including three suspended players, were discovered to have extended illegal loans, ranging from tens of billions of won to as much as hundreds of billions of won to their key shareholders.
One savings bank extended loans worth 640 billion won, or nearly 70 percent of its total assets, to two urban development projects virtually linked with the savings bank.
The inspection results showed that more than 90 percent of the savings banks' irregularities exceeded the legal range. According to local finance industry law, savings banks are not allowed to extend loans worth more than 20 percent of its equity capital to a single borrower.
The financial watchdog, however, said it did not discover any special purpose companies used for illegal loan extensions as was the case in the Busan Savings Bank scandal.
Financial regulators plan to ask prosecutors to investigate the cases. On Sunday, the financial regulators said they will conduct an in-depth probe into the seven suspended savings banks' irregularities.