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Last updated: 27 May, 2025  

bok-2.jpg Banks' lending rates down in South Korea amid monetary easing cycle

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IANS | 27 May, 2025

Banks' loan rates fell for the fifth straight month in April, data showed on Tuesday, as the central bank has been on a monetary easing cycle.

The average lending rate of banks applied to new loans came to 4.19 percent last month, down 0.17 percentage point from a month earlier, according to the data from the Bank of Korea (BOK).

The rate has been on a constant decline since December 2024, reports Yonhap news agency.

In detail, banks' average lending rate for corporate loans shed 0.18 percentage point to 4.14 percent, while their lending rate on household loans lost 0.15 percentage point to 4.36 percent.

The rate that banks pay for deposits also fell 0.13 percentage point to 2.71 percent, the seventh consecutive monthly decline.

The spread on banks' lending and deposit rates, accordingly, narrowed to 1.48 percentage points in April from the previous month's 1.52 percentage points, the data showed.

Meanwhile, South Korea's top 30 conglomerates are increasingly choosing people with a business background over former prosecutors or professors as their outside directors, industry data showed on Tuesday.

According to data from corporate tracker Leaders Index, 239 listed units of the country's top 30 conglomerates by assets hired 152 new outside directors in 2025, bringing the total number of board members to 876.

Among the new outside directors, 39 were former high-ranking government officials, judges or prosecutors, accounting for 25.7 percent of the total. This marks a decline from last year, when former public officials accounted for 30.7 percent of the 215 new outside directors.

In particular, the number of former prosecutors on the board fell sharply to three from 11 last year.

The number of new outside directors with academic backgrounds also fell significantly from 68 last year to 35 this year.

In contrast, the number of appointees from the business sector rose. A total of 52 business professionals, or 34.2 percent of the total, were named outside directors this year, up from 38, or 17.7 percent, a year ago.

Meanwhile, female representation among new outside directors reached 18.4 percent this year, with women now accounting for 21.9 percent of all board members.

 
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