Economy

Korea’s household debt hits record high on mortage loans

Jin-gyu Kang

4 HOURS AGO

Consumers seeking loans at a bank in Yeouido, Seoul

South Korea’s household debt hit a record high in the second quarter as the domestic housing market started to recover and more consumers rushed to take out loans for investments.

The balance of household credit increased 0.7% from the end of April to reach 1,896.2 trillion won ($1.42 trillion) at the end of June, the highest record since the data began to be collected in the fourth quarter of 2002, the Bank of Korea (BOK) said on Tuesday.

The data on household credit includes lending from financial institutions such as banks, savings banks, insurers, and consumers’ credit card pre-authorizations before the transactions are completed.

The quarterly balance continued to increase from the second to the fourth quarter of last year. It declined by 0.2% in the first quarter and rose again in the second quarter of this year.

The balance of household lending alone, excluding credit card spending, rose 0.8% or 13.5 trillion won to 1,780 trillion won in the second quarter.
  
Mortgage loans, making up 61.4% of the household lending, increased 1.5% to 1,092.7 trillion won.

Household lending other than mortgage loans, or consumer credit, has been on a downward trend for 11 consecutive quarters and declined 0.4% to 687.2 trillion won in the second quarter. The cut in the second quarter, or 2.5 trillion won, was only 19% of the decline in the first quarter.

“The balance of household credit rose in the April-June period due to a larger increase in mortgage loans, which was led by housing transaction growth in the Seoul metropolitan region, and a smaller decrease in consumer credit,” a BOK official said.

The number of units transacted in the housing market increased 23% to 171,000 in the second quarter. In the first quarter, the figure increased 6.1% to 139,000.

“Housing transactions affect household lending with a two- to three-month lag,” the central bank official said. “The BOK and other authorities are closely monitoring the housing market as household debt increased in July at a similar pace in the second quarter,” the official added.

The central bank will see the effect of government policies on the housing market, such as stricter rules on bank’s household loans, and expansion of housing supply in the capital and Seoul metropolitan area, the official said.

Write to Jin-gyu Kang at josep@hankyung.com
Jihyun Kim edited this article.

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