Special Report: Global Financial
Crisis
SEOUL, Jan. 7 (Xinhua) -- South Korean banks see the
biggest risk in at least 10 years that consumers and businesses will default on
loans amid growing signs of worries about economic recession, the Korea Herald
reported on Wednesday.
According to a survey to 16 local lenders by the
central bank, the credit-risk gauge measuring lenders' concerns of loan defaults
will rise to 48 in the first quarter of 2009 after climbing to 44 in the fourth
quarter of 2008, revealing that respondents see a greater risk of defaults.
The credit-risk gauge is based on a survey of lenders
conducted from Dec. 6 to Dec. 19. A reading of 48 would be the highest credit
risk since the central bank began the series in 1999. The index ranges from
minus 100 to plus 100.
South Korea has allocated about 140 trillion won (107
billion U.S. dollars), or 15 percent of gross domestic product, in extra
liquidity, tax cuts and spending to cushion against fallout from the global
credit crisis, the Korea Herald said.
The government has promised a 20 trillion-won (15.3
billion U.S. dollars fund to boost banks' capital amid rising bad loans and
pledged to help stricken companies restructure.
"It's not surprising to see credit risk rising when
the economy is in trouble," said Chun Chong-woo, an economist at SC First
BankKorea Ltd. in Seoul. "Policy makers will have to take more action to support
the economy."
The central bank predicted earlier that South Korea's
economy probably shrank in the final three months of 2008, the first contraction
in almost six years.¡¡
