South Korean fresh loan rates up to 2.82% in May
The expansion follows four consecutive months of declines.
Average lending rates on fresh bank loans rose to 2.82% in May, up 2 basis points (bp) from 2.8% in April, according to data from the Bank of Korea (BOK).
This was driven by a sharp increase in corporate lending.
The slight increase on lending rates follows four consecutive months of decline. The BOK slashed its key rates twice to reach an all-time low of 0.75% in March, and later 0.5% in May.
In contrast, interest rates paid by banks on fresh deposits fell sharply on increased market liquidity, dipping to 1.07% in May from 1.2% the previous month. This is now the sixth consecutive month of contractions in this area.
Meanwhile, the average rate on fresh household loans came at 2.81%, down 8bp from a month earlier, data revealed.
On the other hand, the average rate on new corporate loans rose to 2.83% over the same period, or 6bp up.
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