Fact books released on May 3 by KB, Shinhan, Hana and Woori showed estimated losses totaling 2.9963 trillion won in the first quarter. That was up 5.8% from a year earlier and 16.8% from the previous quarter, the highest on record.
Banks classify loan quality into five categories based largely on delinquency: normal, precautionary, substandard, doubtful and estimated loss. “Estimated loss” refers to loans delinquent for more than 12 months and considered effectively unrecoverable.
By group, Hana Financial Group posted the fastest increase, with estimated losses rising 30.3% from a year earlier to 503 billion won. KB Financial Group’s estimated losses climbed 27.2% to 807.2 billion won from 634.6 billion won a year earlier. Woori Financial Group’s rose 12.4% to 826 billion won from 735 billion won. Shinhan Financial Group was the only one to report a decline, down 20.1% to 860.1 billion won, as it managed troubled assets through write-offs and other measures.
The surge in write-offs indicates weakening repayment capacity among borrowers. The average corporate delinquency rate at the five largest banks — KB, Shinhan, Hana, Woori and NH NongHyup — rose to 0.46% in the first quarter from 0.37% the previous quarter. The small- and medium-sized business delinquency rate increased to 0.57% from 0.49%. Delinquencies in industries tied to real estate have hit a 13-year high as a Middle East war has delayed a recovery in the property market.
Nonperforming loans, a broader asset-quality measure that includes substandard and doubtful loans in addition to estimated losses, also jumped. NPLs at KB Kookmin, Shinhan, Hana and Woori banks totaled 5.0773 trillion won at the end of the first quarter, up 12% from the end of last year.
Asset-quality pressure could intensify. The Ministry of SMEs and Startups said small businesses’ May outlook index, the Small Business Health Index, fell 3.2 points from the previous month to 77.6. A reading below 100 means more firms expect conditions to worsen than to improve.
Banks said they plan to manage risk through steps including selling bad loans. A financial industry official said lenders are applying measures such as early credit assessments for vulnerable borrowers, screening high-risk borrowers and quickly restructuring loans to troubled companies. The official added that banks are also building real-time monitoring systems through overseas offices and setting aside additional reserves to prepare for possible further losses from overseas real estate investments.
* This article has been translated by AI.
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