The Korea Herald

지나쌤

FSC chief highlights need to ease restrictions preventing industrial businesses from owning banks

By Yonhap

Published : July 19, 2022 - 09:44

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FSC chief Kim Joo-hyeon (C) greets other officials before attending a meeting to discuss deregulation in the financial sector on Tuesday. (Yonhap) FSC chief Kim Joo-hyeon (C) greets other officials before attending a meeting to discuss deregulation in the financial sector on Tuesday. (Yonhap)

South Korea's top financial regulator said Tuesday it is necessary to ease a rule that restricts industrial businesses from owning banks, saying that such deregulation could generate mega players like BTS in the financial sector.

The government restricts industrial capital from being used to purchase stakes in banks and financial institutions in a bid to make it hard for business owners to take advantage of them as private coffers. Under the rule, businesses can own up to a 4 percent stake in a bank.

"The financial sector should grow into an axis of our economy, and in this process, regulations should not stand in the way," Kim Joo-hyeon, head of the Financial Services Commission (FSC), told a regulatory reform meeting.

"Financial regulatory reforms are aimed at creating a new field on which such leading players as BTS can be born in our financial industry," he added.

In particular, he cited the so-called separation of industrial and financial capital as major red tape that hampers financial firms from going digital.

"We will explore ways to improve restrictions on operation areas and investment in affiliates so as to bolster investment in businesses and new technologies related to IT and platforms," he said.

He also emphasized that the government will make efforts to ease regulations in a way that will allow local financial companies to do anything foreign competitors can, adding that all regulations and practices should be under review for changes. (Yonhap)