Lending and Deposit Facilities

The central bank's lending and deposit facilities are policy instruments through which it supplies loans to or receives deposits from individual financial institutions (under the Bank of Korea Act, financial institutions are limited to banking institutions). Traditionally, a central bank's monetary policy instruments refer to its lending facilities along with its open market operations and reserve requirement regime. As a number of central banks have introduced standing facilities allowing individual financial institutions to both take out temporary loans and make temporary deposits, their lending facilities have developed into lending and deposit facilities.

The Bank of Korea also extended and reformed its existing lending facilities to turn them into lending and deposit facilities, by newly introducing Liquidity Adjustment Loans and Deposits, the standing facilities, in March 2008.

The Bank of Korea's regular lending facilities currently include ① 'Liquidity Adjustment Loans,' provided to financial institutions experiencing fund shortage in the process of their fund supply and demand, ② 'Bank Intermediated Lending Support Facility', support given up to a certain ceiling taking into account financial and economic conditions and the financial trends of small and medium-sized enterprises and regions, etc,and ③ 'Intraday Overdrafts,' provided to financial institutions facing temporary shortages of funds for settlement until the daily funds-transfer business closing. These loans can be implemented in the form of bill rediscounts or securities collateral loans, with the types of collateral including credit securities, government and public bonds and Monetary Stabilization Bonds.

Additionally, in accordance with the Bank of Korea Act, the Bank can conduct credit operations with financial institutions at times when liquidity deteriorates due for example to imbalances between financing and use of funds, and also with for-profit enterprises when severe impediments to obtaining funds from financial institutions occur or when there is a strong likelihood of their occurrence.

Meanwhile, the Bank of Korea also operates 'Liquidity Adjustment Deposit' facilities, which enable financial institutions to deposit their excess cash arising in the process of their supply of and demand for funds.

( as of end-November 2024 )
as of end-November 2024
Facility Objective Collateral Interest rate Maturity
Loans Liquidity
adjustment
loans
Provided to financial institutions facing fund shortages during the fund supply and demand process ①Credit securities acquired by financial institutions through loans 1)
②Government and public bonds
③Monetary Stabilization Bonds
④Bonds issued by the Korea Development Bank
⑤Bonds issued by the Industrial Bank of Korea
⑥Bonds issued by the Export-Import Bank of Korea
⑦MBSs issued by the Korea Housing Finance Corporation
⑧Bonds issued by a specific institution 2)
⑨Financial Institution Bonds 3)
⑩Municipal Bonds 4)
⑪Bonds issued by public institutions 5)
⑫Corporate bonds 6)
⑬Covered bonds
Bank of Korea Base Rate +50bp 7) 1 business day 8)

Bank

Intermediated

Lending

Support

Facility

Support given up to a ceiling, taking into account the recipient banks' SME loan performances 1.50% per annum One month
Intraday
overdrafts
Provided to financial institutions facing temporary shortages of funds for settlement in the course of a single day Interest-free 9) Closing hour for funds transfer during the day
Special loans 10) Emergency credit to financial institutions Support at times when liquidity deteriorates due for example to imbalances between financing and use of funds Specific terms determined by Monetary Policy Board
Credit to for-profit enterprises Support at times when severe impediments to obtaining funds from financial institutions occur or when there is a strong likelihood of their occurrence
Deposits Liquidity
adjustment
deposits
Enabling financial institutions to deposit idle funds raised in process of their supply of and demand for money - Bank of Korea Base Rate -50bp 11) 1 business day
Note :
  • 1)Only those whose maturities fall due within one year after the Bank of Korea acquires the relevant loans
  • 2)KEPCO, Korea Expressway Corporation, Korea Gas Corporation, Korea Land & Housing Corporation, Korail, Korea National Railway, K-Water, Korea SMEs & Startups Agency, and Korea Deposit Insurance Corporation
  • 3)Bonds issued by the National Agricultural Cooperative Federation and Nonghyup Bank, and by the National Federation of Fisheries Cooperatives and Suhyup Bank. The bonds are issued under Article 33(1)1 of the “Banking Act.”
  • 4)Regional bonds issued under Article 11 of the "Local Finance Act.”
  • 5)Bonds issued by public institutions under Article 4 of the "Act on the Management of Public Institutions” and bonds issued by local public enterprises under the "Local Public Enterprise Act,” excluding bonds specified in Items 4, 5, 6, 8, and bonds guaranteed for principal and interest by the government.
  • 6)Corporate bonds issued under Article 469 of the "Commercial Act”. (Excluding securities issued by financial companies and securitization companies)
  • 7)If the interest rate is less than 0.5%, it will be an interest rate equivalent to twice the Bank of Korea's interest rate.
  • 8)An extension is possible for up to three months.
  • 9)Interest is applied on loans in excess of 25% of a financial institution's equity capital, with the interest rate set at a rate equivalent to the spread between the yields on 3-year Treasury bonds and the uncollateralized overnight call rate during the last month of the immediately preceding quarter.
  • 10)Implemented upon approval by four or more members of the Monetary Policy Board.
  • 11)The minimum interest rate is set at 0%.

Liquidity Adjustment Loans and Deposits

Liquidity adjustment loans and deposits are standing facilities that enable financial institutions to borrow from the Bank of Korea to make up for shortages of funds, and to deposit any surplus funds with the Bank of Korea. They were introduced and implemented from March 2008.

The financial institutions eligible to use the liquidity adjustment loans and deposits are those subject to holding of required reserves. Liquidity adjustment loans and deposits have maturities of one business day.

The interest rates on liquidity adjustment loans and deposits are 50 basis points above and below the Bank of Korea Base Rate, respectively. These loans and deposits thus serve to prevent the call rate from deviating too widely from the Base Rate in the call market where short-term excesses and shortages of funds among financial institutions are addressed.

Meanwhile, the liquidity adjustment loan and deposit interest rates can be adjusted to the same level as the Base Rate, and the loan maturities can be extended to as long as three month, if the Monetary Policy Board finds this necessary to ensure smooth functioning of the financial markets.

Liquidity Adjustment Loans and Deposits

Bank Intermediated Lending Support Facility is low interest rate loan extended by the Bank of Korea to banks based on their SME loan performances, etc, up to a ceiling set by the Monetary Policy Board in consideration of financial and economic conditions and regional as well as small and medium-sized enterprise financial trends.

The individual financial institution quotas are allocated in consideration of the performances of financial institutions' trade financing, loans to start-up SMEs with creative technology and any other fund operating performance as stipulated by the Governor. The Bank Intermediated Lending Support Facility for regional branches of the Bank of Korea are distributed to the different individual regions taking into account their financial institutions' performances in extending loans to regionally-based SMEs and the economic situations in the different regions.

The interest rates on Bank Intermediated Lending Support Facilityare generally kept lower than the Base Rate, so as to strengthen the incentives for banks to lend to SMEs and some other enterprises. The loans have maturities of one-month.

Ceiling and Interest Rate of Bank Intermediated Lending Support Facility 1)

Lending and Deposit Facilities

General Overview

  1. Note : 1) The shading represents the upper and lower limit sections of the period when loan interest rates were different for each program.

Intraday Overdrafts

Intraday overdrafts were introduced in September 2000 to extend financial support to banks experiencing temporary shortages of settlement funds in the course of a day. They thus serve to stimulate fund transactions among financial institutions and, as a result, among corporations using those institutions.

Financial institutions that are subject to reserve requirements and participate in BOK-Wire are eligible for intraday overdrafts. In the case where a bank fails to redeem its borrowings by the close of the business day, non-redeemed intraday overdraft amount is converted into a liquidity adjustment loan.

These loans are in principle provided on an interest-free basis. To avoid an increase in settlement risk arising from financial institutions' over-reliance on them, however, a certain level of interest is applied on loans exceeding 25% of a financial institution's equity capital ― at a rate equivalent to the spread between yields on three-year Treasury bonds and the uncollateralized overnight call rate during the last month of the immediately preceding quarter.

Special Loans

The Bank of Korea may extend special loans to not only financial institutions but also for-profit enterprises in the event of an emergency as stipulated under the Bank of Korea Act. Special loans include emergency credit to financial institutions (Article 65) and credit to for-profit enterprises (Article 80).

Emergency credit to financial institutions may be extended with concurrence of at least four members of the Monetary Policy Board, against the collateral of any assets temporarily defined as acceptable securities in either of the following cases: ① in the case of financial institutions’ liquidity deteriorating due for example to imbalances between financing and use of funds; or ② when financial institutions are expected to experience pronounced difficulty in carrying out their operations due to temporary shortages of funds for payment caused by a breakdown of an electronic information processing system or other accidental mishap.

Credit to for-profit enterprises may be extended to any for-profit enterprise, including those engaged in the finance business other than financial institutions, with concurrence of at least four members of the Monetary Policy Board, when severe impediments to obtaining funds from financial institutions including the heavy contraction of their credit occur or when there is a strong likelihood of occurrence. For-profit enterprises provided with such credit must observe the related terms and conditions stipulated by the Monetary Policy Board.

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