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South Korea to monitor $37B in overseas private debt investments

By Editorial Team · Published May 26, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: Crypto Briefing
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South Korea to monitor $37B in overseas private debt investments

South Korea to monitor $37B in overseas private debt investments

The Financial Supervisory Service is ramping up scrutiny of Korean institutional exposure to global private credit after liquidity scares at Blue Owl Capital-linked funds.

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Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 26, 2026

South Korea’s financial regulator is putting $37 billion worth of overseas private debt investments under a microscope. The Financial Supervisory Service, the country’s top financial watchdog, announced a sweeping new monitoring regime targeting domestic institutions that have been pouring money into global private credit funds.

FSS Governor Lee Chan-jin made the announcement on March 26, signaling that the regulator views the rapid buildup of offshore private debt exposure as a potential risk to the broader Korean financial system.

What triggered the crackdown

Liquidity challenges at funds linked to Blue Owl Capital set off alarm bells among Korean authorities during March and April 2026. The FSS initiated inspections and imposed tighter disclosure demands on overseas private debt investments earlier in March, before Governor Lee’s formal announcement.

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Korean institutions hold tens of trillions of won in overseas private credit. That $37 billion figure represents a substantial chunk of capital that has flowed out of the country and into opaque investment vehicles managed by firms like Blackstone, BlackRock, and Blue Owl.

Why Korean money flooded into private credit

Low domestic interest rates pushed Korean institutional investors, including heavyweights like the National Pension Service and Korea Investment Corp, to hunt for yield abroad. According to S&P Global analysis from April 8, 2026, Korean institutional investors have been steadily expanding their allocations to global private credit as a diversification and yield enhancement strategy.

The FSS is also examining sales practices at securities firms to determine whether retail investors were adequately informed about the risks of overseas private debt products.

What this means for investors

Tighter disclosure requirements mean more compliance costs for firms that manage or distribute overseas private credit products to Korean investors. Those costs either get absorbed by the firms or passed along to investors through higher fees.

In the short term, capital flows from Korea into global private credit could slow as institutions recalibrate their strategies to meet the FSS’s enhanced requirements.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
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