South Korea to monitor $37B in overseas private debt investments
South Korea's financial regulator is increasing scrutiny on $37 billion in overseas private debt investments. The Financial Supervisory Service is concerned about the potential risks posed by the rapid accumulation of offshore private debt exposure. This move follows liquidity challenges at funds linked to Blue Owl Capital, prompting tighter regulations and inspections.
- ▪The Financial Supervisory Service is monitoring Korean institutional exposure to global private credit.
- ▪Liquidity issues at Blue Owl Capital raised alarms among Korean authorities.
- ▪Korean institutions have invested heavily in overseas private credit due to low domestic interest rates.
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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. Share Add us on Google by Editorial Team May. 26, 2026 window.sevioads = window.sevioads || []; var sevioads_preferences = []; sevioads_preferences[0] = {}; sevioads_preferences[0].zone = "01f21ccf-2092-46b1-9ac7-8c44cc782e0f"; sevioads_preferences[0].adType = "native"; sevioads_preferences[0].inventoryId = "c5700508-581b-472c-8fdd-a931cdbfc8e1"; sevioads_preferences[0].accountId = "1e47efc1-ec2d-4fca-a8b9-354e249e5095"; sevioads.push(sevioads_preferences); South Korea’s financial regulator is putting $37 billion worth of overseas private debt investments…
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