Korea First Bank | |
Native Name: | 제일은행 |
Native Name Lang: | ko |
Type: | Joint stock company |
Industry: | Financial services |
Predecessor: | Chōsen Savings Bank |
Founded: | in Keijō (now Seoul) |
Fate: | Bank run and collapse |
Successor: | Standard Chartered Bank |
Hq Location City: | Seoul |
Hq Location Country: | South Korea |
Area Served: | Korea |
Products: | Banking services |
Korea First Bank, sometimes also referred to as Jeil Bank,[1] was a Korean bank that operated between 1929 and 1997.
It was one of five most prominent banks in South Korea by the mid-1990s, together with Chohung Bank, Korea Commercial Bank, Hanil Bank, and Seoul Bank.[2] It was initially established in Korea under Japanese rule in 1929 as the Chōsen Savings Bank,[3] Following the division of Korea, it changed its name in May 1950 to Korea Savings Bank,[4] and in December 1958 to Korea First Bank.
In December 1997, Korea First Bank was determined as insolvent following a bank run. It was subsequently recapitalized by the Korean authorities, and eventually acquired by Standard Chartered in 2005 to become Standard Chartered Korea.
Chōsen Savings Bank was founded on in Keijō (now Seoul), and opened its first local branch in Busan in October 1930. On, it moved into a new head office building facing the Bank of Chōsen, which is still extant.
With the division of Korea, as with other banks previously controlled by Japanese interests, the respective operations of Chōsen Savings Bank were taken over by public authorities on both sides of the 38th parallel. In North Korea, they were soon merged into the central bank within the country's monobank system.[5]
In South Korea, they expanded into a fully-fledged commercial banking operation in October 1945.[6] On, Korea Savings Bank took over some branches of the Korea Industrial Bank, whose central operations formed the basis for the simultaneous establishment of Korea Development Bank.[7] Like other Korean commercial banks, however, it was nationalized in the early 1960s following the May 16 coup.
Korea First Bank opened a branch in London on, an affiliate entity in Hong Kong on, and a Chinese joint venture in Qingdao on . Meanwhile, it was privatized in 1982, as part of the limited financial liberalization effort undertaken by then-president Chun Doo-hwan. On, it relocated to a newly constructed head office building in Jongno-gu, Gongpyeong-dong 100.[6]
Starting in early 1997, large companies that had borrowed from Korea First Bank started to come under severe financial stress, triggering a deterioration of the bank's financial position that morphed in early December 1997 into a bank run. The Korean authorities executed an emergency recapitalization based on emergency legislation, completed in January 1998, which resulted in the Ministry of Finance owning 46.9 percent of the bank's equity capital, the Korea Deposit Insurance Corporation (KDIC) owning another another 46.9 percent, and the former shareholders left with a residual 6.2 percent.
The government intended to sell the bank to a foreign investor by November 1998, but due to lack of acquirers it had to delay the sale and recapitalize the bank again through the KDIC in July 1999, wiping out the former shareholders entirely in the process. This allowed the eventual sale in December 1999 of a 51 percent equity stake to a consortium led by private equity fund Newbridge Capital, which won a competitive bid against HSBC. On, Standard Chartered won another competitive bidding process, again against HSBC,[8] to acquire control of Korea First Bank, which it renamed SC First Bank on, then Standard Chartered Bank Korea on, until reverting to SC First Bank on .[6]