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Loans in Japan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Personal loans in Japan are provided by three types of providers. First, there are large, traditional banks, with a long history. Their big advantage is the availability of loans and branches of these banks. Loans are also provided by specialized consumer credit companies. These are often owned by large, multi-national corporation. For example, Acom, one of leading consumer credit companies in Japan, is owned by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group. The advantage of these loans is their availability when these companies are willing to serve customers who do not have a bank loan. A big role is played by psychology, when many people feel shame when they go to apply for a loan to the bank and often needs a guarantor.[1]

On the Japanese market, there are companies that operate at so-called gray zone, sometimes called sarakin. According to estimations, about 10% of the population borrowed from them and there are about 10,000 companies like that on Japanese market.[1] Interest rates were as high as 29.2%. This rate was capped to 15-20% p.a.[1]

On Japanese market, it is not as common to work with credit score as with western markets. Every company and bank uses its own credit rating model without any help of credit bureau.[1]

Many regional banks are facing several obstacles – high risk-aversion in Japanese population in general. Secondly, the competition is increasing on the market and legal framework is getting stricter. Finally, many young people are moving to big cities, where they are handled by big banks.[2] This led to the merger of the Bank of Yokohama and Higashi-Nippon Bank.[3]

Last and most recent platform, is P2P lending. There are only few operators in Japan running this platform so this kind of distribution channel is still minor.[4][5]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    3 255 769
    1 124
    2 060
  • Banking Explained – Money and Credit
  • Home Loans from Japan - (Today Tonight)
  • Consumer Savings and Debt Rates Statistics: The Effect of Bank Loans and Spending (2011)

Transcription

The international banking system is an enigma. There are more than 30,000 different banks worldwide and they hold unbelievable amounts of assets. The top 10 banks alone account for roughly 25 Trillion U.S. Dollars. Today, Banking can seem very complex, But originally, the idea was to make life simpler. 11th Century Italy was the center of European Trading. Merchants from all over the continent met to trade their goods. But there was one problem, too many currencies in circulation. In Pisa, merchants had to deal with seven different types of coins and had to exchange their money constantly. This exchange business, which commonly took place outdoors on benches, is where we get the word bank from. From 'banco,' Italian for bench. The dangers of traveling, counterfeit money, and the difficulty of getting a loan got people thinking. It was time for a new business model. Pawn brokers started to give credit to businessmen, while genoese merchants developed cashless payments. Networks of banks spread all over Europe handing out credit, even to the church or european kings. What about today? In a nutshell, banks are in the risk management business. This is a simplified version of the way it works. People keep their money in banks and receive a small amount of interest. The bank takes this money and lends it out at much higher interest rates. It's a calculated risk because some of the lenders will default on their credit. This process is essential for our economic system because it provides resources for people to buy things like houses or for industry to expand their business and grow. So banks take funds that are unused by savers and turns them into funds society can use to do stuff. Other sources of incomes for banks include accepting saving deposits, the credit card business, buying and selling currencies, custodian business, and cash management services. The main problem with banks nowadays is that a lot of them have abandoned their traditional role as providers of long term financial products in favour of short term gains that carry much higher risks. During the financial boom, most major banks adopted financial constructs that were barely comprehensible and did their own trading in their bid to make fast money and earn their executives and traders millions in bonuses. This was nothing short of gambling and damaged whole economies and societies. Like back in 2008, when banks like Lehman Brothers gave credit to basically anyone who wanted to buy a house and thereby put the bank in an extremely dangerous risk position. This lead to the collapse in the housing market in the US and parts of Europe causing stock prices to plummet. Which eventually lead to a global banking crisis, and one of the largest financial crisis in history. Hundreds of billions of dollars just, evaporated. Millions of people lost their jobs and lots of money. Most of the worlds major banks had to pay billions in fines and bankers became some of the least trusted professionals. The US government and the European Union had to put together huge bail out packages to purchase bad assets and stop the banks from going bankrupt. New regulations were put into force to govern the banking business: Compulsory bank emergency funds were enforced, to absorb shocks in the event of another financial crisis. But, other pieces of tough new legislation were successfully blocked by the banking lobby. Today, other models of providing financing are gaining ground fast. Like new investment banks that charge a yearly fee and do not get commissions on sales. Thus, providing the motivation to act in the best interest of their clients. Or, Credit Unions: Corporate initiatives that were established in the 19th century to circumvent credit sharks. In a nutshell: they provide the same financial services as banks, but focus on shared value rather than profit maximization. The self proclaimed goal is to help members create opportunities like starting small businesses, expanding farms, or building family homes while investing back in to communities. They are controlled by their members, who also elect a board of directors democratically. World wide Credit Union systems vary significantly ranging from a handful of members to organizations worth several billion US Dollars and hundreds of thousands of members. The focus on benefits for their members impact the risk Credit Unions are willing to take. Which explains why Credit Unions, although also hurting, survived the last financial crisis way better than traditional banks. Not to forget: the explosion in Crowdfunding in recent years. Aside from making awesome video games possible, platforms arose that enabled people to get loans from large groups of small investors. Circumventing the bank as a middle man. But it also works for industry. Lots of new technology companies started out on Kickstarter or Indigogo. The funding individual gets the satisfaction of being part of a bigger thing and can invest in ideas they believe in. While spreading the risk so widely, that if the project fails the damage is limited. And last but not least: Micro Credits. Lots of very small loans, mostly handed down to developing countries that help people escape poverty. People who were previously unable to get access to the money they needed to start a business because they weren't deemed worth the time. Nowadays the granting of Micro Credits has evolved into a multi-billion dollar business. So, banking might not be up your street. But the banks role of providing funds to people and businesses is crucial for our society, and has to be done. Who will do it and how it will be done in the future is up for us to decide, though. Subtitles by the Amara.org community

List of top 15 biggest retail banks in Japan

[6]

Rank Company
1 Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group
2 Mizuho Financial Group
3 Sumitomo Mitsui Financial
4 Resona Holdings
5 Sumitomo Mitsui Trust
6 Bank of Yokohama
7 Fukuoka Financial Group
8 Chiba Bank
9 Hokuhoku Financial Group
10 Shizuoka Bank
11 Yamaguchi Financial Group
12 Shinsei Bank
13 Joyo Bank
14 Nishi-Nippon City Bank
15 Sapporo Hokuyo

List of biggest consumer credit companies

  • Acom - currently a market leader with 713 billion yen in outstanding unsecured loans to consumers [7]
  • Aiful - with 216 billion yen in outstanding unsecured loans to consumers [7]
  • Takefuji
  • Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation - (formerly Promise Co.) – with market name Mobit - with 181 billion yen in outstanding unsecured loans to consumers [7]

List of biggest P2P platforms

[5]

  • maneo, Inc. - the first P2P platform in Japan, established in 2007.[8] It started as a consumer loan provider, bud changed its focus on SME soon. It focused on customer-credit and extended product variety to real-estate collateralized loans.
  • AQUSH - second P2P platform in Japan, established in 2009
  • SBI Social Lending Co – established in 2008, launched in 2011. This platform focused on collateralized loans too.
  • Crowdfunding, Inc.., announced in 2013

Loan demand

[9] Demand for loans in Japan is rising again. After a drop in 2010 and 2011 slow recovery become visible again. Concerning year 2014, demand grew slightly especially due to auto loan demand, which driven positive performance of entire market. Performance in first four months of 2014 year was driven by VAT increase that made a high demand for expensive items in order to save taxes.[10]

In June 2015, banking lending grew by 2.6%. Key drivers were regional banks, with growth 3.8% comparing to the same month last year. Major banks grew by 1.2%.[11]

Key product on Japanese market are still credit cards with current boom of contactless payments that allows faster processing of every payment at POS terminal.[12] This trend moves cash payments to card/contactless payments. Nevertheless, Japanese attitude is stable – risk-averse. Japanese are using their credit cards often as free riders – repaying their balance at the end of the month.

The 2010 Money Lending Business Act

[13][14][15] Due to this act, many small companies on the edge of the market went to bankruptcy. Many other were sold according to decreasing profitability of the business. For example, GE was selling Lake,[16] their consumer-credit division.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Lenders of first resort". The Economist. 22 May 2008.
  2. ^ "Consumer lending in Japan – susceptibility to macro events and foray into new markets". blog.nucleussoftware.com/.
  3. ^ "Bank of Yokohama, Higashi-Nippon Bank say considering merger". reuters.com. 3 November 2014.
  4. ^ "Lenders of first resort". The Economist. 2008-05-22. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  5. ^ a b "P2P Lending In Japan – The Current Situation". P2P-Banking.com. 2014-10-15. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  6. ^ "Banks in Japan". Relbanks.com. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  7. ^ a b c "Some Japan lawmakers seek U-turn in regulation of moneylenders". reuters.com. 26 June 2014.
  8. ^ "P2P Lending In Japan – The Current Situation". p2p-banking.com. 15 October 2014.
  9. ^ "Consumer Lending in Japan". euromonitor.com.
  10. ^ "Consumer lending in Japan – susceptibility to macro events and foray into new markets". blog.nucleussoftware.com.
  11. ^ "MNI Japan June Bank Lending Slower But BOJ Sees Solid Loan Demand". Marketnews.com. 2015-07-07. Retrieved 2015-09-05.
  12. ^ "Credit Card Usage in Japan is Expanding". j-credit.or.jp.
  13. ^ "Turmoil in the Consumer Finance Market". ir-aiful.com.
  14. ^ "Japanese Consumer Law". tmuramot.wordpress.com. 23 May 2008.
  15. ^ "Anxiety about the Full Implementation of the Revised Money Lending Business Law" (PDF). waseda.jp.
  16. ^ "GE to sell Japan lender to Shinsei for $5.4 bln". reuters.com. 11 July 2008.
This page was last edited on 24 June 2023, at 13:53
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