KB Financial Group (105560.KS) said on Tuesday it has deployed a cumulative KRW 188.5 billion (approximately USD 136 million) from its KB Social Investment Fund to 148 social enterprises, with portfolio companies reporting average revenue growth of more than tenfold against pre-investment levels as of year-end 2025.
The fund carries a total commitment of KRW 232.6 billion and was established as Korea's first private-sector social investment mother-fund. It targets businesses that blend commercial activity with community-benefit mandates — what Korean regulators call "사회연대금융," or solidarity finance.
Co-Prosperity Venture Fund
KB Financial also announced a KRW 3 billion contribution to a newly formed Co-prosperity Cooperation Fund, structured in partnership with the Ministry of SMEs and Startups and the Large-Medium Enterprise Cooperation Foundation. The group said the arrangement marks the first time a Korean co-prosperity fund has channelled capital into a venture fund vehicle, extending a model previously limited to direct grants and policy loans into equity-style impact investing.
Subsidised Loan Programme
KB Kookmin Bank, the group's banking arm, is simultaneously rolling out a "Social Enterprise Secondary Interest Subsidy Cooperative Loan" programme. The facility offers up to KRW 300 million per company with an interest-rate subsidy of up to 2.5 percentage points for a maximum of one year. The scheme is co-underwritten by the Ministry of Employment and Labor, the Korea Social Enterprise Promotion Agency, and the Korea Credit Guarantee Fund.
Non-Financial Support
Alongside capital, KB Financial said it provides mentoring, business-capacity training, and investor-relations clinics specifically designed for young entrepreneurs tackling local community problems. The group positions this support as integral to improving the survival rate of early-stage social enterprises that might otherwise lack access to mainstream venture networks.
Strategic Context
The expanded social-finance push comes as Korean financial conglomerates face growing pressure from regulators and institutional investors to demonstrate social utility alongside profit generation. KB Financial's fund vehicle, now in its seventh year, offers a measurable track record: an average revenue multiplier of more than ten times across the 148-company cohort is one of the strongest published impact metrics in Korea's corporate social investment space.
The same group is simultaneously widening its exposure to the physical artificial intelligence sector, sponsoring robotics events and directing investment into industrial-AI ventures as expectations grow for that market to gain commercial scale in Korea.
Key Metrics at a Glance
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Total fund commitment | KRW 232.6B (USD ~168M) |
| Capital deployed | KRW 188.5B to 148 companies |
| Portfolio revenue growth | 10x+ vs pre-investment |
| Co-prosperity contribution | KRW 3B |
| Max social enterprise loan | KRW 300M per firm |
| Interest subsidy | Up to 2.5pp for 1 year |
KB Financial's Q1 2026 net profit rose 11.5% year-on-year to KRW 1.892 trillion, supported by a 45.5% surge in fee income, with the group's CET1 ratio standing at 14.93% — giving it ample capital headroom to expand social-finance activities without pressuring its regulatory cushion.
Sources: E-Times · Maeil Business Newspaper



