SBV efforts may stop dollar lending ahead of schedule

Nov 7th at 14:45
07-11-2013 14:45:57+07:00

SBV efforts may stop dollar lending ahead of schedule

The government’s anti-dolarisation plan will stop financial institutions from lending in foreign currencies by 2020. Dollar lending specifically may end even earlier following moves by the central bank.

By the end of October growth in dong-denominated loans hit 11 per cent while those in dollars shrunk by 13.6 per cent. Falling dollar lending is in-line with the government’s anti-dolarisation plan which debuted in 2011 and is to run through 2020.

According to Banking Academy deputy director To Kim Ngoc, due to the State Bank’s (SBV) dollar lending restrictions, dollar deposits against total means of payment fell from 19.5 per cent in 2011 to over 11 per cent only by mid-2013.

Economic experts have widely praised the SBV’s commitment to anti-dolarisation.

Le Xuan Nghia, member of the National Financial Monetary Policy Council said achievements in the foreign exchange market such as increased currency reserves and stable exchange rates were all results of the SBV’s anti-dolarisation policies.

“In light of the government’s anti-dolarisation plan, raising and lending capital in dollars will be finished by 2020. And lending in dollars may end even earlier,” Nghia said.

Despite advocating the government’s anti-dolarisation drive, deputy general director of Military Commercial Joint Stock Bank (MB) Nguyen Thi An Binh still has concerns.

“Dollar lending has slowed, but to completely finish it will require a step-by-step process. At MB we maintain a certain level of dollar-denominated deposits,” Binh explained.

Numerous other banks have also said they are concerned about the dollar mobilising rate falling to zero as banks still need dollars to run their operations.

Businesses are also worried about the effort. Nguyen Tien Dung, chairman and general director of Hanoi-based Agricultural Products and Materials JSC (Apromaco) is concerned that importers would find it difficult to make payments if they could not access dollars from banks.

Responding to banks and firms’ concerns, Ngoc said the government was moving toward stopping dollar lending but that the process would go through tiered steps to avoid severe market shifts. He backed up his point by pointing out that the SBV has still maintained the dollar mobilising rate at 1.25 per cent per year.

vir



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Corruption trial begins for former Agribank director

Just over US$25 million was embezzled from the State budget, the People's Court of HCM City heard yesterday at the start of a corruption trial involving the...

SHB to unload $47m in bad debts loans

Sai Gon-Ha Noi Bank (SHB) announced plans to sell VND1 trillion (US$47.6 million) in bad debts to the Viet Nam Asset Management Company (VMAC) this month, following...

Irrecoverable debts on sharp rise

Of the VND6.5 trillion worth of debts the Vietnam Asset Management Company (VAMC) has bought so far, 67 percent is in the real estate sector.

Tax administration tops the bribery list

A report by the World Bank on October 31, revealed some of the sectors with highest corruption problems in Vietnam.

Fighting against transfer pricing will be a violent war

The owners of international economic groups are always the wise businessmen supported by experienced accountants, lawyers and strategist. Therefore, it is not easy...

VAMC purchases bad debts from 14 banks

By the end of October, the Vietnam Assets Management Company (VAMC) purchased VND11 trillion of bad debts from 14 banks, despite the fact that more than 20 banks...

Vietnam makes big leap in non-dollarization

Vietnam vows to reduce the foreign currency deposit ratio to 15 percent by 2015 and stop the dollarization by 2020.

Vietnam is on tight budget, but generous in spending money

Economists have warned that Vietnam’s public debts would be no longer within the safety line after 2015, when it has to reserve 1/3 of the annual budget to pay...

Banks look to purchase finance companies

A recent trend in the bank-ing and finance industry is that commercial banks are looking to buy finance companies in an attempt to have "special tools" to...

Gov't to curtail currency lending

Foreign currency lending is likely to end sooner than the Government's original schedule because the central bank's efforts to limit its use in the economy have...

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top