Short-term foreign lending extended

Dec 20th at 14:42
20-12-2014 14:42:45+07:00

Short-term foreign lending extended

The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) will extend short-term foreign currency lending to exporters and petrol importers by one year, in a move to support these businesses, said SBV Governor Nguyen Thi Hong.

 

Under the SBV's Circular No 29/2013/TT-NHNN on lending in foreign currencies, issued in 2013, lending would expire on December 31 this year. Beginning January 1, 2015, only a limited number of borrowers, exclusive exporters and petrol importers were to receive foreign currency loans.

Hong said that after scrutinising past lending, as well as targeting to meet the country's 6.2 per cent GDP growth rate next year, as approved by the National Assembly, the central bank decided not to call in loans by the end of this year, as planned, but to extend payments until the end of 2015.

Both businesses and bankers want the central bank to extend the deadline for lending in foreign currencies, because they have significantly benefited from this lending.

Economists have also advised the central bank to extend loan payments, saying that any signs of credit growth, no matter whether it is the Vietnamese dong or foreign currency credit growth, should be seen as good news in the current circumstances.

Circular No 29, released in 2013 but taking effect in early 2014, was aimed to ease more businesses in accessing dollar loans, as it expands the list of subjects that can receive dollar loans from banks, within the context of the country's economic difficulty and low credit growth.

The regulation, plus a stable dong/dollar exchange rate and a lower interest rate of dollar than dong loans, has prompted businesses to rush to borrow dollars, which had contributed significantly to pushing up the country's recent credit growth.

According to the central bank's statistics, foreign currency outstanding loans within the banking system increased 20.77 per cent as of the end of September, which was five times higher than dong outstanding loans.

Of the total foreign currency outstanding loans, exports and petrol imports accounted for roughly 30 per cent. Further, lending on export businesses made up 24 per cent and the remaining 6 per cent of loans had been to petrol importers.

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Ha Noi collects import-export tax arrears

Hanoi Customs Department has collected VND442.47 billion (over US$21 million) in import-export tax arrears, gaining 81.11 per cent of its target at mid-December.

Survey charts overseas remittances

Most overseas remittances to Viet Nam have been used for meeting daily expenses and for purchasing gold, according to the Central Institute for Economic Management...

SBV orders tighter measures for bad debt management

 The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) this week required its branches nationwide to adopt stricter, more comprehensive measures to accelerate progress in restructuring...

Will lending in foreign currencies be stopped sooner than expected?

Businesses are “reading between the lines” and assuming that they will not be able to borrow money in foreign currencies from early 2015.

MoF recommends fee, levy changes

The Ministry of Finance (MoF) proposed to omit or adjust 22 fees and four levies in the draft of the Law of Fees and Levies.

Vietnamese teenagers can now open bank accounts

Individuals aged between 15 and 18, who own separate assets, will be allowed to independently open and operate bank accounts without seeking approval from their...

SBV to persist with exchange rate policy

The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) is expected to continue its current exchange rate stabilisation policy next year following the hefty benefits it derived from the...

Moody’s raises Vietnam credit rating

Moody’s Investors Service has raised its outlook on Vietnam’s banking system to stable from a negative assessment, noting improvements in economic stability and...

Remittance ‘grey market’ thrives towards year-end

Remittances are pouring into Vietnam towards the year’s end, but most of this money is bypassing the official banking sector.

BIDV provides $35 million to VSIP Quang Ngai

The Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam (BIDV) has allocated $35 million to building technical infrastructure at VSIP Quang Ngai, according to a contract...

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top