Dong strengthens against US dollar in early 2017

Jan 16th at 16:13
16-01-2017 16:13:39+07:00

Dong strengthens against US dollar in early 2017

The dong has strengthened against the US dollar unexpectedly in the first two weeks of trading in 2017.

 

This is contrary to what has happened in the previous years when the đồng’s value dropped against the dollar ahead of Tet (Lunar New Year), during which time the demand for the dollar is high to meet payment requirements.

At commercial banks, the dollar has weakened by nearly 1 per cent, from VND22,790 to VND22,600 per dollar. In the unofficial market, the dollar’s devaluation has been higher at 2 per cent, from VND23,400 to VND22,700 per dollar.

On January 9, the central bank even increased the reference exchange rate of the dollar against the đồng by VND275 to stop the declining momentum. The State Bank of Viet Nam’s intervention to prevent the đồng from strengthening too much against the dollar is a rare move. Usually, the central bank intervenes when fluctuations cause the dollar to strengthen significantly against the đồng. This was only the second time the central bank made such an intervention in the past year to curb the devaluation of the dollar. The monetary regulator lastly prevented the dollar from falling below VND22,300 in early February 2016.

When the US dollar depreciates deeply, intervention is necessary to prevent the đồng’s appreciation from affecting the economy’s competitiveness and exports, in the context of many currencies in the Asian region being devalued significantly. Viet Nam’s export turnover increased 8.6 per cent year-on-year to US$175.9 billion in 2016, missing the whole-year growth target of 10 per cent.

The devaluation of the dollar in the domestic market allows the central bank to continuously buy the currency and increase the foreign reserves, which hit a record high of $41 billion in 2016.

Experts said some factors have supported the stabilisation of the dollar/dong exchange rate, such as an abundance of remittances at year-end, a weaker dollar in the global market and a more stable yuan.

Reuters reported that the dollar hit its lowest level in five weeks against a basket of currencies on Thursday. It said the currency was on course for its worst week since November, hit by a loss of confidence in US reflation trade a day after a press conference by US President-elect Donald Trump.

The dollar weakened 1.4 per cent against the yen to 113.76 yen, its weakest level in five weeks, while the euro hit its highest in five weeks against the dollar at $1.0684. The sterling hit a six-day high of $1.2317 against the dollar on Wednesday, rebounding from a three-month low of $1.2038.

Analysts said it is unclear how long the dollar would weaken, Reuters reported.

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

BIDV wins Best Retail Bank award

Bank for Investment and Development of Viet Nam (BIDV) received the Best Retail Bank award for the third consecutive year in Ha Noi on Thursday.

As VN banks digitise, customer service key

Customers must be at the centre of banks’ attention as they make a move towards digital transformation in an effort to adapt to a changing landscape of financial...

City reviews plans to lend to enterprises

The banking – enterprises connection programme enabled around 22,000 businesses in HCM City to borrow over VND280 trillion (US$12.5 billion) from banks last year.

More ex-bankers arrested as Vietnam probes new bank loss

Two ex-leaders of a former Vietnamese bank and seven other people have been arrested in connection with an investigation into massive losses caused by wrongfully...

Top former Trust Bank officials arrested

Seven former officials of Dai Tin Bank (Trust Bank), including former chairman of its board of directors and general director, were arrested and put under temporary...

SBV demands quarterly reports on SME lending

The State Bank of Viet Nam has asked its branches and credit institutions nationwide to report quarterly their lending to small-and medium-d enterprises (SMEs).

"Special" law to boost bank restructuring

The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) will co-operate with relevant agencies to map out a "special" law to boost bank restructuring and settle bad debts in 2017...

Slow rise in consumer lending

Consumer lending is seeing only a slow rise ahead of Tet (Lunar New Year), despite commercial banks offering preferential loans to both individuals and enterprises...

Banks agree to buy back bad debts from VAMC

Settlement of bad debts has shown positive signs after some banks announced they would buy back all their non-performing loans they sold to the Viet Nam Asset...

Deputy PM signs no-cash policy

Under the plan, by 2020 total cash transactions would total less than 10 per cent of total market transactions; all supermarkets, shopping malls and distributors...

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top