Bad debts put dark clouds on bank profits

Aug 19th at 16:48
19-08-2013 16:48:14+07:00

Bad debts put dark clouds on bank profits

Local banks’ recent first-half financial statements showed that scores of banks eyed rosy business outcomes with profits reaching several hundred billion dong even when some of them reported negative credit growth during the period.

The question was where bank profits came from?

In the previous years, credit incomes often made up 80-90 per cent of bank profits. In the face of recent sliding credit growth many banks could still score upbeat profits thanks to their services’ strong performance.

Ho Chi Minh City-based Southern Bank witnessed VND189.3 billion ($9 million) after-tax profits in the first six months of 2013, up five times on-year.

The bank incomes mainly came from securities investment.

In 2013’s second quarter, state giant VietinBank posted after-tax profits surging 3.5 times on-year albeit the bank’s credit just expanded 0.37 per cent only in the first six months.

Its incomes mainly came from services, in which securities investment brought the bank over VND90 billion ($4.3 million) in profits.

Another state giant Vietcombank is in a similar situation. When the bank’s credit contracted 1.47 per cent in the first six months, the incomes from securities investment, foreign exchange business and other services saw a robust growth.

In 2013’s second quarter, the bank’s net profit, though sliding 4.8 per cent on-year, still amounted to VND864 billion ($41 million).

TienPhong Bank chief executive officer Nguyen Hung said the bank would focus on boosting services growth in the upcoming time since credit was not its core competitive advantage.

According to banking expert Nguyen Tri Hieu, banks bolstering services activities like currency transfer, guaranteeing and advisory services or import-export funding are smart moves in current difficult context.

“Spurring services growth would be the only path for small banks possessing copious capital sources in current context since they could hardly compete with big banks in luring depositors in a safe manner,” said Hieu.

Dr. Cao Si Kiem, member of the National Monetary and Financial Advisory Council, however, was doubtful of banks’ impressive profits, arguing that several banks might not make full provisions for their hiking bad debts.

For instance, despite scoring high profit growth, VietinBank saw its bad debts doubled compared to end of 2012.

As of June 30, 2013, the bank’s bad debts were reported at VND7.027 trillion ($334 million), tantamount to 2.1 per cent of its total outstanding loans against VND4.890 trillion ($232 million) or 1.46 per cent by end of 2012.

Similarly, the Saigon-Hanoi Commercial Joint Stock Bank (SHB), after more than a year merging with Habubank, is now saddled with bad debts and sliding profits.

Particularly, by June 30, 2013 the bank’s bad debts covered 9.04 per cent of its total outstanding loans with VND3.186 billion ($152 million) facing being lost.

State Bank of Vietnam’s Monetary Statistics and Forecast Department recent survey showed that 50 per cent of credit organisations saw profits going down 20-30 per cent in the first six months of 2013, meanwhile 71.4 per cent of them expected profit upsurges in the second half this year.

vir



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Discretion needed when boosting credit

There are signs that the economy is rebounding, but bank loans are still hard to come by.

Forex rates to remain stable

Vietnam’s dong-dollar exchange rate is to remain largely unchanged over the rest of the year as the country now boasts fruitful currency sources, say analysts.

Banks’ bad debts drop suspiciously

The finance reports released by many commercial banks showed that their bad debt ratios have fallen down sharply to below 3 percent. This spells that the Vietnam...

BIDV wins prestigious banking award

The Bank for Investment and Development of Viet Nam (BIDV) has been awarded the coveted Viet Nam Domestic Cash Management Bank of the Year by Asian Banking and...

DIV deal guarantees security for deposits

Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has signed a decision to set up the Deposit Insurance of Viet Nam (DIV) in a bid to provide security to depositors.

H1 tax arrears surged 32 per cent due to economic hardship

Tax arrears in the first half of the year surged 32 per cent against the end of last year to VND64.63 trillion (US$3 billion), according to the General Department...

Bank card count reached 60.15m by end of June: SBV

The number of bank cards issued in Viet Nam rose to 60.15 million as of the end of the second quarter this year, up 10.8 per cent against late last year, the State...

Access to loans gives farmers a lift

The total amount of credit available to the agricultural sector has increased by 2.1 times to VND622 trillion (US$29.6 billion), three years after a Government...

IFC invests $805m in VN this year

The International Finance Corporation (IFC) provided up to US$805 million in trade finance to Viet Nam's banking sector in the previous financial year, according to...

Risks from high interest rates

With monthly interest rate reaching 3 per cent, investment advisory companies are luring huge capital amounts from the community which prove highly risky ventures...

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top