Credit for SOEs accounts for 15-17% of outstanding loans

Jun 7th at 11:24
07-06-2016 11:24:11+07:00

Credit for SOEs accounts for 15-17% of outstanding loans

Credit for State-owned enterprises (SOEs) currently accounts for roughly 15-17 per cent of total outstanding loans, deputy governor of the State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) Nguyen Thi Hong said.

 

Previously, credit for SOEs was relatively high, but now, credit for private enterprises has increased significantly, Hong said, adding that the central bank has always targeted credit for production and business operations, especially in the Government's prioritised industries such as agricultural and rural development, exports, support industries, small- and medium-d firms and high-tech enterprises.

However, she admitted that the capital market is under development to help enterprises with their long-term capital mobilisation requirements as the market was unbalanced due to the dependence on bank credit.

Hong said the Government was very interested in the development of the financial market, including the monetary market, to create numerous channels to generate capital for enterprises.

Deputy Prime Minister Vuong Dinh Hue recently also instructed the SBV and relevant ministries to develop the financial market to a healthy level and diversify enterprises' capital mobilisation channels, she said.

Hong made the move as representatives from the private sector at a recent forum to support the sector said it was facing many difficulties, where the greatest challenge was access to capital.

According to the representatives, while the private sector needs capital from many investors and numerous capital mobilisation channels, Viet Nam's financial market is unbalanced as most of the capital for enterprises comes from commercial banks. The capital source, with typically short tenures and volatile interest rates, in addition to asset mortgage requirements, often has a significant effect on the enterprises' long-term business and development strategies as well as their capital mobilisation costs.

Meanwhile, capital funding from the securities market accounts for some 30 per cent of overall funding sources.

According to the representatives, the total outstanding loans are worth more than VND200 billion (US$8.88 million), and the capitalisation value of the securities market is worth roughly $60 billion. However, the corporate bonds market is only worth roughly $1.3 billion due to a shortage of large investors and the introduction of poor financial products.

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Dong devaluation cause for concern

With a double dose of the Federal Reserve’s possible rate hikes combined with the Chinese yuan’s 1.5 per cent retreat in May, there is concern it could trigger the...

Greenback rates fall in market

The State Bank of Vietnam reduced by VND25 per dollar the June 6 reference rate for the Vietnamese dong and US dollar of VND21,914 per dollar.

Fed interest rate hike may not affect forex

The United States Federal Reserve (Fed)'s interest rate hike expected this month is unlikely to have any significant impact on Viet Nam's foreign exchange rate...

Firms praise lifting of SBV foreign money loan ban

Export enterprises and commercial banks welcomed the State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV)'s decision to allow credit institutions to resume provision of foreign currency...

Techcombank, insurance company ink deal to boost co-operation

The Viet Nam Technological and Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Techcombank) and PetroVietnam Finance and Insurance Company (PVI), on June 2, signed a comprehensive...

Thai banks rush for booming Vietnamese market

Thai banks are planning ambitious expansion in the context of increasing trade and investment between the two countries.

Further SCT tweaks seem imperative

Amendments and supplements to the Law on Special Consumption Tax took effect from January 1, 2016. Nguyen Thi Cuc, chairwoman of Vietnam Tax Consultants’...

VIB offers preferential rate for business' auto loans

Vietnam International Bank (VIB) is offering a preferential interest rate of 7.15 per cent for business' auto loans in the first six months.

SBV set to extend $1.3b housing package

The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) on Monday instructed commercial banks to continue disbursement of the VND30 trillion (US$1.3 billion) housing package for contracts...

Bad debts rise to 2.62% by Q1 end

Non-performing loans (NPLs) at credit institutions by the end of the first quarter this year increased to 2.62 per cent from 2.55 per cent late last year.

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top