Bad debts remain below 3% target

Aug 4th at 13:49
04-08-2016 13:49:45+07:00

Bad debts remain below 3% target

Non-performing loans (NPLs) as of the end of May accounted for 2.78 per cent of the entire banking system's total outstanding loans.

 

This was still under the three per cent threshold targeted by the Government, Deputy Governor of the State Bank of Viet Nam Nguyen Thi Hong said during a Government press conference on August 1.

The move was made after concern was expressed about an upward trend in NPLs, as reported recently in H1 financial reports of several commercial banks.

Hong said the central bank would still consider the handling of bad debts one of top priorities during the last five months of the year.

She said the central bank had instructed commercial banks, whose NPLs were more than three per cent, to report measures to resolve the bad debts issue to the central bank.

"Besides a strict control on credit growth to ensure credit quality and to avoid raising new bad debts, the governor has also asked credit institutions to make provisions for their risky loans," Hong said.

She said the governor had also asked the Viet Nam Asset Management Company (VAMC) to further deal with bad debts in a move to control the total bad debts under three per cent.

In July, financial statements released by some large commercial banks showed that bad debts increased in the first half of the year.

Notably, bad debts skyrocketed at Eximbank, surging sharply from 1.86 per cent at the end of last year to 5.3 per cent by the end of June.

Of Eximbank's total bad debts worth VND4.285 trillion (US$191.29 million), subprime debt surged 13 times to reach VND2.415 trillion, while the increasing rate of doubtful debt and potentially irrecoverable debt was 34.8 per cent each to touch VND797 billion and VND1.073 trillion, respectively.

Due to the high NPL rate, Eximbank had to double its provisions to touch VND324 billion in H1, causing pre-tax profits to fall sharply to end at VND79 billion, down 88 per cent year-on-year.

The Bank for Investment and Development of Viet Nam (BIDV) -- the country's largest commercial bank in terms of assets -- also reported that its bad debts increased from roughly 1.6 per cent at the end of last year to two per cent by the end of June. The increasing bad debts in H1 were worth more than VND3 trillion, bringing the bank's total bad debts to reach VND13.183 trillion. Of these debts, potentially irrecoverable debts and doubtful debts rose from VND5.190 trillion and VND887.76 billion to touch VND6.343 trillion and VND2.326 trillion, respectively.

Sacombank's bad debts, as of the end of June, also increased to 2.83 per cent from 1.85 per cent at the end of last year.

Due to the large number of bad debts, Sacombank's provisions surged 86 per cent in H1, causing the bank's pre-tax profit to drop 76 per cent year-on-year to touch VND363 billion.

Experts attributed the increase in bad debts in banks in H1 to the fact that the VAMC bought only a small amount of bad debts in the first half of this year, after meeting the target for controlling bad debts of the entire banking system under three per cent at the end of September last year.

According to a Government report on the country's socio-economic results in H1 2016, VAMC has so far bought VND241 trillion of bad debts. The number of bad debts was nearly the same as compared with those released late last year. It meant that the new bad debts that arose in commercial banks in H1 remained with the banks, instead of being transferred to the VAMC, as was done in previous years.

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