SBV to tighten non-core investment of credit institutions

Oct 15th at 09:46
15-10-2016 09:46:51+07:00

SBV to tighten non-core investment of credit institutions

The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) is drafting a circular on further tightening the non-core investment of credit institutions to strengthen transparency and risk management in the banking system.

 

Under the draft, the central bank classifies the capital contribution and the stake purchase of credit institutions into three groups based on their levels of risk. The classification is in accordance with Viet Nam's legal regulations and international rules.

The three groups are subsidiary company, joint venture and commercial investment.

According to the current legal regulations, including the Law on Financial Institutions 2010, banks must invest in non-core business activities such as securities, insurance, consumer finance and payment intermediation through a separate entity to reduce risks.

In the subsidiary company form, banks can own more than 50 per cent of a non-banking financial institution, while the joint venture form allows banks to own from 11 to 50 per cent of non-banking financial institutions, with commercial investment being less than 11 per cent ownership.

According to the drafting board, of the three forms, commercial investment is the most risky since it is mostly in other business activities, not banking and finance, which bear greater risk, especially investments in non-listed companies.

The SBV, therefore, discourage banks from taking part in commercial investment, the board said.

Under the draft circular, 10 conditions must be fulfilled by banks who wish to make commercial investments, such as the bank must have earned profit for three consecutive years, bad debts are under three per cent and sufficient risk provision is in place, as regulated by law. Moreover, the invested units must have functions that relate to and support the bank's operating activities.

For the joint venture form, the SBV said in some cases the investee bank is unable to secure the right to make crucial decisions on operations and risk supervision. As the ownership structure is more complex in the joint venture form, the invested financial institution may be manipulated by other investors, so the level of risk in joint ventures must be considered higher than the subordinate company form.

Current regulations still make risk assessment easy for banks when investing in a joint venture, so that under the new circular, the central bank will set stricter conditions for joint ventures compared with the subsidiary form in terms of management, operations and the experience of the financial institution.

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Conferences talks tech in insurance

The 13rd Vietnam Finance Conference was held in Ha Noi on October 14, allowing top experts to discuss exchange managerial policies, institutions and applying...

Vietcombank locks customers’ bank cards over ATM fraud concerns

Hanoi-based Vietcombank locked several customer bank cards on Thursday in a move it says will help protect their information from being stolen after using ATM...

Top tax paying firms revealed

The minerals and petroleum sectors have come out on top amongst corporate taxpayers on a list of 1,000 leading corporations, accounting for 30 per cent of total tax...

2016 budget revenues amount to $32 billion

Budget revenues reached VND718.3 trillion (US$32.2 billion) in the first nine months of the year, accounting for around 70 per cent of the annual target, a...

ADB pledges annual loan of $1bn to Vietnam over next five years

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) is committed to maintaining its credit assistance of around US$1 billion per annum to support Vietnam over the next five years, the...

Overseas remittances must be prioritised as investment source: conference

The Government should offer incentives to projects funded by overseas remittances, a conference on policies related to remittances heard in HCM City on October 11.

Bad debts till June equal to 9.2% of GDP

The country's total non-performing loans by the end of June stood at VND346.96 trillion (US$15.489 million), equal to 9.2 per cent of the country's GDP.

No cause for concern over foreign capital outflows

The Vietnamese market remains attractive to long-term investors despite recent sell-offs. Peter Ryder, CEO of Indochina Capital, shared with VIR’s Nam Phuong his...

ANZ voted best foreign FX products and services provider in Vietnam

ANZ today announced that it has been voted No.1 among foreign FX providers in Vietnam by corporates, according to Asiamoney’s FX Poll 2016.

Manulife Vietnam and SCB celebrate one-year exclusive partnership anniversary

Manulife Vietnam and Saigon Commercial Bank (SCB) is celebrating the first anniversary of their exclusive partnership.

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top