Finance companies slow credit growth

Oct 1st at 13:27
01-10-2018 13:27:46+07:00

Finance companies slow credit growth

Consumer finance companies have been cutting credit growth to focus more on tightening internal governance and selecting solvent customers to target a safer and healthier development.

 

Financial statements from major finance companies showed that credit growth had increased by only 4-5 per cent in the first half of this year, compared to double-digit growth in previous years, and even lower than in commercial banks.

At FE Credit, lending rose by only 3.54 per cent in H1 2018, even lower than the growth rate of 10.49 per cent of its parent company VP Bank.

Ho Chi Minh Securities Company attributed FE Credit’s credit growth slowdown mainly to the company’s change in lending structure. FE Credit has focused more on the traditional lending segment, which has lower risks, lower value and shorter terms, but higher competition.

The credit growth slowdown has caused profitability to reduce significantly.

FE Credit’s profit rose by only 16 per cent to VND1.58 trillion (US$67.23 million) in the first half of this year, accounting for only 36 per cent of VP Bank’s total profit, down significantly from 50 per cent in the previous year.

Nguyen Duc Vinh, VP Bank’s general director, said that the bank was planning to keep the growth rate low and reduce its contribution to the bank’s consolidated profit.

According to experts, Viet Nam’s consumer finance market is still very attractive due to the large room for growth and high profitability, but players in the market have decided to focus more on sustained growth for fears of tightened management from State agencies and bad debt risks.

The general move to lower credit growth follows a series of scandals regarding debt collection, high interest rates or co-operation with cosmetics companies to ‘trap’ borrowers, which have damaged their reputations.

Finance companies are also concerned about increasing bad debts without improvement in risk governance. At FE Credit, the bad debt ratio rose significantly to reach 6.43 per cent of total outstanding loans by the end of June.

Nguyen Duc Kien, deputy chairman of the National Assembly’s Economic Committee, said that the slowdown was necessary to help finance companies develop and gain confidence from customers.

Banks themselves are also becoming more cautious with consumer lending. Techcombank has sold its financial company to foreign investors, saying that the bank didn’t have strategy to operate the risky business. For consumer loans, Techcombank only provides housing or car loans based on collateral.

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Fed rate hike won’t have much impact on Viet Nam

The US Federal Reserve (Fed)’s third interest rate hike this week would not affect Viet Nam’s economy significantly as the move was foreseeable, according to...

Cashless payment needs a boost in rural areas

Viet Nam is entering the Fourth Industrial Revolution with the participation of all sectors, including the banking system; however, non-cash payment has seen...

Real estate collateral at 10 banks worth $170 billion

Real estate collateral in 10 of Viet Nam’s commercial banks is worth more than VND4 quadrillion (US$170.2 billion), accounting for 56 per cent of the banks’ total...

GNN scandal rocks delivery segment

Fraud in cash-on-delivery payments has sparked a need for the use of e-payments in the domestic delivery market, which is seeing big competition between service...

Fitch Ratings: Vietnamese banks showing improvements but challenges remain

Fitch Ratings expects Vietnamese banks to sustain their improving operating trends in the second half of 2018 (H2) on the heels of better credit quality and...

HDBank loan aids consumer goods firms

Housing Development Bank (HDBank) has unveiled a preferential loan package for consumer goods producers and distributors.

FIEs resist MoF demands for more transfer pricing data

Multinational companies are refusing to divulge what they deem corporate secrets in response to the local authorities’ requirement that foreign-invested enterprises...

Foreign investors eye Viet Nam’s e-wallet market

Foreign investors have poured into Viet Nam’s e-wallet sector as they see huge growth potential in the market in the wake of the Government’s plan to reduce cash...

MoF boosts Industry 4.0 use

The Ministry of Finance will apply the technological achievements of the fourth industrial revolution (Industry 4.0) to build a smart governance foundation, provide...

Bad debt ratio among banks drops sharply to 6.7%

Viet Nam’s finance and banking sector has reduced its ratio of non-performing loans (NPLs) – including both NPLs owned by credit institutions and the Viet Nam Asset...

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top