Commercial banks cut profit target amid COVID-19 pandemic

Apr 9th at 08:52
09-04-2020 08:52:22+07:00

Commercial banks cut profit target amid COVID-19 pandemic

Many banks in Viet Nam have reduced their profit target for 2020, and plan to support companies severely impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Besides, the State Bank of Viet Nam issued instructions on 31 March to banks to cut costs and bonus payments and not pay dividends in cash.

Nam A Bank has reviewed its 2019 performance and 2020 plans, and said it now targets pre-tax profit of only VND800 billion in 2020, 13.5 per cent down from last year.

But it plans to keep some other targets unchanged. The bank says it would seek to achieve the credit target it set based on the State Bank of Viet Nam’s credit growth quota.

It is set to lower lending interest rates by 2 percentage points, with businesses in agriculture, hospitality and import-export benefiting the most from this.

It has also unveiled a VND1 trillion loan package for individual customers at an interest rate of 9.9 per cent.

Hoang Viet Cuong, deputy general director of the lender, said it is meant to enable borrowers to revive production and get their lives back to normalcy.

Bad debts this year would not exceed 3 per cent, the bank said.

The Sai Gon – Ha Noi Commercial Joint Stock Bank (SHB) also plans to cut its 2020 profit target, telling Vietnam News Agency it would be by at least VND1 trillion.

It also plans to reduce operation costs. Its executives have volunteered a 50 per cent wage cut until the pandemic ends, while department heads are amenable to 10-30 per cent cuts.

It has earmarked VND25 trillion for loans with many preferential offers including a 2 percentage point interest rate cut.

It also plans to restructure customers’ loans.

It is expected that more banks will announce changes to strategies and interest rate cuts to support clients in the coming days.

A report from the National Statistics Office said the credit growth this year has been only 0.68 per cent, 1.22 percentage points down year-on-year.

Deposit growth has fallen to 0.51 per cent from 1.72 per cent, it added.

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