Pandemic causes remittances to HCM City to fall by 2%

May 7th at 08:14
07-05-2020 08:14:05+07:00

Pandemic causes remittances to HCM City to fall by 2%

Overseas remittances to HCM City in the first four months of the year are estimated to be US$1.8 billion, a year-on-year decrease of 2 per cent, according to the State Bank of Vietnam.

 

This is the first decline in many years, it said.

Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy director of the central bank’s HCM City office, said remittances to the city this year are forecast to be lower than last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Some money transfer companies said remittances from abroad declined in the last two months, with some reporting declines of 50 per cent.

According to DongA Money Transfer Co., Ltd, inbound remittances in the first 22 days of April were down by half month-on-month.

Remittances from Europe were down the most, followed by the US, Canada, Australia and Viet Nam’s key labour markets such as South Korea, Taiwan, and Japan.

Key countries for remittances to Viet Nam such as the US, UK and Canada have been hit hard by the pandemic, and ethnic Vietnamese there, like many others, have lost jobs, leading to reduced remittances to their families.

The companies forecast remittances to further fall in the second quarter and said last year’s figure could not be reached if the pandemic prolongs.

Can Van Luc, chief economist at State-owned bank BIDV, said inflows this year could decrease by 10-15 per cent, and even 15-17 per cent in the worst case.

According to the World Bank, global remittances will decline by 20 per cent this year due to the economic crisis caused by the pandemic.

Remittances to low- and middle-income countries are projected to fall by 19.7 per cent to $445 billion.

Viet Nam ranks among the top 10 countries in the world in terms of remittances. They were worth $16.7 billion last year, with HCM City accounting for $5.3 billion

The majority of the money is converted into dong and deposited in banks or invested in business.

Dr Huynh Trung Minh, a financial expert, said, "The decrease in remittances will affect the supply of foreign currencies but not have a big impact on the exchange rate since supply and demand of foreign currencies remain steady.

“Viet Nam's foreign exchange reserves, ... of around $84 billion, are sufficient to stabilise the foreign exchange market in case of fluctuations."

In 2021 the World Bank expects remittances to LMICs to recover and rise by 5.6 per cent to $470 billion. 

bizhub



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Five banks make top 10 most profitable listed firms

Vietnam’s top 10 most profitable listed companies, half of them banks, posted VND37 trillion ($1.6 billion) in pretax profits in the first quarter.

Vietnam’s Techcombank blames upgrade for system failure

Vietnamese lender Techcombank has explained that an upgrade was responsible for system failure early this week after many customers complained they could not access...

Vietnamese currency forecast to continue weakening in 2020

Weaker foreign direct investment inflow on the back of the Covid-19 pandemic and a likely preference by the central bank for a weaker Vietnamese dong to support...

Techcombank delivers record first quarter 2020

Viet Nam Technological and Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Techcombank) recorded after-tax profit reached VND2.5 trillion (US$106.5 million) in the first quarter of...

ABBANK shrugs off pandemic to grow profits

An Binh Commercial Joint Stock Bank reported pre-tax profit of VND362 billion (US$15.5 million) for the first quarter.

Pandemic accelerates Vietnam’s move to cashless payments

The limitations on contact and gatherings imposed by the Covid-19 pandemic have significantly boosted online shopping and home deliveries.

Business cash flow issues in Vietnam trump global average: survey

The ratio of Vietnam businesses facing cash flow problems, 47 percent, is higher than the global average of 37 percent, a survey has found.

Viet Nam faces increasing tax evasion and avoidance

Viet Nam faces increasing tax evasion and avoidance as policies have not kept up with reality, according to a report by Viet Nam Institute for Economic and Policy...

IFRS for better financial reporting in Vietnam

The recent announcement of a roadmap for international financial reporting standards (IFRS) in Vietnam marks a key milestone on the path of improvement of financial...

Banks report lower profits on provisioning as pandemic increases bad debts

Half of the top 10 banks saw profits fall in the first quarter due to provisioning for bad debts caused by the coronavirus pandemic.

Bank stocks

Insurance stocks


MOST READ


Back To Top