Central bank sold roughly $7 billion to stabilise forex market
Central bank sold roughly $7 billion to stabilise forex market
The State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) sold about US$7 billion in the first five months of this year to balance the supply and demand sources of the greenback in the domestic forex market, according to the Viet Dragon Securities Corporation (VDSC).
The USD/VND exchange rate listed at Vietcombank has so far this year increased by approximately 2 per cent.
The average rate of commercial banks according to Bloomberg's statistics in the period has increased by about 1.7 per cent. During May and the first half of June alone, the dong depreciated about 1.0 per cent on the official market.
However, in the context that most currencies have fallen significantly against the US dollar after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates, the dong has remained relatively stable.
The US Dollar Index has so far this year risen by 9.2 per cent, resulting in the depreciation of many currencies. The Japanese yen has fallen by 16.8 per cent, followed by the British pound (11.5 per cent) and euro (8.5 per cent). The Chinese yuan has also dropped by 6.3 per cent, Indian rupee (5 per cent) and Malaysian Ringgit (6 per cent).
According to VDSC’s analysts, the domestic exchange rate might be under higher pressure at some times in the coming months, but the SBV will have enough resources to intervene and rebalance when necessary.
Viet Nam’s foreign exchange reserves are currently measured at more than US$100 billion, equal to 3.1 months of imports, and are forecast to keep rising. The value, which is four times higher than in 2015, will be an important buffer to stabilise the domestic forex market and help the country’s economy withstand external shocks.
Though exchange rate management in the remaining months of the year is still a big challenge for the SBV, VDSC’s analysts believe that the dong will not depreciate as strongly as other currencies as in the latest meeting this month, the SBV affirmed to continually manage the exchange rate flexibly and readily cope with greater pressure caused by external uncertainties in the near future.
Under the move, the VDSC’s analysts expect the dong to depreciate only about 2.0-2.5 per cent in 2022, 1 percentage point higher than its forecast at the beginning of this year.
Earlier, Vietcombank Securities Company (VCBS) believed the USD/VND exchange rate will increase by under 2 per cent in 2022.
The State Bank of Vietnam set the daily reference exchange rate for the US dollar at VND23,087 per dollar on Tuesday, down VND5 from the previous day.
With the current trading band of +/-3 per cent, the ceiling rate applicable to commercial banks during the day is VND23,779 per dollar and the floor rate VND22,394 per dollar.
The rates at some commercial banks also dropped.
BIDV listed the buying rate at VND23,100 per dollar and the selling rate at VND23,380 per dollar, both down VND10 from June 20.
Meanwhile, Vietcombank kept both rates unchanged from June 20, listing the buying rate at VND23,070 per dollar, and the selling rate at VND23,380 per dollar.