Exchange rate pressure to soften by year end
Exchange rate pressure to soften by year end
Experts are confident the VND-dollar exchange rate will soon soften, leveraging a raft of factors.
Last weekend, the selling price of the US dollar fetched VND24,500 per dollar at major state lender Vietcombank, up nearly 4.4 per cent compared to the outset of this year. Similarly, the central exchange rate gained more than 2 per cent correspondingly.
Senior economist Le Xuan Nghia in a talk with VIR early this month, said that the higher exchange rate in the domestic market would be proportional to that in the global market.
In the year to date, the greenback rose about 4 per cent in value globally.
Nghia noted that the US dollar remained strong as the US economy has rebounded positively thanks to robust growth of its weapons, as well as liquefied and petrochemical industries.
Many experts have the same mindset, assuming that albeit the Federal Reserve (Fed) doesn't raise the base rate in its November policy meeting, the Fed’s interest rate is at its peak in 22 years and the ‘expensive money era’ could prolong for some time now.
Phan Dung Khanh, head of Investment Advisory at Maybank Investment Bank believe the US dollar gaining in value came as the Fed could maintain its tightened monetary policy for longer.
“The Fed’s interest rate might be softened to 2.9 per cent in the next three years, meaning the US interest rate would be kept higher than the neutral interest rate at 2.5 per cent. In other words, the expensive money era could linger for at least three years more,” said Khanh.
Augmenting the US dollar in the global market and increasing speculation of the greenback in the domestic market due to the gap between VND and US dollar in the first half of this year, has underpinned a sharp rise in the VND-US dollar exchange rate.
In the past month, the central bank (SBV) has continually issued a huge volume surpassing $4.6 billion of 28-days treasury bonds to withdraw cash from the banking system, helping to narrow the gap in the interest rate between VND and US dollar-denominated deposits.
Khanh from Maybank remarked that this positive move had contributed to pushing up the interbank interest rate as well as stabilising the forex market.
Economist Le Xuan Nghia said, “SVB’s intervention by T-bond issuance is a smart move. Currently, forex supply is abundant. Moreover, the Fed is expected to begin reducing their interest rate from 2024. This will put a brake on dollar price and soother the exchange rate pressure in the forthcoming time.”
Nguyen Huu Huan, head of the Faculty of Finance at University of Economics Ho Chi Minh City, said that it was necessary for Vietnam to accept the exchange rate to lose 3-5 per cent in value to uphold exports.
The exchange rate might quickly be softened when the peak time for dollar demand has passed. In his view, there are a raft of factors underpinning exchange rate stability.
First, the trade balance in the first 10 months of this year saw a $24.61 billion trade surplus, compared to just $9.56 billion in the same period last year.
Second, disbursed foreign direct investment capital volume during the period reached an estimated $18 billion, up 2.4 per cent on-year, a record in the past five years.
In addition, inward remittance volume saw a stable growth.
Analysts at ACB Securities assume that although there is a risk to the exchange rate, the SBV has sufficient tools to maintain exchange rate and interest rate stability.
In their view, the SBV has two vehicles in the short-term: issuing T-bonds to withdraw cash or considering 3- to 6-month term dollar sell-offs for market intervention, in which, the latter is the final-case option.
From the SBV side, Deputy Governor Dao Minh Tu said that the dollar movement was proportional to that in the global market and the supply-demand situation.
“Businesses can put their mind at ease as the central bank shall act to phase out the dollar speculation mindset. The fruitful foreign reserves, growth of foreign direct investment flow and positive movements with other foreign currencies are the fundaments for a stable exchange rate,” Tu said.