Showing posts with label dollar deposits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dollar deposits. Show all posts

Monday, November 15, 2010

Interest rates rise for dollar deposits

Several commercial banks have increased the annual interest rates they pay on US dollar deposits by 0.2 percentage points to an average of 4.5-5.2 percent, sparking worries of a new interest rate war.

Both Asia Commercial Bank and Eximbank have increased interest rates on three-month term deposits to 4.35 percent and on 12-month term deposits to 4.45 percent.

Vietcombank is offering 4.5 percent for a 12-monthterm deposit in US dollars while the Vietnam-Russia Bank, PG Bank and An Binh Bank are offering rates as high as 5.2 percent.

"In the latter part of the year the dollar supply is often limited, and to attract dollars, many banks raise interest rates," said Asia Commercial Bank deputy director Nguyen Thanh Toai.

Another senior official from the same bank who asked to remain anonymous said that the bank raised interest rates to hold onto its existing depositors and did not want to get involved in a new interest-rate war.

Total foreign currency deposits at the Ho Chi Minh City branch of the State Bank of Vietnam were down 4 percent last month against July to about $8.56 billion, according to the State Bank.

It was too early to tell whether a dollar shortage would solidify into a trend toward higher interest rates, said one treasury official at Vietcombank.

"The third and first half of the fourth quarter are the toughest time," he said. "December is the best time for dollars because of abundant remittance inflows and high export turnover."

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Thursday, November 11, 2010

Interest rates rise for dollar deposits

Several commercial banks have increased the annual interest rates they
pay on US dollar deposits by 0.2 percentage points to an average of
4.5-5.2 percent, sparking worries of a new interest rate war.


Both Asia Commercial Bank and Eximbank have increased interest rates on
three-month term deposits to 4.35 percent and on 12-month term deposits
to 4.45 percent.


Vietcombank is offering 4.5 percent for a
12-monthterm deposit in US dollars while the Vietnam-Russia Bank, PG
Bank and An Binh Bank are offering rates as high as 5.2 percent.


"In the latter part of the year the dollar supply is often limited, and
to attract dollars, many banks raise interest rates," said Asia
Commercial Bank deputy director Nguyen Thanh Toai.


Another
senior official from the same bank who asked to remain anonymous said
that the bank raised interest rates to hold onto its existing depositors
and did not want to get involved in a new interest-rate war.


Total foreign currency deposits at the HCM City branch of the
State Bank of Vietnam were down 4 percent last month against July to
about 8.56 billion USD, according to the State Bank.


It
was too early to tell whether a dollar shortage would solidify into a
trend toward higher interest rates, said one treasury official at
Vietcombank.


"The third and first half of the fourth
quarter are the toughest time," he said. "December is the best time for
dollars because of abundant remittance inflows and high export
turnover."/.

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Saturday, October 16, 2010

Dollar borrowers still wary, dong rates high

loan

HANOI - Potential US dollar borrowers in Vietnam remain gun shy about taking out greenback loans three weeks after the central bank devalued the dong, despite signs that lenders have ample supplies, bankers said on Monday.

Demand for dollars was expected to pick up later in 2010, they said, likely piling renewed pressure on the currency.

"There could be a light fever this year," a currency dealer in Ho Chi Minh City said, noting that most of the demand came from importers.

The central bank cut the dong exchange rate by around 2 percent against the dollar on Aug. 18, saying the move was to help control the trade gap. It was the third devaluation since last November.

While rates on dollar deposits and loans remained stable in the second half of August, according to central bank reports, Eximbank said it had raised its dollar deposit rate by 0.2 percentage points to 4.65 percent as of last Wednesday.

It was the lender's second rate increase for dollar deposits since Aug. 18, a move bankers said was taken to catch up with the rising demand for dollar loans.

Banks in Vietnam had built up their dollar holdings before the devaluation so they were now long the dollar, the HCMC-based dealer said.

"We have dollars now sitting idle but have not found borrowers because they are afraid of the exchange rate risk," a Hanoi-based domestic bank executive said.

Industry officials have suggested that banks increase dong loans between now and year-end to meet an annual credit growth target of 25 percent set by the central bank. Loans at the end of July grew nearly 13 percent against last December, the central bank has said.

Bankers, however, said it was tough to increase dong lending now, given relatively high rates banks were paying to depositors.

"It is difficult to lower interest rates because banks have to maintain their market share and protect depositors, but in doing so they cannot cut deposit rates," the Hanoi-based bank executive said.

Banks were paying between 11.0 percent and 11.2 percent for dong deposits with terms from three months to one year, and lending the domestic currency at 13-15.5 percent.

Market rates were above a government goal which envisaged banks cutting dong deposit rates to 10 percent and lending rates to 12 percent to spur an expansion of credit to support economic growth.

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