Showing posts with label estate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label estate. Show all posts

Monday, January 24, 2011

Herd mentality adds to volatility of fluctuating real estate market

Construction of an apartment building in Ha Noi's Ha Dong District. Many incomplete apartments are bought by people who hope to re-sell their purchases at a profit. — VNA/ VNS Photo Tuan Anh

Construction of an apartment building in Ha Noi's Ha Dong District. Many incomplete apartments are bought by people who hope to re-sell their purchases at a profit. — VNA/ VNS Photo Tuan Anh

HA NOI — Vietnamese citizen Nguyen Hoai Nam bought a plot of land in Ba Vi District's Tan Linh Commune after hearing that the national administrative centre in Ba Dinh District would be moved to Ba Vi.

"I followed my friends and bought the property in the hopes that its price would increase much higher than what I had bought at VND800 million," Nam recalls.

Nam is not alone in his thinking.

It is not uncommon to see a number of investors pouring their money into buying land, following the advice of their relatives and friends.

Vice chairman of the Viet Nam Report Company Phung Hoang Co put forth a survey that found that nearly 62 per cent of the 500 questioned consumers in Ha Noi had bought real estate simply to resell it at a higher price.

"In many cases, herd mentality is a decisive factor to the fluctuating real estate market," said vice general secretary of the Association of Cities of Viet Nam Vu Thi Vinh.

She attributed the trend to insufficient information and a lack of understanding leading to many buyers who are then unable to analyse real changes in the market. Instead, they rely on the advice of acquaintances to buy land.

The Viet Nam Report survey also found that 44 per cent of buyers had invested their own money in buying property; 35 per cent borrowed from their friends and relatives and about 20 per cent used bank loans to buy property.

The desire to buy land has been boisterous in Ha Noi in the past months with projects spanning across the new urban areas of the capital's western region.

Analysts have attributed the trend to the expansion of the Lang-Hoa Lac Highway (now Thang Long Boulevard) and to an exhibition that focused on the capital's vision for development over the coming decades. The exhibition revealed that five satellite cities and the proposed Thang Long axis would link the Ba Vi region to the west of Ha Noi.

Former Vice Minister of Natural Resources and Environment Dang Hung Vo said the recent land fever in Ba Vi in particular and in the western region in general exposed the reality that both managers and investors were not professional.

"How can a project like Ba Vi, which is still waiting for planning approval, create an outbreak of land fever where several hundreds of investors rushed to buy land there?" said Vo.

He said land fever in Ba Vi did not follow market rules. Traders did not study information carefully but simply rushed into decisions because of the herd mentality.

Le Minh Hoang of the Ha Noi Real Estate Joint-Stock Company said most of the land fever actually deflated quickly because investors were short of information. And unfortunately, one negative consequence was wildly fluctuating real estate prices, he said.

Hoang added that the real estate market will be impossible to stablise if investors remain vague about information.

The problem, however, will hopefully be settled after the recent issuance of Government Decree 71, which imposes stricter rules on real estate investment.

Vo said the decree will help solve various issues, including the ways in which project developers raise capital from buyers and the regulations for the transfer of land-use rights, among others.

The decree is also expected to raise the market's transparency.

Vo said he hoped the decree would reject unprofessionalism and speculative investors who often spread misleading information to seek a profit. — VNS

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Strict lending policies hamper contractors

Housing developers are struggling to cope with banks' tightened lending policies.


The new regulations in tandem with construction materials' rising
prices is making it difficult for developers to survive as the real
estate market continues to chill for the second straight quarter.


A leader of the Vietnam Construction and Export-Import Corporation
(Vinaconex) said an increase in construction materials' prices, along
with banks' restricted lending policies, had made construction companies
broke, forcing them to liquidate.


Construction materials'
prices increased by 30 to 40 percent during the past few months while a
new chill in the property market caused bidders to abandon their
projects after their proposals concerning the adjustment of construction
materials' prices were refused by house owners.


The
procedures for State funded construction projects, concerning price
adjustments, takes a long time, making the supply of housing projects
lag behind schedule which in turn adversely impacts the real estate
market.


The prices of construction materials including steel, cement and housing equipment continue to soar.


Construction materials account for 40 to 70 percent of the total
estimated capital for building projects, according to the Institute
of Construction Economics .


Property markets primarily
depend on monetary and credit policies, according to a Ministry of
Construction report that was submitted to the Government Office.


Banks began increasing lending interest rates and applying greater
restrictions on mortgage loans starting in July, following a warning
from the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) that urged financial institutions
to be prudent with issuing loans for real estate projects.


The warning was issued in response to findings that real estate loans
accounted for more than 5 percent of the bad debts that had incurred at
several commercial banks in the country.


The SBV reduced
the short-term deposit proportion reserved for long-term loans from 40
percent to 30 percent and specified real estate loans as high risk.


Vinaconex deputy director Nguyen Dinh Thiet said commercial banks only
lent loans for up to 10 years, and total outstanding real estate loans
were restrained to 10 percent.


Commercial loans provide
the primary impetus for the property market, reports the Collier
International Company. Buyers are hesitating to borrow money from banks
to purchase homes, while banks increased their interest rates that range
from 17.5 to 18 percent per year.


Investors have begun to
secure capital from other sources including mobilising cash from
secondary investors and issuing bonds. Secondary investors are not so
interested in investing in housing projects, as the chill in the real
estate market continues./.

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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Strict lending policies hamper contractors

Housing developers are struggling to cope with banks' tightened lending policies.

The new regulations in tandem with construction materials' rising prices is making it difficult for developers to survive as the real estate market continues to chill for the second straight quarter.

A leader of the Viet Nam Construction and Export-Import Corporation (Vinaconex) said an increase in construction materials' prices, along with banks' restricted lending policies, had made construction companies broke, forcing them to liquidate.

Construction materials' prices increased by 30 to 40 per cent during the past few months while a new chill in the property market caused bidders to abandon their projects after their proposals concerning the adjustment of construction materials' prices were refused by houseowners.

The procedures for State funded construction projects, concerning price adjustments, takes a long time, making the supply of housing projects lag behind schedule which in turn adversely impacts the real estate market.

The prices of construction materials including steel, cement and housing equipment continue to soar.

Construction materials account for 40 to 70 per cent of the total estimated capital for building projects, according to the Institute of Construction Economics.

Property markets primarily depend on monetary and credit policies, according to a Ministry of Construction report that was submitted to the Government Office.

Banks began increasing lending interest rates and applying greater restrictions on mortgage loans starting in July, following a warning from the State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV) that urged financial institutions to be prudent with issuing loans for real estate projects.

The warning was issued in response to findings that real estate loans accounted for more than 5 per cent of the bad debts that had incurred at several commercial banks in the country.

The SBV reduced the short-term deposit proportion reserved for long-term loans from 40 per cent to 30 per cent and specified real estate loans as high risk.

Vinaconex deputy director Nguyen Dinh Thiet said commercial banks only lent loans for up to 10 years, and total outstanding real estate loans were restrained to 10 per cent.

Commercial loans provide the primary impetus for the property market, reports the Collier International Company. Buyers are hesitating to borrow money from banks to purchase homes, while banks increased their interest rates that range from 17.5 to 18 per cent per year.

Investors have begun to secure capital from other sources including mobilising cash from secondary investors and issuing bonds. Secondary investors are not so interested in investing in housing projects, as the chill in the real estate market continues.

 

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Vietnam’s real estate market stagnates

A deluge of development has left Vietnam swimming in apartments no one can afford



Workers at a construction site in downtown Ho Chi Minh City. Supply will increase on the local real estate and experts say this can put more pressure on prices.

The real estate market, especially the high-end aparment segment, has hit a rough spot recently as prices remain high in the face of abundant supply.

The actual demand for luxury property is very low, at the moment. Many developers have had to cut their prices and begin offering lots of perks to attract buyers. Despite these efforts, sales have sagged, according to Nguyen Manh Ha, director of the Construction Ministry’s Housing and Real Estate Market Management Department.

“This month only two people bought apartments,” said Nguyen Thu Ha, a salesperson from a real estate exchange center in Khuat Duy Tien Street in Hanoi. “Most people come here to check prices only.”

Many real estate exchange centers in the area are seeing the same situation, she said. Despite the slow trade, property prices remain beyond the financial grasp of many customers she explained.

In Ho Chi Minh City, only 14 percent of the luxury apartment supply was sold in the first eight months of this year. Meanwhile agents sold off 17 percent of midrange and 20 percent of low-end apartments, according to a recent survey conducted by the market research firm Cushman & Wakefield Vietnam.

The primary apartment market in Hanoi was generally not very vibrant in the second quarter. Only 670 units were sold, accounting for 48 percent of the primary supply, said Savills Vietnam, a UK-based research firm.

Hugo Slade, deputy director of Cushman & Wakefield Vietnam, attributed the stagnation to high real estate prices and high interest rates. Complicated borrowing procedures remain a major obstacle for those who cannot afford the inflated prices.

The price of luxury apartments stands at US$2,350-2,870 per square meter, while mid-range and low-end flats sell for $1,460- 1,860; and $780-810, respectively, according to the survey.

Nguyen Van Minh, general secretary of the Vietnam Property Association said the real estate market in Hanoi and some neighboring areas was very hot, when the National Assembly discussed the Hanoi zoning plan some months ago. Because the plan has still not been approved, the market has reverted to its previous state.

A supply surplus has only exacerbated the situation. According to the Ministry of Construction, 2,500 apartment projects are currently underway nationwide, including 800 in Hanoi, and 1,400 in Ho Chi Minh City.

A recent report from Savills Vietnam said there were 11,200 apartments available for sale in the southern city’s primary market in the second quarter, an increase of 24 percent compared to the first quarter. The company said about 28,500 apartments that are currently in the works will be completed between 2010 to 2012. An estimated 5,800 apartments will become available in the second half of 2010.

Minh from the property association, said the government has facilitated the construction of low-income apartments, and many projects have been implemented. Thus, many apartments will become available for sale by the end of this year.

The real estate consulting firm CB Richard Ellis, sales of mid-range and affordable development will continue to flourish in the coming months.

According to the Ho Chi Minh City Real Estate Association, mid-range housing will be the key real estate product both this year and the next. Housing products priced between VND12- 15 million per square meter will grow the most because both homebuyers and investors can afford them.

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Monday, November 22, 2010

Central bank eyes foreign currency in property deals

The State Bank of Vietnam's branch in HCMC this week will inspect the use of foreign currencies in real estate transactions in the locality.

Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy director of the branch, said the SBV's move was aimed not only to ensure the serious implementation of Vietnamese laws but also to protect real estate buyers from losses caused by forex fluctuations.

The branch has already prepared a list of real estate companies eligible for inspection to be carried out without any advance notification.

This week, inspections will focus on real-estate companies allegedly using the US dollar in their business.

The SBV hopes to check two or three real estate companies a week.

Real estate owners will be penalised at a level heavier than current fines if any violation is discovered, according to Minh.

According to Vietnam's current laws, all transactions and payments in the country must not be implemented in foreign currencies, except those that are carried out with credit organisations, and payment forms that require intermediaries.

However, the use of foreign currencies including the US dollars was still very popular in big cities, especially in real estate transactions, Minh said.

Most transactions related to high-grade properties include villas or luxurious apartments now using foreign currencies, particularly the greenback, according to Bui Tien Thang, deputy director of the Sai Gon Commercial Real Estate Joint Stock Company (Sacomreal).

There were many reasons that made real estate owners prefer the greenback to the domestic currency (Vietnamese dong), Thang said.

Most foreign investors want to be paid in US dollars because such a payment form is familiar to them.

In addition, their partners often use the US dollar as they have to contribute their capital to the projects.

As a result, the price of finished real estate products has to be established in the US dollar, which facilitates payments among the involved sides.

Thang, however, said that a main reason that the greenback was used in real estate payments was that project owners would not have to suffer losses as the Vietnamese dong will likely be devalued.

Many individual investors, most of them rent their houses, have also wanted to fix their rental charges in US dollar, but they then received dong. With this method, they expected to keep their capital intact, he said.

The current penalty of VND30 million maximum applied to violators is too low, which allowed investors to continue using foreign currencies.

An official of the HCMC Real Estate Association also admitted that the association suggested that real estate companies should not use the foreign currency in establishing product prices. However, the latter insisted on their option of the US dollar in payments.

Over the past years, authorised agencies have checked and penalised only consumer goods traders who used the foreign currency in their transactions.

 

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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Central bank eyes foreign currency in real estate deals

The State Bank of Vietnam's branch in HCM City this week will inspect
the use of foreign currencies in real estate transactions in the
locality.


Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy director of the branch, said the SBV's move
was aimed not only to ensure the serious implementation of Vietnamese
laws but also to protect real estate buyers from losses caused by forex
fluctuations.


The branch has already prepared a list of
real estate companies eligible for inspection to be carried out without
any advance notification.


This week, inspections will focus on real-estate companies allegedly using the US dollar in their business.


The SBV hopes to check two or three real estate companies a week.


Real estate owners will be penalised at a level heavier than current fines if any violation is discovered, according to Minh.


According to Vietnam's current laws, all transactions and payments in
the country must not be implemented in foreign currencies, except those
that are carried out with credit organisations, and payment forms that
require intermediaries.


However, the use of foreign
currencies including the US dollars was still very popular in big
cities, especially in real estate transactions, Minh said.


Most transactions related to high-grade properties include villas or
luxurious apartments now using foreign currencies, particularly the
greenback, according to Bui Tien Thang, deputy director of the Sai Gon
Commercial Real Estate Joint Stock Company (Sacomreal).


There were many reasons that made real estate owners prefer the
greenback to the domestic currency (Vietnamese dong), Thang said.


Most foreign investors want to be paid in US dollars because such a payment form is familiar to them.


In addition, their partners often use the US dollar as they have to contribute their capital to the projects.


As a result, the price of finished real estate products has to be
established in the US dollar, which facilitates payments among the
involved sides.


Thang, however, said that a main reason
that the greenback was used in real estate payments was that project
owners would not have to suffer losses as the Vietnamese dong will
likely be devalued.


Many individual investors, most of
them rent their houses, have also wanted to fix their rental charges in
US dollar, but they then received dong. With this method, they expected
to keep their capital intact, he said.


The current penalty
of 30 million VND maximum applied to violators is too low, which
allowed investors to continue using foreign currencies.


An
official of the HCM City Real Estate Association also admitted that the
association suggested that real estate companies should not use the
foreign currency in establishing product prices. However, the latter
insisted on their option of the US dollar in payments.


Over the past years, authorised agencies have checked and penalised only
consumer goods traders who used the foreign currency in their
transactions./.

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Central bank eyes foreign currency in real estate deals

HCM CITY — The State Bank of Viet Nam's branch in HCM City this week will inspect the use of foreign currencies in real estate transactions in the locality.

Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy director of the branch, said the SBV's move was aimed not only to ensure the serious implementation of Vietnamese laws but also to protect real estate buyers from losses caused by forex fluctuations.

The branch has already prepared a list of real estate companies eligible for inspection to be carried out without any advance notification.

This week, inspections will focus on real-estate companies allegedly using the US dollar in their business.

The SBV hopes to check two or three real estate companies a week.

Real estate owners will be penalised at a level heavier than current fines if any violation is discovered, according to Minh.

According to Viet Nam's current laws, all transactions and payments in the country must not be implemented in foreign currencies, except those that are carried out with credit organisations, and payment forms that require intermediaries.

However, the use of foreign currencies including the US dollars was still very popular in big cities, especially in real estate transactions, Minh said.

Most transactions related to high-grade properties include villas or luxurious apartments now using foreign currencies, particularly the greenback, according to Bui Tien Thang, deputy director of the Sai Gon Commercial Real Estate Joint Stock Company (Sacomreal).

There were many reasons that made real estate owners prefer the greenback to the domestic currency (dong), Thang said.

Most foreign investors want to be paid in US dollars because such a payment form is familiar to them.

In addition, their partners often use the US dollar as they have to contribute their capital to the projects.

As a result, the price of finished real estate products has to be established in the US dollar, which facilitates payments among the involved sides.

Thang, however, said that a main reason that the greenback was used in real estate payments was that project owners would not have to suffer losses as the Vietnamese dong will likely be devalued.

Many individual investors, most of them rent their houses, have also wanted to fix their rental charges in US dollar, but they then received dong. With this method, they expected to keep their capital intact, he said.

The current penalty of VND30 million maximum applied to violators is too low, which allowed investors to continue using foreign currencies.

An official of the HCM City Real Estate Association also admitted that the association suggested that real estate companies should not use the foreign currency in establishing product prices. However, the latter insisted on their option of the US dollar in payments.

Over the past years, authorised agencies have checked and penalised only consumer goods traders who used the foreign currency in their transactions.— VNS

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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Tightened credit chills real estate sales

Work underway on a low-cost housing project in the northern province of Vinh Phuc. Commercial banks are tightening their real estate lending policies, sending a new chill over the property market. — VNA/VNS Photo Tuan Anh<br />

Work underway on a low-cost housing project in the northern province of Vinh Phuc. Commercial banks are tightening their real estate lending policies, sending a new chill over the property market. — VNA/VNS Photo Tuan Anh

HA NOI — Commercial banks are tightening their real estate lending policies, sending a new chill over the property market.

Since July, banks have hiked lending interest rates and applied greater restrictions on mortgage loans, following a warning from the State Bank of Viet Nam urging greater caution on loans for real estate projects.

The warning was a response to the fact that real estate loans had risen to account for over 5 per cent of the bad debts of several commercial banks.

The real estate market contained high risks since many investors had leveraged existing projects as collateral to finance new projects, said Asia Commercial Bank credit council chairman Pham Trung Cang.

Speculators were also financing the acquisition of homes and apartments in order to obtain additional capital for investment, allowing one housing project or unit to be used as collateral for a loan up to three times, Cang said.

Driven by this speculative fever, the prices of homes and apartments have increased substantially, and unequally among cities and provinces. For instance, in the last quarter of the year, the cost of a plot of land in the western part of Ha Noi rose by 30 per cent between December and July, while prices in HCM City remained fairly constant.

The risk to banks has become significant. In recent years, loans to build, purchase or improve homes have accounted for 35-50 per cent of outstanding commercial bank loans made to individual borrowers.

As of July 31, total outstanding mortgage loans totalled VND210.7 trillion (US$10.8 billion), an increase of about 14.4 per cent from December 31 of last year, the ministry said. But loans for new housing projects, meanwhile, actually fell by 2.35 per cent during the period.

To cool down real estate lending, banks have recently hiked real estate interest rates from a low of 15 per cent to a high of 20 per cent, according to the Ministry of Construction.

But, in a report submitted to the Government Office last week, the ministry complained that tighter credit posed major obstacle to further real estate development and was adding to the instability of the real estate market.

In early 2009, the report said, the availability of low interest loans under the Government's economic stimulus package caused a short term spike in real estate prices in Ha Noi. But, since the end of the subsidised-interest loan programme, the real estate market has remained quiet, and in the third quarter of this year, threatened to become frozen due to tighter credit policies.

The report urged greater flexibility in regulating the real estate market.

About 2,500 housing projects are currently under construction, according the ministry figures, including 800 projects in Ha Noi, 1,400 in HCM City, 260 in Hai Phong, and 120 in Da Nang. — VNS

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Thursday, October 7, 2010

Ha Noi property market goes west

The Nam Trung Yen apartment building in the west of Ha Noi's Trung Hoa District. The western areas have great opportunities and resources for real estate development projects. — VNA/VNS Photo Tuan Anh

The Nam Trung Yen apartment building in the west of Ha Noi's Trung Hoa District. The western areas have great opportunities and resources for real estate development projects. — VNA/VNS Photo Tuan Anh

HA NOI — Ha Noi's western areas have great opportunities and resources for real estate development projects, according to real estate experts.

Dang Hung Vo, former deputy minister of Natural Resources and Environment, told participants at a recent workshop focused on real estate and investment opportunities in the west of Ha Noi that investors and individuals had shown an interest in developing the western part of the city.

The decision to develop Ha Noi towards the west was decided by the Government and city authorities several years ago. This tendency towards westward development was confirmed again in the city's recent master construction plan.

Vo said the master plan of expanded Ha Noi was divided into two zones: nuclear urban area and neighbouring regions.

An overall plan for Ha Noi was established to expand these areas. The inner city area will stretch from the left bank of the Red River to the second ring road, reaching a population of about 1.2 million by 2030. High-rise buildings are restricted in this area.

The extensions of the nuclear urban centre, including a chain of urban areas along the fourth ring road and the southern region of the Red River, are expected to reach a population of 1.25 million people by 2030. Investors are being encouraged to build high-rise buildings in this area to shift the population from the inner city.

The series of urban areas to the north of the Red River will consist of Me Linh District, with about 0.45 million people, Dong Anh District, with 0.55 million and Long Bien-Gia Lam districts, with about 0.7 million by 2030.

Five urban satellite towns will include Hoa Lac, Son Tay, Xuan Mai, Phu Xuyen, Phu Minh and Soc Son. Each satellite town will include one or more specific characteristics to support and share the need for urban housing, high-quality training, industry and services, and job creation.

Duong Duc Tuan, deputy director of the Ha Noi Planning and Architecture Department, affirmed that with such development, the western area of Ha Noi would have many opportunities and resources to carry out real estate investment projects. He added that land funds were available for infrastructure projects in the form of build-transfer (BT) and build-operate-transfer (BOT) in this area.

According to many experts, finance problems have posed a challenge. Capital resources from official development assistance (ODA) and foreign direct investment (FDI) are currently difficult to mobilise and the State budget cannot afford the estimated US$70 billion investment.

As a result, capacity to implement the master plan can only rely on resources from the land fund. Appropriate mechanisms and policies should be developed to encourage real estate investors to get involved in the implementation of the master plan in combination with efficient use of land resources.

Land bubble

In the first quarter this year, a land bubble phenomenon occurred in the area around Ba Vi which saw land prices increase unexpectedly. Increases varied between 35 per cent to 45 per cent depending on the specific area, according to the Kim Bai and Ba Vi administrative centres.

During this land fever, land in the west of Ha Noi fetched high prices. For example, land in Van Khe, Ha Dong District ranged from VND70 million ($3,589) to 80 million ($4,102) per sq.m, and in Nam An Khanh the price was around VND30 million ($1,538) per sq.m.

However, fewer transactions are now taking place because many land traders have fled the area. Land prices have fallen by 70 per cent compared with peak land fever prices.

Vo said land fever in Ba Vi did not follow market rules. Traders did not carefully study information about the land but simply rushed to buy land under the herd mentality. Unfortunate consequences are inevitable, he said.

Nguyen Tran Nam, deputy minister of Construction, said commodity prices would follow the market rule which centred around the law of supply and demand and the law of value. Although real estate was a special kind of good, it still complied with economic laws and other factors.

Authorised agencies could regulate prices by increasing supply, he said.

Currently, major capital for the real estate market comes from banks, but financial institutions are beginning to narrow the flow of capital with strict regulations in order to prevent a real estate bubble.

The Ministry of Construction has proposed potential channels for mobilisation of capital for the real estate market in the future, such as real estate trust funds and savings funds on housing. — VNS

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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Banks to face stricter rule on real estate loans

HCMC – Banks have already refrained from making property loans due to difficulties in raising middle and long-term funds and their customers will find it even harder to gain access to real estate loans when a new central bank rule takes effect in early October.

Circular 13/2010/TT-NHNN issued by the State Bank of Vietnam requires the risk reserve ratio for real estate and stock loans to rise to 250% of the loans from the current 100%. This means a higher proportion of risk reserve for property loans will affect the capital adequacy ratio (CAR) of banks, at 9% or higher.

Those banks acting as retail ones are in the position of boosting real estate loans given strong demand. To meet the CAR requirement, lenders will have no choice but to either reduce real estate and stock loans, or increase their capital.

The general director of a joint-stock bank said that if giving out a property loan of VND40, the total amount must be set at VND100 to keep the CAR unchanged. Meanwhile, he added, for other sectors where a risk reserve ratio below 250% applies, banks can lend more than VND40 given the same amount of VND100.

Making loans for customers in sectors where the possibility of loan defaults is high will affect profits, so lender banks must consider limiting real estate and stock loans, and boosting credit for clients in the manufacturing and trading sectors, he noted.

That explains why in recent weeks, banks have launched incentives to corporate enterprises. For example, An Binh Commercial Bank last week opened a center for supporting small and medium enterprises, Asia Commercial Bank has doubled the credit line for import and export firms to US$100 million, and Vietnam International Bank gives a credit line of VND1.5 trillion for wood processors.

The head of the individual customers division of a joint-stock bank said banks would restrict real estate loans. “The new regulation will lead banks’ capital cost to increase, so interest rates for real estate loans should be hiked,” he added.

The Vietnam Banks Association acting on behalf of 14 institutions has written to the central bank asking for a reconsideration of unreasonable points in Circular 13, including the higher risk requirement for real estate and stock loans. The association has even suggested postponing this circular.

The Prime Minister last week asked the central bank to reconsider the circular following the Vietnam Banks Association’s proposal. The central bank has told banks to clarify the difficulties they might face when adhering to the new circular. Reports must be sent to the central bank by late this month.

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Monday, August 30, 2010

Real estate trading inspections begin

HA NOI — A delegation led by officials from the ministries of Public Security and Construction has started to inspect the operation of real-estate transaction floors in Ha Noi and HCM City.

The main subjects of the inspection are floors managed by groups, corporations and companies that are carrying out the construction of new urban areas.

The inspection would focus on the opening and operation of property transaction floors, said Pham Gia Yen, chief inspector of the Ministry of Construction.

"The inspection will be carried out according to a plan which was ratified at the beginning of this year and will take 30 days to complete," said an official from the inspectorate.

"At this time, only floors in Ha Noi and HCM City will be investigated," he said.

Based on a report to be compiled following the investigation, the Ministry of Construction and relevant authorities will plan for better conditions and more information to amend policies to manage the real estate market and transaction floors.

Difficulties that are encountered during trading will also be reported and solutions will be found.

"The investigation is necessary. It will make the market more transparent," said To Chi Cong, director of Asia Real, a member of Asia Invest Group.

"I think the investigation will help policymarkers re-appraise the criteria needed to set up a transaction floor and will also play an important roll in managing them," Cong said.

Recently, around 4,000 floors have been set up across the country but following appraisals, many have been found to operate ineffectively. — VNS

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