Showing posts with label rates percent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rates percent. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Vietnam’s banks asked to lower deposit rates to 11 pct

Vietnam’s banks asked to lower deposit rates to 11 pctThe Vietnam Banks Association has asked members to reduce deposit rates to no more than 11 percent by Oct. 15 from 11.2 percent, according to a statement on the central bank’s website.

For non-term deposits and deposits of less than three months, the association asked commercial banks to make a bigger reduction to create a “suitable” interest-rate curve to attract long-term funds, according to the statement. Members were also asked to lower dollar-deposit rates and to cut borrowing costs to spur lending, according to the statement.

The Southeast Asian nation’s government has been asking commercial banks to increase lending to support the economy and meet a target for 25 percent credit growth this year. The State Bank of Vietnam on Sept. 28 allowed lenders to use 25 percent of non-term deposits made by businesses for loans. Bank credit has grown 19.27 percent from the start of the year to Sept. 27.

Vietnam’s gross domestic product may expand 6.7 percent this year, surpassing a target of 6.5 percent, Nguyen Xuan Phuc, chairman of the Government Office said Sept. 30. The government in May asked the State Bank of Vietnam to lower deposit rates to 10 percent and cut borrowing costs to 12 percent to spur economic growth.

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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Vietnam’s banks asked to lower deposit rates to 11 pct

Vietnam’s banks asked to lower deposit rates to 11 pctThe Vietnam Banks Association has asked members to reduce deposit rates to no more than 11 percent by Oct. 15 from 11.2 percent, according to a statement on the central bank’s website.

For non-term deposits and deposits of less than three months, the association asked commercial banks to make a bigger reduction to create a “suitable” interest-rate curve to attract long-term funds, according to the statement. Members were also asked to lower dollar-deposit rates and to cut borrowing costs to spur lending, according to the statement.

The Southeast Asian nation’s government has been asking commercial banks to increase lending to support the economy and meet a target for 25 percent credit growth this year. The State Bank of Vietnam on Sept. 28 allowed lenders to use 25 percent of non-term deposits made by businesses for loans. Bank credit has grown 19.27 percent from the start of the year to Sept. 27.

Vietnam’s gross domestic product may expand 6.7 percent this year, surpassing a target of 6.5 percent, Nguyen Xuan Phuc, chairman of the Government Office said Sept. 30. The government in May asked the State Bank of Vietnam to lower deposit rates to 10 percent and cut borrowing costs to 12 percent to spur economic growth.

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Sunday, January 16, 2011

Banks expected to reduce interest rates

Commercial banks are expected to lower interest rates on deposits and
loans in compliance with the State Bank of Vietnam's Circular 19, which
took effect on October 1.


The circular, issued on September 27, amended content in Circular 13 on capital-adequacy ratios.


The major adjustment is the redefinition of deposits, which would ease the pressure on banks to mobilise funds.


Because deposits from the State Treasury are counted in the banks'
mobilisation funds for lending, banks would be able to expand the number
of deposits.


Commercial banks' demand deposits from the State Treasury this year were estimated at 57 trillion VND (2.94 billion USD).


That amount is considered to be sufficient to use as a cheap source of
capital, and to balance the high interest rates on mobilised capital.


The circular also allows banks to use 25 percent of
non-term deposits from enterprises as a source of funding for lending.
It can be used because this source of non-term deposit is often stable
at 20 percent to 30 percent.


Three months of loans from other credit institutions can be added to funds for lending, according to the circular.


Small banks will be able to more easily access cheap capital from
larger banks, with the current interbank interest rate ranging from 8 to
9 percent.


After the circular took effect on October 1, the market showed signs of lower interest rates.


For example, Dai A Bank has eased deposit rates by 0.14 percent to 0.2 percent per year.


Customers with deposits in Vietnam dong for a one-month term and US
dollars for one to two months would be entitled to get interest rates of
10.95 percent per year, and 3.75 percent per year, respectively.


Nam A Bank has announced a lending programme of up to 1 trillion VND
(51.5 million USD) for small – and medium – sized enterprises'liquid
capital at interest rates of 13 percent for dong and 5 percent for the
US dollar.


Western Bank has lowered loan rates for
small enterprises by 1 percent, and transaction fees for the first three
months by 30 percent.


An Binh Bank has given priority to small enterprises by offering an annual 1 percent rate lower.


Phuong Dong Bank has cut car loan rates by 0.5 percent.


The Vietnam Banks Association (VNBA) has recently proposed that
commercial banks cut down highest deposit interest rate from 11.2
percent per year to 11 percent.


VNBA has also
suggested that banks slash the demand deposit interest rate from the
common rate of 4.8 percent to ease business expenses, which would lower
lending interest rates.


VNBA said that the deposit
rate for US dollars at commercial banks, at 4.7 percent to 5.2 percent
per year, is an emerging trend. The rates are currently very high in
comparison to the international market.


Therefore,
VNBA has urged commercial banks to reduce US-dollar deposit rates to
create a balance with dong-deposit rates, creating conditions for dong
interest rates to drop.


Le Tham Duong, head of the
business administration department of HCM City University of Banking,
said because the total outstanding loan growth had been quite low, banks
were entering an output race that would lead to the fall of both
deposit and loan interest rates in the near future.


Total trading volume in Vietnamese dong was 65.93 trillion VND (3.38
billion USD) during the final week last month, down 29.55 percent
against the previous week, according to a report issued by the State
Bank of Vietnam.


The dramatic decrease in interbank
trading signals that liquidity at banks has improved after the central
bank loosened capital regulations through the amendment of Circular 13
taking effect last week.


During the past two months, the trading volume hovered around 90-100 trillion VND (4.61-5.12 billion USD).


Average interbank trading increased slightly by 0.13-0.19 percent for
three month loans. Interbank trading has increased on average by
6.77-8.52 percent per year. Interest rates for loans that exceed three
months were down 0.06-0.48 percent to about 10.12-10.55 percent.


During the same period, total trading volume in the US dollar was also
15.37 percent to 2.52 billion USD. Interest rates for the dollar loans
were about 0.33-1.43 percent per year.


As of
September 27, credit growth in the banking industry was 19.27 percent.
Total loan allocation for property was 218 trillion VND (11.18 billion
USD), up 18 percent, loans for securities were up 19.8 percent to reach
15 trillion VND (769.23 million USD), loans for consumers increased by
19.7 percent to 151 trillion VND (7.74 billion USD).


Loans for agricultural and rural development and small and medium enterprises were up about 19-20 percent./.

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Saturday, January 8, 2011

Banks turn cautious about rate cuts

HANOI - Banks in Vietnam have received another call to lower interest rates, but neither the lenders nor the central bank are expecting any cuts to be large, said economists.

The Vietnam Banks Association, which acts as a mediator between the State Bank of Vietnam and lenders, called on banks last Wednesday for the third time in the past six months to cut dong deposit rates, this time to 11 percent from 11.2 percent by Oct. 15.

The association referred to amendments the central bank made to a new set of banking safety rules last Tuesday, suggesting that they would make it easier in future to raise deposits.

But the industry association had previously urged banks to slash deposit rates to 10 percent and lending rates to 12 percent by the end of September, and the new target of 11 percent appeared to reflect an understanding that macroeconomic developments were making it hard to bring rates down by much.

The association's request came as the Ministry of Planning and Investment said economic growth would reach 6.7 percent this year, exceeding the official target of 6.5 percent.

September annual inflation hit 8.92 percent, quickening for the first time in half a year.

"With current market movements, the recent decrease in interest rates is positive, but they cannot drop much more," the newspaper Vietnam Investment Review quoted government adviser Tran Du Lich as saying.

Many lenders considered the central bank's original set of safety rules too stringent. Lich said the amendments may not have a direct impact on rates, but they aimed to give banks with low liquidity more time to prepare for new requirements.

The central bank was also urging lenders to cut rates to help spur economic growth, but its enthusiasm appeared curbed by the 1.31 percent surge in consumer prices in September.

"Monetary policy needs to guarantee the two targets of boosting economic growth and containing inflation are met. It is necessary to cut interest rates, but it requires time and gradual steps", Nguyen Dong Tien, deputy governor of the State Bank of Vietnam, said last week.

But Le Dang Doanh, an independent economist, warned that a minor cut in rates would not be enough.

"Vietnam's economic growth this year has been fueled by public investment and an increase in exports. If interest rates remain high, businesses, especially those in the private sector, will feel the heat early next year," he said.

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