Viet Nam credit growth rises

Thursday, Mar 24, 2016 08:20

Transactions at the Viet Nam Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development's branch in Quang Tri Province. The lending interest rate was stable during the month, but the deposit interest rate was on an upward trend. — VNA/VNS Photo Hoang Hung
HA NOI (Biz Hub) — Credit growth by February 20 rose 0.39 per cent while capital mobilisation increased 0.34 per cent against December last year, a government report released early this week said.

Compared with the same period last year, credit increased 0.96 per cent and capital mobilisation inched up 0.05 per cent.

The report said the lending interest rate was stable during the months, but the deposit interest rate was on an upward trend, especially for medium- and long-term deposits, as commercial banks tried to attract idle money from local people after Tet to restructure their capital sources, in order to meet rising medium- and long-term capital demands during the remaining months of the year.

After staying out of an interest hike race of small- and medium-sized banks early this year, all major banks such as Vietinbank, Vietcombank and BIDV have now joined it.

Vietcombank recently increased the interest rate for deposits with terms of more than 12 months from six per cent to 6.5 per cent per year. A 0.2 per cent hike has also been applied on short-term deposits, pushing up the rate to 4.8 per cent for two-month deposits, five per cent for three-month deposits and 5.4 per cent for six-month deposits.

Vietinbank also quoted a 6.8 per cent interest rate for 12-month to 24-month terms, up from six per cent earlier. The bank has also increased the interest for short-term deposits by 0.3 per cent.

The same trend is seen at BIDV, which has increased the interest rate by roughly 0.3 per cent for short-term deposits and 0.2 per cent for nine-month to 12-month deposits.

After this move, the interest rate gap for long-term deposits between small and large banks has been reduced to 0.8 to one per cent from 1.5 to 1.8 per cent. Small banks often have to list higher interest rates than large banks to lure depositors.

Banks said the interest rate hike was not because of poor liquidity, but to have enough capital to fund medium- and long-term projects.

Director of Orient Commercial Bank (OCB) Nguyen Dinh Tung said if liquidity was poor, banks must attract short-term deposits to deal with the shortfall. Tung said interest rates would be on an upward trend, adding that the rise would help banks readily meet the expected rising capital demand in the next few months as credit was expected to rise by 18 to 20 per cent this year. — VNS

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