The Vietnamese dong has increased its attractiveness as a result of the
State Bank of Vietnam ’s monetary policies, SBV Governor Nguyen Van
Binh said.
“ Vietnam retained a stable foreign exchange rate
and forex market in a difficult context last year. The forex had
fluctuated less than 1 percent,” Binh said at an online discussion held
by the Government Web Portal chinhphu.vn in Hanoi on Jan. 12.
“Speculation
in the foreign currency market had reduced sharply, while people tended
to sell foreign currency to banks, thus improving liquidity in the
system,” he added.
The online discussion focused on issues of
monetary policy, interest, liquidity in the banking sector,
restructuring, foreign exchange and gold markets.
Liquidity has
been a headache for years. The average credit growth in the banking
system was 29.4 percent over the past 10 years, he said.
Besides,
capital utilisation structure at banks was incorrect because they
mobilised money for the short term while loans were mid- and long-term,
he said.
The SBV regulates that the rate of mid and long-term
loans at every bank should be less than 30 percent. However, in reality,
the rate was 60-70 percent, or even 100 percent, of banks’ total loans.
“Credit institutions coped with difficulties when the
Government implemented tighter monetary policies,” he said, adding that
the SBV and commercial banks were finding solutions for a lower interest
rate at a suitable level.
At the discussion, the governor
affirmed that the country has not yet had enough conditions to lower the
interest rate in the banking sector.
The lower interest rate is the urgent demand of people as well as hope of the Government and banks.
“However, lowering it depends on several conditions, including inflation and liquidity at banks,” he said.
The governor said the country saw a high inflation of 18.5 percent for 2011 despite CPI’s growth rate being reduced.
“We could not lower the interest rate immediately with such as high inflation rate.”
Earlier
at a press meeting in Hanoi , Binh said that in the first quarter of
the year, the central bank will maintain its interest cap.
“The SBV will supply money to credit institutions to increase their liquidity and facilitate business production activities.”
The
cap interest rate at 14 percent a year was expected to be lifted when
the SBV could better manage credit institutions’ liquidity, he said.
Accordingly,
the banking sector posted a credit growth of 13 percent last year,
representing almost one-third of the previous years’ figures.
Binh said tightening credit growth will help reduce machinery and equipment imports and the trade deficit.
The
central bank will continue supporting Vietnamese dong and stabilising
foreign currencies to ensure that exchange rate fluctuation would be
held at 2 to 3 percent.
Several people and organisations were concerned whether there would be a crisis in the banking sector or not.
Binh
confirmed that the sector’s restructuring was rooted from the demand to
change the country’s economic development model, not its weaknesses.
“A
restructuring of the whole economy will improve the quality instead of
quantity. It has been an urgent demand to resolve shortcomings in the
banking sector,” he said, adding that there will be five to eight banks
to be merged this year.
He also admitted that violations in the interest rate cap were prevalent due to a weakness in supervision.
“The SBV has drastically resolved the situation since September, but will promote the supervision this year.”
Binh
added that all activities violating SBV’s regulations, including
interest rate caps, will be illegal and unhealthy to competition. The
SBV will cooperate with public security forces to strictly punish
violations./.