Central bank takes looser monetary measures

The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) has relaxed monetary measures in the context of sharp declines in the foreign exchange rate in recent days.

A bank teller counts the dollar at a transaction office in Hanoi. The rapid cooling of the exchange rate creates conditions for the SBV to implement a looser monetary policy, in order to support liquidity for the banking system and the economy. (Photo: baodautu.vn)
A bank teller counts the dollar at a transaction office in Hanoi. The rapid cooling of the exchange rate creates conditions for the SBV to implement a looser monetary policy, in order to support liquidity for the banking system and the economy. (Photo: baodautu.vn)

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) has relaxed monetary measures in the context of sharp declines in the foreign exchange rate in recent days.

Specifically, the SBV has stopped offering treasury bills since this week. This was the first time in many months that the SBV has not issued new bills.

The SBV this week also continued to reduce the bill interest rate from 4.2% per year to 4.15% per year. This was the third time this month that the SBV reduced the interest rate on bills. Previously, on August 5, the SBV cut the rate from 4.5% per year to 4.25% per year. The rate was then further reduced to 4.2% on August 20.

The SBV still maintains a liquidity support through open market operation (OMO) channel with more than 5.98 trillion VND at a term of 14 days and an interest rate of 4.25%. Compared to previous trading sessions, the OMO term doubled, while the interest rate remained unchanged.

Previously, the SBV also reduced the OMO interest rate from 4.5% to 4.25% in the session of August 5.

After continuously maintaining a net withdrawal of liquidity since the beginning of June 2024, the SBV this week injected a net amount of more than 9.1 trillion VND into the banking system.

The SBV’s move to gradually reduce interest rates and stopping treasury bill issuance early this week shows the SBV's orientation to support the liquidity of the banking system, in order to contribute to establishing a lower interbank interest rate level shortly.

At the same time, increasing the OMO loan term while keeping the interest rate unchanged also shows the SBV's initiative in reducing the interbank interest rate level.

The SBV has continuously implemented monetary loosing measures in the context of sharp declines in the exchange rate in recent days.

On the interbank market, the USD/VND exchange rate fell below 25,000 VND last week and continued to fall in this week. Since the beginning of August, the rate has decreased by 1.4%.

The USD exchange rate listed at commercial banks has also continuously decreased in recent weeks, to the range of 25,000 VND for selling and 24,700 VND for buying. Since the beginning of August, the dollar price at banks has decreased by nearly 400 VND, equivalent to about 1.5%.

The exchange rate on the unofficial market has also continuously declined sharply and is currently trading at 25,200 VND - 25,300 VND per dollar.

The rate on the unofficial market has started to fall sharply in the past month, especially in the first half of August. Compared to the peak of nearly 26,000 VND set at the end of June, the dollar price on the unofficial market is currently 700 VND lower, equivalent to a decrease of about 2.7%.

According to analysts, the rapid cooling of the exchange rate creates conditions for the SBV to implement a looser monetary policy, in order to support liquidity for the banking system and the economy.

"In the context of positive macroeconomic signs, along with the SBV’s direction, liquidity is expected to be more stable and abundant, which can help interbank interest rates decrease again," analysts of the Vietcombank Securities Company (VCBS) commented in a recent macroeconomic report./.

VNA

See more

Production activities at a centrifugal concrete pillar manufacturing plant (Photo: VNA)

Rising FDI, investor optimism reinforce Vietnam’s appeal for inflows

Commenting on Vietnam’s FDI performance in 2025, Dr. Nguyen Quoc Viet, a public policy expert at the University of Economics under the Vietnam National University, Hanoi, said that the strong growth in disbursed capital, particularly additional funding for ongoing projects, reflects sustained confidence among international investors.

An illustration of the North-South high-speed railway project (Image created by AI)

Vietnam fast-tracks key national railway projects

With the completion of a key legal framework, Vietnam's major national railway projects have kicked off the new year of 2026 with an accelerated implementation phase, notably the North-South high-speed railway and the Lao Cai-Hanoi-Hai Phong railway line

The signing ceremony of a cooperation agreement between Star Fintech and Lao Airlines in Vientiane on January 14 (Photo: VNA)

Vietnamese firm provides digital airline ticket payment services in Laos

Under the agreement, payments for Lao Airlines tickets will be made through the Umoney e-wallet provided by Star Fintech. The partnership marks an important step forward in Laos’ aviation digital transformation roadmap, while helping remove long-standing monopolistic barriers in the country’s airline payment system.

A corner of Ho Chi Minh City (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam gears up for full-force growth push in 2026

A growth path for 2026 has been outlined in line with the National Assembly’s resolution setting a target of more than 10% expansion. Under this scenario, gross domestic product (GDP) would need to rise 9.1% in the first quarter and 10.2% in the second.

OCOP products are displayed at the Autumn Fair 2025 (Photo: VNA)

Domestic demand drives OCOP expansion

The domestic market has seen a shift in consumer awareness. While locally made goods were once viewed as secondary choices, improvements in quality and transparency have helped OCOP products become a preferred option in many households.

A Vietjet Air aircraft (Photo: VNA)

Vietjet remains among world’s safest airlines

Vietjet Air has consistently maintained AirlineRatings’ highest safety rating of seven out of seven stars since 2018, underscoring its sustained efforts to ensure safe and reliable journeys for passengers.

Illustrative photo (Photo: VNA)

Vietjet to transport apricot, peach blossoms on Lunar New Year occasion

Vietjet Air will transport apricot and peach blossoms on domestic flights from/to Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Da Nang, Da Lat and Hai Phong from January 15 to February 28 on the occasion of the Lunar New Year (Tet) festival, at 450,000 VND (17.13 USD) per bundle (excluding taxes and fees).

The National Spring Fair 2026 will take place at the Vietnam Exposition Centre from February 2 to 8. (Photo: VNA)

National Spring Fair 2026 to boost trade, strengthen value chains

The proactive engagement of Vietnam’s trade offices overseas is also expected to contribute to the success of the fair. From mid-January, these offices have launched coordinated promotion and matchmaking efforts, inviting foreign partners to attend the fair as a gateway to Vietnam’s market, manufacturing capacity and investment environment.

The Song Khoai Industrial Park (Quang Ninh province) attracts numerous enterprises for investment and production, creating jobs for local workers. (Photo: VNA)

Quang Ninh removes bottlenecks to attract 3 billion USD in FDI

Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee Bui Van Khang said that Quang Ninh aims to draw 101 non-state budget domestic investment projects with total registered capital of nearly 569 trillion VND (21.6 billion USD), and 3 billion USD in FDI capital in 2026.

Average economic growth of 6.3% per year, together with an estimated 8.02% expansion in 2025, has placed Vietnam among the world’s most dynamic economies. (Photo: VNA)

Indonesian scholar praises Vietnam as model of sustainable, inclusive growth

These achievements so far stem from the consistent leadership of the Communist Party of Vietnam, the spirit of self-reliance and resilience, and strong national solidarity, laying a solid foundation for the country’s strategic development goals towards 2030 and the vision to 2045, according to a senior researcher at the Centre for Southeast Asian Studies.

Vietnam – India trade hit historic high of nearly 16.46 billion USD in 2025. (Illustrative photo: VNA)

Vietnam – India trade sets new record at nearly 16.5 billion USD

India supplies key inputs such as iron and steel, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, textiles and garments, animal feed and aquatic products, while Vietnam exports technology-intensive goods, electronics, textiles and garments, chemicals, wood products, footwear, spices, coffee and pepper.

Experts discuss at the event (Photo courtesy of the organiser)

Venture capital falls for fifth straight year in 2025

This downturn continues the trend of decline that began in 2021 amid tighter global liquidity and a structural reset in investor risk appetite, according to the 'Vietnam Tech & Venture Capital Outlook 2025' report published by VinVentures.