VCCI suggests central bank reconsider cash loan proposal

Hanoi (VNA) - The Vietnam Chamber of
Commerce and Industry (VCCI) has suggested the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV)
reconsider a proposal on limiting unsecured personal loans in cash by consumer
finance companies.
The move was made after the SBV recently
released a draft circular to amend Circular No. 43/2016/TT-NHNN stipulating
consumer lending by financial companies.
The proposed changes under the draft circular
include limiting unsecured personal loans in cash to existing customers with
good credit and no overdue debt; and limiting the maximum amount of such cash
loans to 30 percent of total loans.
In financial companies, cash loans are one of
the main products besides instalment loans and credit cards. Target customers
of these product packages are more than 50 percent of the country’s population
who do not have a bank account and have an average income of only 3-5 million
VND (129-215 USD) per month, depending on the requirements of each company.
As explained by the SBV, cash loans are at high
risk of becoming non-performing loans (NPLs) as they don’t require collateral
and declaration of borrowing purposes. With easy requirements and simple
procedures, cash loans are an easy way to develop credit even though lending
interest rates are much higher than those of banks.
Therefore, to ensure consumer lending for
sustainable, healthy and efficient development, the SBV said cash loans should
be limited to finance companies’ existing customers with good credit history
and no overdue debt.
However, according to the VCCI, the SBV should
explain more clearly the necessity of the regulations as no statistics on NPLs
of consumer finance companies have been released yet.
Especially, the VCCI noted, the application of the
new regulations should be scrutinised when the Government is taking measures to
fight loan sharks.
“Should the regulations be applied as it will increase
costs of financial companies, making it more difficult and expensive for
borrowers to access to consumer loans?” the VCCI asked.
Experts also said though the proposed
regulations would contribute to controlling bad debts, it would cause the
Government difficulty in implementing its policy to fight loan sharks.
According to banking expert Nguyen Tri Hieu,
without consumer loans with easy requirements from finance companies, borrowers
without collateral and low income will have to depend on loan sharks.
However, in a credit outlook report released
recently, the international ratings agency Moody’s Investors Service backed the
SBV’s proposal.
According to Moody’s, the proposal is credit positive for
Vietnamese finance companies because the stricter regulations will help
alleviate asset quality pressure by curbing excessive growth in the riskier
consumer-loan segment, which will lead to stronger risk-adjusted returns and
will support internal capital generation in the future.
Vietnam’s consumer finance industry grew at a
compound annual rate of 41 percent between 2013 and 2017 on the back of higher
personal income and greater penetration of services.
Moody’s expects growth in personal loans to slow
significantly when the new regulations come into effect, after far exceeding
growth over the past three years for other less-risky consumer loans, such as
those for the purchase of motorcycles and durables.
The demand for consumer finance is strong and
supported by the buoyant Vietnamese economy.
Now, finance companies constrained from
extending new personal unsecured loans because of the new regulations will
focus on growing other product segments and will benefit from increased
diversification in their lending portfolios and more emphasis on lower-risk products.-VNS/VNA