Vietnam’s credit growth has expanded by 8.4 percent from the end of 2018 so far this year.
According to latest report by the General Statistics Office (GSO), the gain was slower than last year’s figure when credit rose 9.52 percent. Vietnam News Agency reports.
Capital mobilized by banks was also moderate, rising by 8.68 percent compared with 9.15 percent during the same period last year.
Interest rates remained relatively stable, with the rate of mainly medium- and long-term deposits inching up at some banks that needed capital to meet the central bank’s adequacy ratio regulations.
Interest rates for one-to-six month deposits stood at 4.5-5.5 percent per year, 5.5-6.8 percent per year for six-to-12 month deposits, and 6.6-7.5 percent for 13 months and upwards.
Meanwhile, lending rates averaged 6 to 9 percent per year for short-term loans and 9 to 11 percent per year for medium- and long-term loans.
In the first nine months, banks largely met credit demands in the investment, production and business sectors. Notably, banks continued focusing on manufacturing, business borrowers and prioritized industries, as per Government guideline, while loans for risky sectors were under strict control.
The central bank has targeted credit growth of 14 percent this year, lower than in previous years. Experts have so far hailed the moderate credit growth, saying it was a positive sign for banks’ asset quality and capitalization.
According to Moody’s, tighter credit could lead to rising problem loan ratios. However, lower credit growth encouraged banks to focus on borrowers of better quality, which would improve asset quality in the long term.
Moderate credit growth would also lower pressure on capital, especially for State-owned banks, the rating agency said./.
– VNA