VietNamNet Bridge – Commercial banks have reported the steady increase in the mobilized capital so far this year. Meanwhile, businesses keep complaining that they lack capital to maintain production and expand business scale.
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A report showed that the mobilized capital of the whole banking system increased
by 4.34 percent in the first quarter of 2013, while the outstanding loans
increased by 0.67 percent only.
Nguyen The Tuy, from the National Assembly said at a recent meeting of the
Economics Committee, that the branch of a state owned bank in Lang Son province
had transferred VND1 trillion worth of mobilized capital to the headquarter
because it cannot lend the sum of money in Lang Son.
The State Bank of Vietnam, in the report to the National Assembly’s Economics
Committee, attributed the slow credit growth to the national economy’s low
capability of “assimilating” the capital.
A lot of businessmen have admitted that they dare not borrow capital not because
of the high interest rates, but because they are not sure if their products can
be sold. A representative of the Hanoi Supermarket Association also said that
the low values in the customers’ bills at the supermarkets in Hanoi showed the
demand is very weak.
In the eyes of bankers, the businesses’ solvency has weakened when the majority
of the assets mortgaged for the loans relate to the real estate, while the real
estate market has been frozen for a long time.
Meanwhile, commercial banks now take precautions in the disbursement for fear
about the bad debt ratio increase after the hot credit growth period of 30
percent.
The problem now is that the strong businesses, eligible for accessing bank
loans, don’t intend to borrow more money because they tend to ease the reliance
on borrowing. Meanwhile, the weak businesses which lack capital are not eligible
for borrowing, even though they accept the high lending interest rates.
A question has been raised -- that where the bank deposits have gone, then? Bui
Duc Thu from the National Assembly’s Finance & Budget Committee also said it’s
necessary to clarify how the mobilized capital has been used.
The April’s report of the National Finance Supervision Council showed that banks
still try to mobilize more capital, but not to lend more, but just to pay for
the due deposits. This has been blamed on the high bad debt ratio of the banking
system.
Nguyen Tri Hieu, a well-known banking expert, also said banks have to use the
new money to pay back the old debts, which would badly affect the national
economy, if the problem cannot be settled.
The report of the national finance supervision council also said that the
mobilized capital have been poured into non-credit finance investments,
including the government bonds.
The analysis coincides with the statistics from the Hanoi Stock Exchange that
the total capital mobilized through the government bond issuance in 2012 reached
VND167,589 billion, which was double the figure of the year before. Of this
amount, 80 percent was sold to commercial banks.
Meanwhile, a well-known economist, who is the advisor to the State Bank of
Vietnam, thinks that banks might have use the deposited money to buy gold to
finalize the accounts to stop trading gold prior to June 30 as requested by the
State Bank.
The State Bank reportedly has sold out more than 13 tons of gold at the auctions
so far, while the main buyers were the commercial banks.
VNE