Overnight rates are now ranging from 6.16-8.47 per
cent, while rates for one- to four-month loans are seeing an interest of
9.07-10.98 per cent.
Total trading volume last week on the interbank market
reached VND86.59 trillion (US$4.56 billion) in Viet Nam dong and $2.05
billion in US dollars.
State Bank governor Nguyen Van Giau also announced last
week that commercial banks had repaid VND34 trillion ($1.78 billion) in
bailout funds injected into the banking system late last year and now
had usable capital on hand of around VND30 trillion ($1.58 billion).
With more usable capital on hand, many commercial banks
are contemplating a restructuring of their deposit interest rate
structure, including Vietcombank, Bank for Investment and Development of
Viet Nam (BIDV), DongA Bank, Eximbank, Sacombank, and Asia Commercial
Bank.
"If the deposit interest cap is removed, deposit
interest rates will increase and the interest curve will return to a
normal shape, indicating that the longer deposits are, the more interest
the deposits gain," said Nguyen Quoc Quynh, a senior economist and
former general director of Vietcombank.
Commercial banks are currently capped at offering
interest rates on deposits of no more than 10.49 per cent, under a
voluntary agreement between the central bank and members of the Viet Nam
Banking Association executed last December.
The cap is aimed at ending a deposit interest rate war
but has had the effect of causing most banks to offer rates at or near
the 10.49-per-cent limit for all deposit terms.
A reliable source that asked to remain anonymous told
Viet Nam News that, in a closed meeting of the Banking Association late
last week, most banks agreed that the deposit interest rate cap should
be lifted now that lending interest rates could be negotiated.
A reliable source that asked to remain anonymous told
Viet Nam News that, in a closed meeting of the Banking Association late
last week, most banks agreed that the deposit interest rate cap should
be lifted now that lending interest rates could be negotiated.
The central bank last week also partially lifted the
cap on commercial lending rates, suggesting that banks would be able to
operate with higher profit margins.
"Removing the deposit interest rate cap would help us
be more active in managing capital resources," said the chairman of a Ha
Noi-based bank who asked to stay unnamed.