The
State Bank of Viet Nam has received plans from 23 commercial banks on
how they expect to meet stricter charter capital requirements. — VNS
Photo Truong Vi |
None of the plans called for a bank closure or merger with another institution, the SBV said this week.
However,
the plans would require the banks to attract VND30 trillion ($1.56
billion) in new investment over the next four months, which seems no
easy task for unlisted banks at a time of fairly restrictive monetary
policy.
The central bank
has already approved the plans of Mekong Bank, Dai A Bank, Ficombank,
Viet A Bank, SaigonBank, Tien Phong Bank, Southern Bank and VP Bank,
with the remainder expected to get the nod this month to increase
charter capital from an average of VND1.55 trillion ($80.7 million) to
an average of VND3.5 trillion ($182.3 million)
"It
is very important to closely monitor the process of approved banks in
increasing their charter capital," said State Bank of Viet Nam Governor
Nguyen Van Giau. "I will supervise how they sell shares to the public or
seek strategic investors."
Giau has also ordered banks to make monthly progress reports.
The
higher charter capital regulations was issued four years ago, but in
May this year, 23 out of 42 credit institutions still had charter
capital below VND3 trillion ($156.25 million).
The
central bank has vowed to close these banks down or force them into
mergers with larger institutions if they fail to meet the capital
requirements by year's end.
To
meet the deadline, Dai A Bank is relying on the backing of its
controlling shareholder, Tin Nghia Group. Navibank, Western Bank and Gia
Dinh Bank also are looking to the support of major stakeholders like
the Viet Nam Textile and Garment Group (Vinatex), Sai Gon Investment
Group and Vietcombank.
The small banks are also competing for available capital with major banks with listings on the stock exchange.
"Big
banks like Vietcombank, Vietinbank, Asia Commercial Bank, Sacombank and
Eximbank all plan to increase charter capital, and obviously they will
more easily attract money than small banks," said a representative of a
well-known HCM City-based bank who asked that his name be withheld.
However, he noted, "The stock market is gloomy. That's their challenge."
The
SBV has previously extended the deadline for commercial banks to meet
the higher capital requirements. Commercial banks were required by law
to register capital of at least VND1 trillion ($52 million) by the end
of 2008, but only 28 banks met the requirement by the deadline. Another
10 banks only managed to meet it by the end of 2009, with the central
bank granting permission for the delayed compliance.
This time, however, the SBV is saying the deadline is hard-and-fast.
Complicating
the picture is the expected introduction of even stricter requirements,
under which commercial banks would have to register capital of VND5
trillion ($260.42 million) by December 31, 2012, and VND10 trillion
($520.83 million) by December 31, 2015.
The
policy aim is to eliminate weaker banks in order to strengthen the
overall quality and security of the financial system. — VNS
by http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/
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