VietNamNet Bridge - The State Bank of Vietnam yesterday ordered five major
state-owned commercial banks to make comprehensive reports on their business
operations during 2008-10. The banks subject to the order are the Bank for
Investment and Development of Vietnam (BIDV), Agribank, Mekong Housing Bank,
Vietcombank, and Vietinbank.
Although Vietcombank and Vietinbank have already made initial public offerings
and listed shares on the stock exchange, the nominally ‘joint-stock' banks
continue to be substantially state-owned.
The central bank decision aims to gauge the progress of these banks to
reorganise under a corporate model, as well as evaluate the role of state
capital representatives in the management of the banks.
The banks have been ordered, as well, to reassess investments in core and
non-core business lines, especially in stocks and real estate, with the reports
due no later than next Tuesday, December 28.
The major state-owned banks have invested in a wide range of business sectors,
including financial leasing, securities brokerage, investment funds,
construction and property leasing, insurance and aircraft leasing, and are major
sources of capital for state-owned enterprises.
For some of these banks, 30-40 per cent of their exposure is loans and
investments in state-owned enterprises, many of which are financially weak and
poorly managed.
Following the insolvency of state-run shipbuilder Vinashin, a number of global
credit rating agencies have raised the alarm about the status of state-owned
banks in Vietnam.
BIDV, the second-largest bank in the system with a 10.2-per-cent market share by
assets, was downgraded last week by Moody's, dropping BIDV's financial strength
rating to E+ (mapping to a BCA of B2) from E+ (mapping to a BCA of B1) with a
stable outlook.
The downgrade was seen as partly a response to the troubles of debt-laden
Vinashin, which is labouring under nearly $4.4 billion in debt.
The downgrade also took into consideration the risks in the country's weak
operating environment, including the bank's poor – but improving – capital
ratios, and its modest liquidity fundamentals.
Vietcombank, the first state-owned bank to make an IPO in 2007 but still
90-per-cent owned by the state, received a downgrade in September from Fitch
Ratings, which lowered Vietcombank's individual rating from D to D/E.
The downgrade was said to reflect Vietcombank's substantially weakened balance
sheet arising from excessively strong loan growth and the fragile quality of the
loans.
In October, Standard & Poor's said that a wide disconnect existed between
industry-reported nonperforming loan ratios and the true state of the system's
asset quality. S&P rated Vietcombank BB/Negative/B and BIDV BB/Negative/B.
Source: VNS
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