Devaluating dong now
would burst everything into flames
The dollar prices quoted by commercial
banks since the beginning of June have always been hitting the ceiling
levels. Is it now the time to adjust the dong/dollar exchange rate?
It’s obvious that the dong/dollar exchange rate is
under a hard pressure, though some state officials say the dollar price
increases are just temporary, which would in no way affect the exchange rate.
On June 22, the selling dollar prices quoted by
commercial banks, also hit the ceiling level of VND21,036 per dollar.
Meanwhile, the buy price was quoted at VND21,025 per dollar. On the black
market, the dollar price has been increasing sharply, sometimes hitting the
VND21,400 per dollar threshold.
Exchange rate bears hard pressure
At the beginning of the year, Governor of the State
Bank of
By mid-June 2013, the banks’ average buy prices had
increased by 0.9 percent in comparison with the beginning of the year.
However, the dollar prices have witnessed several sharp rises so far this
year.
Especially, the upward trend has been seen since early
April, partially because of the people’s worries about the exchange rate
adjustments, and partially because of the higher demand amid the returning of
the trade deficit.
In the first half of June 2013, the dollar prices in
the black market many times hit the VND21,400 per dollar threshold, while the
prices quoted by commercial banks have always been hitting the ceiling level
at VND21,036 per dollar.
Dr. Nguyen Tri Hieu said there are many factors that
push the dollar demand up, including the higher imports of materials for
domestic production, the government’s demand for dollar to pay foreign debts.
The dollar price increases have also been attributed to the speculation.
People rush to buy dollars for the fear about a possible exchange rate
adjustment.
The overly big gap between the domestic and the world’s
gold prices, about VND5-6 million per tael, has also stimulated the demand
for dollars to import gold through unofficial channels.
Pham Hong Hai, a senior executive of the Hong Kong and
Shanghai Banking Corporation HSBC, said the reasons behind the dollar price
increase includes the fact that portfolio investors now try to sell dong bonds
to buy foreign currencies when the government bond yield has decreased
rapidly recently.
Hai has noted that when seeing the dollar price
increase and the weak market liquidity, though the problems are just
temporary, enterprises, including those, who still do not need foreign
currencies immediately, rush to buy foreign currencies, while others try to
hoard foreign currencies instead of selling them.
Observers have noted that the gap between the buy and
sale prices quoted by commercial banks is very small, just VND1 dong per
dollar. It’s obvious that the small margin is not big enough for banks to
cover expenses.
If the problem cannot be settled, it may happen that
banks would, once again, dodge the laws by collecting additional fees to make
the actual selling prices higher than the ceiling levels.
Though seeing the pressure on the exchange rate, Hieu
thinks it would be very dangerous to devaluate the local currency at this
moment, because this would “burst everything into flames.”
Analysts believe that it would be better to widen the
trade band from one percent to 2 or 3 percent, i.e. that banks can set up
their prices higher or lower by 2 or 3 percent than the dollar prices
announced daily by the State Bank of
Source: NLD
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Thứ Ba, 25 tháng 6, 2013
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