State Bank of Vietnam takes over troubled
Vietnam Construction Bank
Vietnam Construction Bank has been take over by the State Bank
of
A transaction
office of Vietnam Construction Bank
SBV deputy governor Nguyen Phuoc Thanh made the announcement on
March 5. The decision followed several years of concern about the bank's
liquidity.
Its former entity, TrustBank, was in 2012, put under special
monitoring due to its liquidity crisis. In 2013, new investors changed
TrustBank into Vietnam Construction Bank. However, difficulties continued and
in 2015 shareholders stopped supplying additional capital. As a consequence,
the bank was unable to meet the minimum capital requirements of VND3trn.
The SBV said it paid nothing for the bank, which will in due
course be converted from a commercial bank into a one-member limited
liability bank owned by the state.
Nguyen Van Tuan, deputy general director of the Bank for Foreign
Trade of Vietnam (Vietcombank) will chair Vietnam Construction Bank. Two
other officials of
SBV deputy governor Nguyen
Phuoc Thanh said the
move should not be seen as nationalization, but rather as a commercial move
to maintain stability in the banking sector, and SBV would make available
VND40trn so the bank could continue interim operations.
"The government is buying back the bank to protect
depositors and ensure stability in the banking system," Thanh said.
He said the SBV would take similar action in the future to deal
with weak credit institutions with heavy bad debt or inadequate capital
reserves, and named GPBank and Ocean Bank as likely candidates if they failed
to address their financial problems.
Associated Professor Tran Hoang Ngan, head of the University of
Finance-Marketing, said weak financial institutions often have only two
alternatives, to go bankrupt or to seek rescue, usually through being
nationalised.
Depositors are entitled to an insurance payout of a maximum
VND50m.
"Maybe from 2016, after the banking system completes its
restructuring, financial institutions will be simply allowed to go bankrupt,
but the government does not want to go down that path just yet because it
unsettles the market," Ngan said.
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Thứ Sáu, 6 tháng 3, 2015
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