S Korean banks to expand in VN
HÀ NỘI - In addition to the wave of
investments in the banking and finance sector from financial institutions in
Japan, UK, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia and the US, there will be a marked
presence of South Korean banks in the Vietnamese market in the near future,
observers forecast.
The
observers, who declined to be named, told Trí thức trẻ (Young
Intellectual) online newspaper that there could be big deals involving South
Korean companies in the future, following a series of co-operation agreements
between South Korean and Vietnamese financial institutions recently.
In the
middle of July, a major South Korean bank, Daegu, announced that a
comprehensive co-operation agreement had been signed with Việt Nam’s Orient
Commercial Joint Stock Bank (OCB).
Nguyễn Đình
Tùng, general director of OCB, said Daegu would support OCB in various areas,
such as international money transfer, product development, SME services,
training exchange programmes on risk management, information technology, and
product development in South Korea.
Daegu Bank
has pledged to provide the best companion programmes to facilitate OCB’s
growth among the South Korean business community in Việt Nam, and to share
its experience so that OCB will eventually hold a 50 per cent market share in
SME services in the country.
In South
Korea, Daegu holds over 50 per cent of the market share in the loans to local
small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) area.
In
mid-April, Korea Development Bank (KDB) marked its presence in Việt Nam
through a comprehensive co-operation agreement with Commercial Joint Stock
Bank for Investment and Development of Việt Nam (BIDV).
KDB is the
top bank in South Korea in terms of total assets and equity, and ranks 94th
in the world. It has a presence in 22 countries.
With the
State holding around 95 per cent of its charter capital, BIDV, which tops
Việt Nam’s commercial banks in total assets, has most room for foreign
investors among Việt Nam’s privatised banks, of up to 30 per cent.
Ever since
BIDV’s shares were listed on the stock market in 2014, its leaders have
repeatedly stated that the bank is looking for foreign strategic partners,
and could sell 25 to 30 per cent of its stake. With the co-operation, there
is a possibility that the Korean partner may become one of BIDV’s strategic
shareholders.
Besides
co-operation agreements, financial institutions from South Korea have also
been taking more direct, stronger steps into the Vietnamese financial market.
Take the
case of Shinhan Bank, which received a licence and became one of the first
five banks with 100 per cent foreign capital in Việt Nam in 2008.
In April
this year, Shinhan surpassed its four rivals to acquire the lucrative retail
segment of ANZ Vietnam.
Previously,
after acquiring a 50 per cent stake in Shinhan Vina (a joint venture between
the Commercial Joint Stock Bank for Foreign Trade of Việt Nam or Vietcombank
and Shinhan Bank with 50 per cent stake for both), the bank was renamed
Shinhan Bank Vietnam in 2011.
ANZ’s
retail segment serves around 125,000 individual customers in Việt Nam and
A$320 million in outstanding loans. The handover is underway and expected to
be completed before the end of 2017, sources revealed.
In November
last year, the largest lender by assets in the Republic of Korea Woori Bank
also officially set up a wholly foreign-owned bank in Việt Nam. The bank’s
representatives said that Woori Bank would boost its retail business and
target becoming the top foreign credit bank in the Vietnamese market.
With the
advantage of established trade relations, Việt Nam’s untapped potential and
global integration goals will make it an ideal destination for South Korean
banks. So Vietnamese banks, though they have been receiving investments,
should be well-prepared to compete, if they want to survive and grow.
While
Vietnamese banks are still struggling to lend to FDI firms and have seen very
modest results in the area, foreign banks, especially South Korean ones, are
showing much stronger initiative in not only providing loans to local
enterprises but also to Việt Nam’s huge projects.
Most
recently, South Korea’s Keximbank expressed interest in investing in several
metro lines in HCM City and received enthusiastic support from the transport
sector. Minister of Transport Trương Quang Nghĩa has encouraged Keximbank to
invest not only in the metro lines in HCM City, but also in metro projects in
Hà Nội. In particular, Nghĩa hopes Keximbank will fund three other transport
projects of Tân Vạn-Nhơn Trạch, Lộ Tẻ-Rạch Sỏi and Mỹ Thuận 2 bridge. - VNS
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Thứ Tư, 26 tháng 7, 2017
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