The jury is out to whether
ceiling mobilising rate scheme should be removed.
After the central bank (SBV) decided on letting banks to
fix their more than 12-month deposit interest rates from June 11, 2012, banks
have stepped into a new interest rate hike race to lure depositors.
On July 14, Western Bank lifted its ceiling mobilising
rate to 14 per cent per year for 13-month deposits. However, four days later
the bank pulled down the rate to just 12.5 per cent per year.
SBV deputy governor Le Minh Hung assumed the move was a correct
step to gradually remove the ceiling interest rate scheme.
“”Since lending rates are on downward trend, banks
accepting high borrowing costs will surely be hurt,” said Orient Commercial
Bank (OCB) chairman Trinh Van Tuan.
Tuan said banks’ input rates might slide further.
A Hanoi branch director of a joint stock bank said
ceiling mobilising rate would be no longer needed since the bank was
financially healthy and there were few borrowers.
“If the ceiling mobilising rate was removed, possibly some
banks could drive up the rates like the recent case with Western Bank. But this
race could soon end as banks are struggling to lend,” said the director, added
that if so the bank would peg its ceiling mobilising rate at about 11-12 per
cent, per year.
“Plummeting inflation and contracted credit growth are
auspicious factors to kill ceiling interest rates. The rate hike race is
unlikely to come true since banks cannot boost lending,” said National
Financial and Monetary Policy Council member Cao Si Kiem.
Economic expert Le Tham Duong said underperformed banks
created chaos in the market and if these banks were radically treated in June
as once declared by the SBV governor, there would be no reason to retain
mobilisation ceiling.
Echoing the idea, financial expert Nguyen Tri Hieu
assumed ceiling interest rates might be abolished in the third quarter or not
later than the fourth quarter, but feeble bank issue must be entirely tackled
to make the banking sector healthy.
Industry experts said the market could wobble after
mobilising rates were removed. “However, after that the interest rate will stay
stable at a rational level truly reflecting the supply-demand rule,” said
National Financial Supervisory Commission deputy chairman Ha Huy Tuan.
Ha Tam | vir.com.vn
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