Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Vietnam banks say 'I do' as government forces arranged marriages




You are here


Vietnam banks say 'I do' as government forces arranged marriages


[HANOI] Vietnamese bank consolidation will accelerate this year as a new rule encourages lenders with stakes in each other to merge or unwind their holdings amid a government pledge to push unions and even force bankruptcies.
Renewed calls for restructuring come with teeth this time after a new rule restricting banks' cross-ownership took effect in February. The central bank has said there will be at least six mergers this year and recently took the unprecedented step of nationalising two unlisted banks. JSC Bank for Foreign Trade of Vietnam, the largest bank by market value, said last month it's looking for a partner to merge with this year.
The State Bank of Vietnam, the monetary authority, plans to reduce the total number of banks to as few as 15 by 2017 from 40 now. Investor confidence is rebounding as the country's weakest lenders have been absorbed by larger banks and bad debt that was the highest in Southeast Asia just a few years ago has been partly taken over by a state-backed asset company.
"The consensus is that Vietnam is overbanked," Long Ngo, a Ho Chi Minh City-based research manager at Viet Capital Securities, the nation's third-largest brokerage, said in an e- mail. "Even if we don't have the current banking problems, there are good reasons to shrink the number of players."


Under the new law, banks' cross-ownership is limited to 5 percent or less in a maximum of two other financial institutions. Moody's Investors Service Inc. has said the move will quicken consolidation.
The mergers of Saigon Thuong Tin Commercial JSB, or Sacombank, with Southern Commercial JSB, and Vietnam Maritime Commercial JSB with Mekong Development JSB, have received initial central bank approvals and are likely to be completed this year.
Tram Be, deputy chairman at Sacombank and senior adviser at SouthernBank, and his family held stakes totaling more than 20 per cent in SouthernBank and 6 per cent in Sacombank, the Dau Tu Chung Khoan magazine reported April 2014. Maritime Bank held about a 10 per cent stake in Mekong Bank, it reported. The mergers address those cross-ownership issues at the banks, according to the report.
"The central bank considers 2015 to be a decisive year to complete banking reform," Alan Pham, Ho Chi Minh City-based chief economist at VinaCapital Group, the country's biggest fund manager, said in an e-mail. "M&A is very important because it is an effective policy instrument to reform the banking system."
The country's largest listed banks, which are state- controlled, have also picked up some of the weakest in the sector. The nation's third-largest lender, Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam, or BIDV, expects to complete a merger with unlisted Mekong Housing Bank this month. Shareholders at VietinBank, or Vietnam JS Commercial Bank for Industry and Trade, the second-biggest, gave approval April 14 to merge with unlisted Petrolimex Group Commercial JSB.
Shares of VietinBank have rallied 28 per cent this year, while BIDV's stock has jumped 42 per cent. The gains compare with a 1.3 per cent increase in the benchmark VN Index of Vietnamese stocks.
The number of merger announcements so far this year has outpaced consolidation activity in each of the past several years, Eugene Tarzimanov, Singapore-based vice president and senior credit officer at Moody's, said by phone. Getting larger banks to absorb smaller and weaker lenders limits contagion risk and supports the financial system's stability, he said.
"Vietnam's well-positioned now to gradually improve its financial health," he said. "There's a desire from the regulator and government to have a cleaner financial system. Still, we are unlikely to see a rapid transformation of the system."
The central bank and the government have said this year the monetary authority can take over weak banks and force lenders into bankruptcy. No bank has gone bankrupt yet.
Vietnam's banking overhaul has long been in the making, with the government announcing reforms as far back as 2012. That year, central bank Governor Nguyen Van Binh said he would crack down on cross-ownership of banks because "interest groups" of shareholders manipulated bank operations and were obstacles in the restructuring process.
The pace of bank restructuring in Vietnam remains slow, Sanjay Kalra, the International Monetary Fund's resident representative in Vietnam, said at a conference in Nghe An province April 21. Vietnam banks can't get fresh capital because of bad debt, which is still "not going away," Mr Kalra said.
The nation's state-backed asset management company has bought 123 trillion dong (S$7.6 billion) of troubled loans, improving the outlook for Vietnamese lenders. Non-performing loans reported by the nation's banks dropped to about 3.25 per cent at the end of 2014 from 17 per cent two years earlier, government data show. Moody's estimates actual bad debt was higher, about 10 per cent at the end of 2014.
The union of VietinBank and Petrolimex Group Bank, or PG Bank, will form Vietnam's largest lender by registered capital at 40.2 trillion dong and the second-largest in terms of assets, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit.
Hanoi-based lender BIDV expects the merger with MHB to help expand operations with about 1,000 branches nationwide.
Larger banks with greater economies of scale will also benefit from improved efficiency, though it poses implementation risks, according to a Moody's March report. Fewer banks will make it easier for authorities to supervise, it said.
To get foreign investor betting on Vietnamese lenders, authorities need to strengthen bad-debt transparency and lift the current foreign ownership stake at banks above the current cap of 20 per cent, Moody's Mr Tarzimanov said.
"Unless transparency is improved, we won't see a lot of foreign capital flowing in," he said. "They need the foreign capital because domestic capital is limited."
BLOOMBERG

US seen joining world's biggest oil exporters if ban is lifted

US seen joining world's biggest oil exporters if ban is lifted

[SAN FRANCISCO/HOUSTON] The US will become one of the world's largest oil exporters if domestic production continues to surge and policy makers lift a four-decade ban that keeps most crude from leaving the country, a government-sponsored study shows.
America would be capable of sending as much as 2.4 million barrels a day overseas in 2025 if federal policy makers were to eliminate restrictions on most crude exports, an analysis by Turner, Mason & Co for the Energy Information Administration shows. That would make the US the fourth-largest oil exporter, behind Saudi Arabia, Russia and the United Arab Emirates, based on 2013 EIA data. The report assumes domestic output rises by 7.2 million barrels a day from 2013.
The analysis is part of a series of studies the US government is performing following a 71 per cent surge in domestic oil production over the last four years. Drillers including Harold Hamm of Continental Resources Inc and John Hess of Hess Corp have been calling on the government to lift the ban on crude exports as they pump more light oil out of shale formations from North Dakota to Texas.
"We are already the world's leading exporter of refined products," John Auers, executive vice president at Dallas-based energy consultant Turner Mason, said by phone Tuesday.
"Based on developments in the last few years in tight oil formations and deepwater, the US has the resource base to be a big crude exporter as well." The report doesn't account for potential changes in domestic crude output and prices because of the lifting of the US export ban, nor does it consider competition abroad. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude rose US$1.47 a barrel on Tuesday to US$60.40 on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Turner Mason's study was designed to show the upper and lower bounds of the future for US energy, Mr Auers said. Exports of "2.4 million is probably not a likely scenario, but it shows what might be possible," he said.
The consultant's forecast for exports in 2025 is almost double what EIA administrator Adam Sieminski said the US could export right away if restrictions were limited. During a Dec 11 congressional subcommittee hearing, Mr Sieminski said there was space in today's global market for 1 million to 1.5 million barrels a day of US crude.
Alaska Senator Lisa Murkowski, the Republican chair of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources committee, has said she'll bring a bill forward this year to overturn the export ban. Several reports including one issued last year by IHS Inc. found that ending the ban would lower US pump prices by putting pressure on international crude oil markets.
Refiners such as PBF Energy Inc have argued against lifting restrictions, saying it would reduce investment in new equipment in the US and possibly hurt East Coast plants that now depend on rail shipments of domestic crude for more than half of their supplies.
The country's capacity to refine light shale oil would still expand should legislators vote to lift the ban, just not as much as it would if the restrictions remain in place, Turner Mason's report shows. Domestic capacity increases by 2.4 million barrels a day, assuming the ban is unchanged and by 800,000 if it's lifted.
"More costly hydroskimming refineries are not built," the report shows, "because the ability to export crude oil prevents the price of WTI from declining to a level that would support such investment."
BLOOMBERG

Japan pushes big companies to pass yen benefits on to suppliers

Japan pushes big companies to pass yen benefits on to suppliers

[TOKYO/NEW YORK] The Abe administration plans to push Japan's large exporters to pass on benefits from the weaker yen to suppliers hurt by higher costs for imported raw materials, Deputy Economy Minister Yasutoshi Nishimura said.
"While the weak yen has been good for the Japanese economy overall, there has also been a negative side to that," Mr Nishimura, 52, said in an interview Tuesday at Bloomberg headquarters in New York. "We will win an agreement by asking via the Keidanren that the big companies that benefited from the weaker yen pass on those benefits by lifting prices to suppliers." The Keidanren is Japan's biggest business lobby.
The plans reflect angst in some quarters of the Japanese economy about a policy of reflation and monetary expansion that has sent the yen to its weakest against the dollar in eight years. While large exporters have seen profits swell - firing up the nation's stock market - they have been reluctant to boost domestic investment or increase wages much more than the pace of inflation.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has repeatedly called on the country's large corporations to step up their contributions to his campaign to end two decades of stagnation. Finance Minister Taro Aso has suggested a levy on retained earnings should be examined.
Mr Nishimura said that medium- and small-sized companies were hurt by the weak yen, which lifted the costs of imported raw materials. He said the government had compiled a supplementary budget to support these companies and will try to convince big exporters to raise the prices they pay suppliers.
The deputy economy minister is helping spearhead the government's reform plans as the right-hand man to Economy Minister Akira Amari, a key architect of Abenomics. Six years ago, when Abe's Liberal Democratic Party was out of office, Mr Nishimura ran for the party leadership, losing out to Sadakazu Tanigaki. He was elected to parliament in 2003 after a career in the civil service.
The 29 per cent decline in the yen against the dollar since Mr Abe took office in December 2012 has helped companies including Toyota Motor Corp. and propelled the Nikkei 225 Stock Average through 20,000 in April for the first time in 15 years.
Even so, reluctance of companies to increase investment is hobbling a recovery from the recession that followed last year's sales-tax increase. Capital expenditure fell for a third straight quarter in the three months through December, capping economic growth at an annualised 1.5 per cent after two quarters of contraction.
Twenty years of a deflationary mindset makes it difficult to change attitudes, said Mr Nishimura, a law graduate from the University of Tokyo who later went on to the Graduate School of Public Policy at University of Maryland. He was in the boxing club in college and compiled a record of 9 wins and 2 losses, according to his website.
The yen's depreciation has drawn scrutiny from South Korea, Japan's main export competitor, as companies including Hyundai Motor Co. and Samsung Electronics Co say the strongest Korean won against the yen in seven years has hurt earnings.
"We're not targeting any levels" for the currency, said Mr Nishimura, a native of Akashi, a city near Kobe in Hyogo prefecture. "Each country has different fundamentals and exchange rates will reflect that."
The issue of higher costs for importers and smaller companies is drawing concern in Mr Abe's ruling Liberal Democratic Party. Policy chief Tomomi Inada said in an interview that Japan needs to address the negative impact on both small companies and regional parts of the economy.
The number of Japanese bankruptcies linked to the weak yen surged to 345 last year, about 2.7 times that of 2013, even as the total number of failures declined 11 per cent, according to Teikoku Databank Ltd.
Moves in foreign exchange rates aren't harmful as long as they reflect economic fundamentals, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said in March.
Analysts anticipate the yen will continue to weaken as the BOJ maintains its campaign to push inflation to 2 percent by enlarging the monetary base. The central bank, which refrained from boosting monetary stimulus on April 30, has pledged to keep up its efforts until its objectives are reached.
"The key driver for the yen has become QE and the expectation of QE," HSBC Holdings Plc analysts including Izumi Devalier in Hong Kong wrote in a note last week, referring to the BOJ's quantitative easing program. HSBC sees the yen ending the year at 125 per dollar. It was at 119.94 as of 7:14 am in Singapore trading.
BLOOMBERG

728 X 90

336 x 280

300 X 250

320 X 100

300 X600