Q3 finance reports show that a series of banks had unsatisfactory results in foreign exchange trading or took losses.
The financial report season began in mid-October, and to date, 13 commercial banks officially released their Q3 financial reports. Though most banks reported good business performance in general, they saw a decline in forex trading.
According to Bizlive, nine out of 13 banks, or 69 percent, reported a decline in forex trading in the first nine months of the year, of which three banks reported losses for the business.
VP, for example, reported a loss of VND81 billion from forex trading in Q3, while it could make a high profit of VND218 billion for the same period last year.
As such, it incurred a loss of VND117 billion for the business in the first nine months of 2019 after making a profit of VND251 billion the same period last year.
VP Bank is leading banks which reported losses for forex trading, and it is the bank which saw the biggest decline.
VIB continued to report loss, VND28 billion, for Q3 2019, double the same period last year, which raised the 9-month accumulative loss to VND115 billion, or 5.5 times higher than the same period last year (the bank took a loss of VND21 billion in the first nine months of 2018).
At National Citizen Bank (NCB), forex trading saw little improvement as it took a loss of VND100 million in Q3 only compared with the loss of VND14 billion the same period last year. In the first nine months of 2019, NCB reported the loss of VND5 billion for forex trading, a decrease of 2/3 compared with the loss of VND16 billion it took the same period last year.
As for other banks, though they still could make profit, the profits were much lower than the same period last year.
SeABank, for example, reported that forex trading brought VND15 billion in profit to the bank in the first nine months of the year, a sharp fall of 79 percent compared with the profit of VND70 billion it made the same period last year.
Bac A Bank also saw the profit decrease by 68 percent to VND3 billion. This was because it took a loss of VND4.2 billion in Q3, which wore away the profit Q1 and Q2.
From the beginning of the year to mid-April, the dong/dollar exchange rate and the forex market were stable with strong liquidity. The State Bank then bought a big amount of foreign currencies to increase the forex reserves.
However, the dollar has appreciated rapidly since May 6.
On May 20, commercial banks quoted the selling prices of VND23,470-23,495 per dollar.
https://vietnamnet.vn/en/business/banks-see-decline-in-foreign-exchange-trading-results-585686.html