Vietnam's central bank said on Friday it had continued providing support to Saigon Joint Stock Commercial Bank (SCB), which it put under special supervision in October 2022 after a run on its deposits.
Reuters reported on Wednesday the central bank had pumped
nearly $24 billion in SCB to prevent its collapse, and that special loans to
the bank had continued at least until early April.
The central bank placed SCB under its supervision to stem a
run on the bank sparked by the October 2022 arrest of real estate tycoon Truong
My Lan, who was last week sentenced to death over her role in a $12.5 billion
financial fraud case, Vietnam's biggest of its kind.
"SCB has caused difficulties or may be in crisis. Like
other central banks, we have to intervene. It's in accordance with our
regulations," State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) deputy governor Dao Minh Tu told
a press conference, acknowledging the SBV's lending to SCB.
"We continue to have a roadmap to restructure it
step-by-step and study possible mechanisms, solutions to help the bank
recover," Tu said, adding the bank was stable.