TL;DR: Effective July 1, 2026, Vietnam's State Bank (SBV - Ngan hang Nha nuoc Viet Nam) officially raised the short-term capital cap for medium and long-term lending from 30% to 40%. The same circular revises the loan-to-deposit ratio (LDR) calculation. This is the most significant relaxation of bank liquidity rules in several years and directly expands lending capacity for infrastructure, real estate, and corporate investment projects across Vietnam.

What is the short-term capital cap, and why does it matter?
Vietnamese commercial banks raise funding from two broad categories: short-term liabilities (demand deposits, savings accounts, certificates of deposit under 12 months) and medium-to-long-term funding (bonds, longer-dated deposits, equity). When a bank channels short-term deposits into multi-year loans, it creates a maturity mismatch. Poorly managed mismatches are a classic driver of liquidity crises in banking systems.
SBV's short-term capital cap (CLTD) - commonly called the short-term capital cap - CLTD (ty le von ngan han su dung de cho vay trung dai han) in Vietnamese regulatory language - is the guardrail. Under the previous 30% ceiling, a bank holding 1 trillion VND in short-term liabilities could deploy at most 300 billion VND of that into loans longer than one year. At 40%, the ceiling rises to 400 billion VND - a one-third increase in headroom for medium and long-term credit.
What exactly changed in the June 2026 circular?
SBV published the new circular on June 22, 2026, effective July 1, 2026. Two substantive changes were made. First, the CLTD ratio ceiling rises from 30% to 40% across all commercial banks, state-owned banks, joint-stock banks, foreign bank branches, and development banks licensed in Vietnam. Second, the LDR calculation methodology is revised with updated qualifying-deposit criteria aligned with Basel III liquidity principles, giving most banks modest additional flexibility on the LDR constraint as well.
Which institutions benefit most from the higher cap?
Banks already operating near the old 30% ceiling gain the largest immediate benefit. Several mid-tier private banks with large retail mortgage books and infrastructure project finance portfolios were running CLTD ratios in the 27-30% range as of Q1 2026. For these institutions, the new 40% ceiling unlocks hundreds of billions to a few trillion VND in new lending capacity without requiring additional long-term funding issuance.
State-owned banks including Vietcombank (stock ticker VCB on HOSE), BIDV (BID on HOSE), VietinBank (CTG on HOSE), and Agribank typically hold more stable, longer-dated liability structures. Their primary benefit is flexibility to absorb the large-scale infrastructure pipeline: five metro lines across Vietnam totaling over 1.3 million billion VND (approximately USD 52 billion as of June 2026) broke ground the same day the SBV circular was announced.
What does this mean for corporate borrowers and investors?
For Vietnamese corporations seeking capital for 3-7 year investment cycles, the short-term capital cap increase signals that medium-to-long-term credit will become more available and likely more competitive in H2 2026. Infrastructure contractors, real estate developers, and manufacturing investors in export-processing zones stand to benefit most directly.
Foreign investors tracking Vietnamese bank equities should note that the change reduces capital pressure on banks close to the old 30% limit and supports net interest margin stability, as medium and long-term loans typically carry higher spreads than short-term working capital facilities.
How DataCore tracks lending ratio changes across Vietnam's banking sector
DataCore's Company Intelligence Service aggregates structured financial data for all 48 licensed credit institutions in Vietnam, covering capital adequacy, LDR, liquidity coverage ratios, and lending mix metrics - updated quarterly as institutions publish audited statements.
When regulatory parameters like the short-term capital cap shift, downstream effects appear across balance sheets over the following two to four quarters. DataCore subscribers in quantitative research and corporate treasury use our banking data to model these ripple effects: which institutions accelerate long-term lending, how deposit funding strategies adjust, and where credit concentration risks emerge. To explore Vietnam banking sector data, contact the DataCore team or try the platform demo.
Related reading from DataCore
For broader context on how AI governance and financial regulation are shaping Vietnam's data economy in 2026, see: AI Model Access Risk - What Businesses Building on Anthropic Should Do Now. DataCore's Financial Data coverage tracks every NHNN circular that affects bank lending ratios and liquidity rules.
Frequently asked questions
When does the new 40% cap take effect?
July 1, 2026, per the SBV circular published June 22, 2026.
Does the 40% cap apply to all banks in Vietnam?
Yes. The circular applies to all commercial banks, state-owned banks, joint-stock banks, foreign bank branches, and development banks licensed to operate in Vietnam.
What is the difference between the CLTD ratio and the LDR?
The LDR measures total loans as a percentage of total deposits - a broad liquidity gauge. The CLTD cap specifically limits how much short-term funding can flow into long-duration loans. Both constraints were updated in the June 2026 circular but address different risk dimensions.
Where can I find detailed lending ratio data for Vietnamese banks?
DataCore's Company Intelligence Service provides structured financial data for all 48 licensed credit institutions in Vietnam. Contact DataCore to learn more.
How the short-term capital cap fits into Vietnam's broader banking stability framework
The short-term capital cap does not operate in isolation. It is one of three interlocking liquidity ratios that the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) monitors for every licensed credit institution. The other two are the Loan-to-Deposit Ratio (LDR) and the Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) under Basel II. Understanding how the short-term capital cap interacts with these ratios is essential for any bank treasury team, credit analyst, or corporate borrower assessing credit availability after July 1, 2026.
The Loan-to-Deposit Ratio constrains how much a bank can lend relative to its deposit base. The short-term capital cap restricts how much of that lending can be funded with short-term money market sources. A bank could technically have headroom under its LDR but still be constrained by the short-term capital cap - and vice versa. With the short-term capital cap moving from 30% to 40%, banks sitting at 28-30% utilization now have a significant buffer that frees up medium and long-term lending capacity without touching their LDR ceiling.
The CAR requirement adds a third dimension: banks must hold sufficient tier-1 and tier-2 capital against risk-weighted assets. When a bank deploys the new short-term capital cap headroom into corporate term loans or infrastructure project financing, those assets carry higher risk weights (100% for standard commercial lending vs. 50% for residential mortgages). This means aggressive deployment of the new short-term capital cap capacity could require banks to raise additional capital, particularly smaller joint-stock commercial banks already close to minimum CAR thresholds.
DataCore's Company Intelligence Service tracks all three ratios - LDR, CAR, and short-term capital cap utilization - for every licensed bank in Vietnam on a quarterly refresh cycle, with more frequent updates when SBV publishes supervisory data or when individual banks release earnings. This integrated view lets risk and treasury teams model capacity constraints across the banking system rather than treating each ratio in isolation.
A brief history of the short-term capital cap in Vietnam: how we got to 40%
The short-term capital cap has been adjusted multiple times since SBV first introduced the ratio in Circular 36/2014/TT-NHNN. Understanding that history helps contextualize the current change and signals what policymakers may do next.
- 2014: SBV set the original short-term capital cap at 60%. Many Vietnamese banks were heavily reliant on short-term deposits to fund infrastructure and real estate projects. The 60% threshold acknowledged this structural reality while beginning to curb maturity mismatch risk.
- 2016: The short-term capital cap fell to 50% as the banking sector undertook a first wave of NPL resolution. SBV wanted banks to extend the duration of their funding base rather than roll short-term deposits into medium-term lending indefinitely.
- 2018: The short-term capital cap dropped again to 40%. Vietnam's banks had significantly cleaned up legacy NPL portfolios through VAMC transactions, and SBV tightened the structural liquidity requirement as a preventive measure ahead of a projected credit expansion cycle.
- 2020-2022: SBV temporarily reduced the short-term capital cap to 37%, then briefly to 34%, to encourage banks to restructure distressed borrower loans without triggering automatic limit breaches during the COVID-19 period.
- 2023: The short-term capital cap was reset to 30% as COVID restructuring expired. This became the baseline in force until the June 2026 announcement.
- 2026: The new circular returns the short-term capital cap to exactly 40% - where it was in 2018-2020. SBV's confidence in system-level liquidity and NPL quality enables this reversal.
The cyclical nature of the short-term capital cap is important context for corporate borrowers making 3-5 year financing decisions. The current 40% ceiling is not a permanent floor - it can be tightened again if macro conditions deteriorate or credit growth accelerates beyond SBV targets. Building a risk-management framework that accounts for potential future short-term capital cap reductions is prudent for both lenders and large corporate borrowers.

Practical impact by bank type: who gains the most from the new short-term capital cap?
Not all banks benefit equally from the short-term capital cap increase. The practical impact depends on each bank's existing capital structure, deposit mix, and strategic lending focus.
State-owned commercial banks (BIDV, Vietcombank, VietinBank, Agribank): These four institutions control over 40% of total banking system assets. Their short-term capital cap utilization was already lower than the system average due to their deep deposit franchises with relatively long average deposit durations. The move to 40% gives them additional headroom for infrastructure lending, but the constraint for SOCBs is more often the CAR and capital budget than the short-term capital cap itself.
Large joint-stock commercial banks (Techcombank, VPBank, MBBank, ACB, HDBank): This tier is most directly impacted by the short-term capital cap change. JSCBs have been aggressively growing corporate loan books while managing a deposit base that skews shorter in duration. Several were operating at 26-30% short-term capital cap utilization under the old 30% regime. The move to 40% unlocks meaningful new lending capacity - analysts estimate an additional 200,000-300,000 billion VND in system-wide medium and long-term lending capacity across the top 10 JSCBs.
Smaller regional and rural banks: These institutions often have a more volatile deposit base with higher concentration of short-term retail deposits. For them, the short-term capital cap was a harder binding constraint. The increase to 40% offers relief, but smaller banks must carefully monitor daily short-term capital cap fluctuations to avoid accidental breaches that trigger SBV supervisory action.
How DataCore tracks the short-term capital cap across all licensed Vietnamese banks
DataCore's Company Intelligence Service ingests and normalizes financial statement data for all 49 licensed commercial banks in Vietnam, including the 4 SOCBs, 31 JSCBs, 9 foreign bank branches, and 5 joint-venture banks. For each institution, DataCore extracts the key inputs for the short-term capital cap calculation: the breakdown of funding sources by duration (demand deposits, term deposits under 1 year, over 1 year, interbank borrowings, bonds issued) and the corresponding loan portfolio duration profile.
Corporate treasury teams at large enterprises use DataCore's comparative short-term capital cap data to predict which of their banking partners is best positioned to approve new term loan facilities. Credit risk teams at institutional investors monitor which banks are approaching the 38-40% short-term capital cap utilization ceiling, as this signals a forthcoming slowdown in that bank's new lending activity.
The data is available through DataCore's financial data API, queryable by institution name or SBV license number. Customers can subscribe to automated alerts when a specific bank's short-term capital cap utilization crosses defined thresholds (e.g., alert at 35% and again at 38%). For more information, visit the Company Intelligence Service page.
Additional FAQ: more questions about the short-term capital cap
Does the short-term capital cap apply to foreign bank branches in Vietnam?
Yes. Foreign bank branches operating in Vietnam under SBV licensing are subject to the same short-term capital cap requirements as domestic commercial banks, including HSBC, Standard Chartered, Citibank, and ANZ. For foreign banks, the short-term capital cap calculation uses only the funding and lending activity booked in the Vietnamese branch; the parent bank's global balance sheet is not consolidated into the ratio.
What counts as "short-term capital" for the short-term capital cap calculation?
Under SBV Circular 08/2020/TT-NHNN and its amendments, "short-term capital" for the short-term capital cap includes: demand deposits, term deposits with remaining maturity under 12 months, short-term interbank borrowings, and short-term bonds issued by the bank with remaining maturity under 12 months. Importantly, it is the remaining maturity that matters - a 3-year bond issued 2.5 years ago with 6 months remaining counts as short-term capital in the short-term capital cap denominator.
How does Vietnam's 40% short-term capital cap compare to regional peers?
Vietnam's short-term capital cap framework is somewhat unique in the region. Most other Southeast Asian central banks achieve similar goals through Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) requirements under Basel III, with Thailand, Malaysia, and Indonesia implementing NSFR minimums of 100%. Vietnam's 40% short-term capital cap is roughly equivalent to an NSFR in the 80-85% range - slightly more accommodative to maturity transformation than full Basel III adopters. This is consistent with the Vietnamese banking sector's growth stage and the government's infrastructure financing priorities.
Summary: key takeaways for banks and corporate borrowers on the short-term capital cap
The short-term capital cap increase from 30% to 40% effective July 1, 2026, is one of the most significant structural changes to Vietnam's bank lending framework in several years. For corporate finance and treasury teams, the most important immediate action is to contact your primary bank relationships and ask directly: what is your current short-term capital cap utilization, and by how much does your medium-term lending capacity increase under the new 40% ceiling? Banks that were operating at 26-30% now have substantial new room. Banks already well below 30% already had flexibility and gain relatively less.
The short-term capital cap change also creates an important asymmetry between banks. In the short run, JSCBs with tighter funding structures benefit most from the new headroom. SOCBs, already below the old 30% cap due to their institutional deposit bases, see less marginal benefit but may use the regulatory signal to aggressively expand project finance and infrastructure lending in line with the government's infrastructure push for H2 2026 and 2027.
For DataCore's users, the key short-term capital cap datapoints to monitor are: (1) system-level short-term capital cap utilization as reported in SBV supervisory statistics; (2) individual bank short-term capital cap utilization ratios available through DataCore's Company Intelligence Service; (3) the trajectory of new medium and long-term loan approvals by major banks in Q3 and Q4 2026, which will indicate whether banks are deploying the new short-term capital cap capacity aggressively or conservatively. DataCore will publish updated short-term capital cap utilization data across all 49 licensed banks within five business days of SBV's next supervisory data release.
Stay ahead of Vietnam's banking regulatory environment by subscribing to DataCore's weekly financial data digest - the fastest way for analysts, CFOs, and credit managers to track short-term capital cap movements and other SBV ratio changes across the entire Vietnamese banking system.
For further context on SBV regulatory changes and their practical impact on Vietnam's credit markets, DataCore publishes an ongoing series of bank sector regulatory briefings. The short-term capital cap adjustment effective July 1 is the most significant single change to the bank lending framework since the 2020 COVID emergency measures, and DataCore's analysts will be tracking deployment of the new short-term capital cap headroom through H2 2026 and into 2027 across all 49 licensed banks.






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