HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 15 July 2026 - Fitch Ratings has assigned its first-ever credit
ratings to Ho Chi Minh City Development Joint Stock Commercial Bank
(HoSE: HDB), placing the lender among the highest-rated Vietnamese banks
and recognising its strong financial position, profitability and
sustainable growth.
The agency assigned HDBank long-term foreign- and local-currency issuer default ratings (IDRs) of
'BB-
' with a "Stable outlook" and a Viability Rating of
'bb-
', the highest Viability Rating for Vietnamese banks.
The BB- rating is one notch above the B1 rating previously assigned by
Moody's, reflecting HDBank's steady progress in strengthening its
financial position and credit quality.
Fitch said the ratings reflect the Bank's strong profitability, stable
funding base and growing position in Vietnam's banking sector, while the
country's favourable economic outlook is expected to continue
supporting banking industry performance.
The agency highlighted HDBank's sustained growth in total assets and
lending, alongside its expanding market share in the retail banking and
small and medium-sized enterprise segments.
It expects the bank to maintain profitability above the sector average,
supported by healthy net interest margins, strong operating efficiency
and one of the strongest capital positions among Vietnamese banks.
Fitch also noted that HDBank's shareholder-approved capital raising
plans will further strengthen its capital buffers and support medium-
and long-term growth, while the newly assigned credit rating is expected
to improve the bank's access to global capital markets, diversify
funding sources and lower funding costs.
Earlier this year, Moody's upgraded HDBank's outlook from "Stable" to
"Positive", citing improvements in financial strength, asset quality and
growth prospects.
In the first quarter of 2026, HDBank reported pre-tax profit of VND6.107 trillion (US$232.1 million), up 14% year-on-year.
Its return on equity (ROE) remained among the highest in the banking
sector at 24.29%, while its Basel II capital adequacy ratio stood at
16.2%, more than double the regulatory minimum of 8%.
As of March 31, total assets topped VND984.2 trillion (US$37.5 billion), up 5.7% from the end of 2025.
The Bank maintained a loan-to-deposit ratio below 70%, while other key
liquidity indicators, including the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) and
Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR), all exceeded Basel III minimum
requirements.