Lumen Vietnam Fund
About Us

Vietnam Holding Asset Management VNHAM

Is a Cayman Islands based investment advisor with a representative office in Ho Chi Minh City.

As an active investment advisor with a fundamental and value based approach, VNHAM seeks attractive risk-adjusted returns by combining rigorous financial analysis with interactive sustainability research.

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Vietnam
Why VNHAM

Focused and Active Value Investment in Vietnam

Sustainable Partnership with long-term relationships for shared growth. Systematic Approach as the methodical and adaptable management focused on long-term stability and growth. Achievement-Focused on commitment to results that bring maximum value and support sustainable development.

Experienced team

Decades of industry expertise

Value approach

Disciplined value investment combined with active portfolio trading

Result focused

Agile portfolio management to yield optimal return
Team

The Board of VietNam Holding Asset Management (VNHAM) plays a very active role in the management of the company. Members bring to our organization a wealth of professional experience in Vietnam, Asia, and the global financial community. The directors remain in close and regular contact with dedicated and advanced communication system, and physical meetings.

The Ho Chi Minh City team is headed by Chief Representative, Head of Advisory, and Head of Research.


In a frontier market like Vietnam, it is essential for an investment advisor company to have staff on the ground. VNHAM has always strived to hire qualified and motivated professionals, who share our distinctive values.

News

The latest news from our company and the world

We are happy to share with you information about our upcoming events, our achievements and the results of our work. Also, our team monitors and offers you news from official verified channels.

News

Vietnam

AQUIS-Fondsmanager Timpanaro: "Vietnam ist ein bisschen die Schweiz von Asien"

​​Hören Sie rein: Mario Timpanaro, der Fonds Manager hinter dem Lumen-Vietnam-Fonds von AQUIS Capital, spricht über die Bedeutung der Diversifikation im heutigen Markt, die potenziellen Vorteile vietnamesischer Aktien in Zeiten geopolitischer Spannungen und die besonderen Merkmale seines Fonds. Er gibt zudem einen Ausblick auf die kommende e-fundresearch.com Fonds-Dialog Roadshow in Österreich und teilt seine neuesten Erkenntnisse von einem Research-Trip nach Vietnam.

Click on the link for the full article.

These factors promise superior growth

​​In our newest market report, we present you the top 3 opportunity factors for Vietnam’s economy and an interview with fund manager Mario Timpanaro.

Click on the link for the full article.

Die China + 1-Strategie gibt unserem Vietnam-Fonds den Turbo

​​Die „Vietnams Bambus-Politik“, dem geschickten Balancieren zwischen völlig unterschiedlichen Handels-Partnern. Erlaubt dem Land jetzt von den geopolitischen Unsicherheiten, vor allem von der „China + 1“-Strategie, zu der sich viele westliche Unternehmen entschieden haben, zu profitieren.

Lesen Sie das Interview mit Mario Timpanaro zum Thema Vietnam

Click on the link for the full article.

Blog

Non-cash payments reach 28 times GDP in 2025

Non-cash payments reach 28 times GDP in 2025

Strong growth was recorded across all modern payment channels.

Non-cash payments in Vietnam rose sharply in 2025, reaching a total equivalent to 28 times the country’s GDP, according to the State Bank of Vietnam.

Vietnam's 2025 GDP size stood at $514 billion.

The number of non-cash transactions increased 42.21%, while total transaction value climbed 22.65% year-on-year.

Strong growth was recorded across all modern payment channels. Internet-based transactions surged 53.95% in volume and 35.75% in value, while mobile phone payments rose 36.62% in volume and 20.07% in value.

QR code payments saw the most dramatic increase, jumping 50.94% in transaction volume and an impressive 124.06% in value, underscoring their rising popularity for fast and convenient transactions.

Meanwhile, the interbank electronic payment system reported a 6.07% increase in transaction volume and a 56.55% surge in value. Transactions processed through financial switching and electronic clearing systems grew 24.33% in volume and 7.71% in value.

In contrast, ATM transactions declined 17.30% in volume and 6.02% in value compared to the previous year, highlighting a clear shift away from cash withdrawals as digital payments become increasingly widespread.


PM encourages greater invesment from Swiss and European enterprises

PM encourages greater invesment from Swiss and European enterprises

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh received a delegation of Swiss and European businesses in Hanoi on February 3.

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh has reaffirmed Vietnam’s openness to Swiss and European enterprises, encouraging greater investment in high-tech and high value-added projects linked with technology transfer, as well as deeper cooperation in green and digital transformation, renewable energy, the marine economy, green finance and tourism, according to a report from the Vietnam News Agency.

He made the suggestion at a meeting in Hanoi on February 3 with a delegation of Swiss and European businesses led by Dr Philipp Rösler, President of the Swiss–Viet Economic Forum (SVEF).

The PM expressed his hope that Swiss and European enterprises will scale up both direct and indirect investment, intensify technology transfer, support workforce training, share management expertise, invest in research and development, and help Vietnamese businesses integrate more deeply into global value and supply chains.

He also called on Swiss and European businesses to support Vietnam’s efforts to develop the international financial center, encourage the remaining EU member states to ratify the EU – Vietnam Investment Protection Agreement (EVIPA), urge the European Commission to lift the IUU fishing “yellow card” on Vietnamese seafood, and contribute to Vietnam’s long-term development through sustained investment, technology transfer, innovation cooperation and the promotion of international standards on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) and sustainable finance.

Representatives of Swiss and European enterprises highly valued Vietnam’s investment climate, noting their long-term cooperation and investment plans in sectors such as finance, textiles, climate change response, emissions reduction, pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, semiconductors, data infrastructure and artificial intelligence.

They called for continued support from the Government via policy openness and stability, streamlined administrative procedures, and stronger supporting ecosystems to help them enhance investment efficiency.

When money is no longer cheap

When money is no longer cheap

Rising interest rates are no longer seen as a short-term phenomenon but a structural trend, according to many financial institutions and economists, as Vietnam enters a new interest-rate regime with limited room for easing.

A new interest-rate floor takes shape

After a volatile 2025, Vietnam’s dong-denominated interest rates are settling at a noticeably higher level than in 2023-2024. Entering early 2026, both domestic and global factors suggest limited scope for rate cuts, with the possibility of further increases at certain points to address liquidity and exchange-rate pressures.

Many banks and securities firms agree that 2026 will not be a cycle of “cheap money”.

UOB expects the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) to keep its refinancing rate unchanged at 4.5% throughout 2026, citing persistent inflationary and exchange-rate pressures. Twelve-month deposit rates are forecast to rise by around 0.5 percentage points from end-2025 levels.

From a domestic perspective, BSC Securities said the central bank may retain some flexibility should exchange-rate pressures ease in the second half of the year. However, deposit rates are still expected to rise by 0.5-1 percentage point as money supply growth (M2) lags well behind credit demand.

Vietcombank Fund Management (VCBF) said the SBV is likely to prioritize targeted liquidity injections rather than cutting policy rates, while deposit rates will need to remain elevated to retain funds, particularly as the system-wide current account savings account (CASA) ratio has fallen sharply.

Alongside persistently high deposit rates, lending rates have come under clear upward pressure since late 2025, driven by rising funding costs as CASA ratios decline and competition for medium- and long-term deposits intensifies.

Market data show that new lending rates for standard corporate borrowers have commonly risen to 8.5-10% per year, well above levels seen in the first half of 2025. For medium- and long-term loans - especially in higher-risk sectors such as commercial real estate, construction and project investment - banks are offering rates of 10-12% or higher, particularly for highly leveraged firms or those with unstable cash flows.

The U.S. Federal Reserve’s policy meeting on January 27-28, 2026 marked a key turning point, as the Fed held its benchmark rate at 3.5-3.75%, pausing the easing cycle that began in September 2025.

The decision reflected U.S. inflation proving more persistent than expected despite cooling labor markets. The pause has kept the dollar index (DXY) elevated, adding pressure on emerging-market currencies, including the Vietnamese dong.

UOB economists said that under such conditions, Vietnam has virtually no room to cut policy rates in 2026 if it wants to maintain USD/VND stability.

Domestic liquidity strains add pressure

Beyond external factors, internal stresses within Vietnam’s banking system are also limiting the scope for lower rates.

By the end of 2025, the gap between credit and deposits had widened to around VND1,600 trillion ($61.52 billion), reflecting a growing mismatch as loan demand rebounded while savings shifted to alternative investment channels.

As a result, the sector-wide loan-to-deposit ratio reached a record 111%, forcing banks to compete aggressively on deposit rates to secure funding. The CASA ratio fell below 22%, significantly raising funding costs.

In December 2025, the SBV injected more than VND400 trillion ($15.38 billion) net via open market operations (OMO) to cool interbank rates, which had climbed to 7.5-7.8% at year-end. By late January 2026, longer-tenor interbank rates at times exceeded 8%, indicating that shortages of medium- and long-term funding remain unresolved.

Can Van Luc, chief economist at state-controlled BIDV bank, said the rise in interest rates is no longer cyclical but structural. He pointed to the prolonged gap between credit growth- around 18.5% in 2025 - and deposit growth, which has forced banks to maintain higher rates to attract funds.

Lending rates for high-risk sectors such as commercial real estate could remain at 10-12% in 2026, as these sectors no longer qualify as credit priorities, he added.

From an international perspective, Nguyen Xuan Thanh of Fulbright University Vietnam described the Fed’s pause as a “mild shock” for emerging markets. USD/VND pressures are likely to re-emerge in the first quarter of 2026, placing the SBV in a difficult position between defending the currency and supporting growth.

Signals from the SBV in January 2026 suggest a shift in policy priorities. Pham Chi Quang, head of the SBV's monetary policy department, said the 2026 credit growth target is expected to be around 15%, well below nearly 19% in 2025.

This reflects a move away from growth-at-all-costs toward a balance between economic expansion and inflation control, implying the central bank will no longer inject liquidity aggressively to push rates lower.

As of February 2026, 12-month deposit rates are forecast to range between 6.5% and 7.5%, with an upward bias. The USD/VND exchange rate is expected to trade between 25,500 and 25,800, while credit growth remains capped at 15%.

A recent 2026 outlook report by FiinGroup said Vietnam’s public debt indicators remain relatively safe, leaving some room for fiscal policy. However, the banking system remains the economy’s main funding channel, particularly for small and medium-sized enterprises, making growth heavily dependent on credit expansion.

That credit-driven growth model is approaching its limits. If credit growth of around 16% per year is maintained to support GDP growth of 8-10%, the credit-to-GDP ratio would exceed 180% by the end of the decade and approach or surpass 200% after 2030 - well above safe thresholds for an emerging economy, increasing risks to financial stability and banking system resilience.

With capital adequacy (CAR) under pressure, asset risks accumulating and inflation control becoming more critical, continued reliance on bank credit to drive growth is no longer sustainable. This underscores the need for a fundamental shift toward alternative funding channels in the next phase of economic development.

Contact

Please get in touch with us

If you would like to get in touch with us, please reach out to us and we’ll get back to you.

Cayman Islands

VietNam Holding Asset Management

Mario Timpanaro – Director

Collas Crill Corporate Services,
Willow House, Cricket Square,
PO Box 709, Grand Cayman Y1-1107,

Cayman Islands

Ho Chi Minh City – Representative Office

VietNam Holding Asset Management

Tran Kim Phuong – Chief Representative

Zen Plaza, Floor 1, Unit 106,
54-56 Nguyen Trai, Ben Thanh Ward,
District 1, Ho Chi Minh City,

Vietnam