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

Government orders localities to align with double-digit growth targets

Government orders localities to align with double-digit growth targets

Localities are required to identify new growth drivers, regularly update growth scenarios, and remove long-standing development bottlenecks.

The Vietnamese Government has instructed provinces and centrally governed cities to align their development strategies with the country's ambitious double-digit economic growth targets, identify new growth drivers, regularly update growth scenarios, accelerate public investment disbursement and remove long-standing development bottlenecks.

The directive is outlined in the Government's Resolution No. 169/NQ-CP, issued on June 27, 2026, which sets economic growth objectives for localities in 2026 and the 2026-2030 period.

To achieve rapid, sustainable and substantive growth, the Government has instructed chairpersons of provincial and municipal People's Committees to closely monitor local economic performance while ensuring coordinated and effective implementation of existing socio-economic policies and solutions.

Local authorities are also required to strengthen forecasting and analytical capacity, closely monitor international and regional economic developments, particularly policy changes in major economies that could affect Vietnam, and proactively recommend timely and appropriate policy responses to the Government and the Prime Minister.

Under the resolution, local governments must closely follow the national double-digit growth roadmap for 2026 and the following five years. They are tasked with identifying new growth drivers and untapped development potential to formulate practical and breakthrough measures capable of achieving the assigned targets.

Provinces and cities are required to submit quarterly reports assessing implementation progress and updating growth scenarios where necessary.

The Government also called on local authorities to continue simplifying administrative procedures, reducing business conditions and regulatory barriers, improving the operating efficiency of the newly established two-tier local government system, and resolving the issue of underutilized or surplus public assets, including unused land and buildings.


PM asks to accelerate key transport projects

PM asks to accelerate key transport projects

Vietnam expects to have 5,000 kilometers of expressways by 2030.

Prime Minister Le Minh Hung has requested relevant ministries, agencies and localities to speed up progress of key infrastructure projects, while chairing a meeting of the State Steering Committee for key national projects in the transport sector in Hanoi on June 27.

The Government has identified 38 key projects with total investment capital of around VND5 quadrillion (around $190 billion) for the five-year period of 2026-2030. In 2026 alone, the Government has allocated VND220 trillion for these projects.

The PM requested the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Construction to strengthen supervision of airport construction projects, including Long Thanh International Airport in southern Dong Nai city, and Gia Binh airport in northern Bac Ninh province.

He tasked the Ministry of Construction to promptly select foreign contractors and consultants to carry out the feasibility study report for the North-South high-speed railway project.

The Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Construction, and the State Appraisal Council were tasked to organize the verification of the feasibility study report for the Lao Cai-Ha Noi – Hai Phong railway project and submit to the National Assembly Standing Committee prior to July 10, 2026.

The progress of these projects will be made public via the Vietnam Government Portal, according to the PM.

By 2030, Vietnam expects to have 5,000 kilometers of expressways.


Vietnam bank profits in 2026: The 'VIP pass' of credit growth quotas

Vietnam bank profits in 2026: The 'VIP pass' of credit growth quotas

The outlook for Vietnam's banking sector in 2026 presents a notable paradox: despite mounting liquidity pressures, narrowing net interest margins (NIMs), and rising funding costs, many banks are still expected to deliver double-digit profit growth, with some forecast to double their earnings.

Unlike previous years, the key driver of bank profitability in 2026 is no longer NIM expansion. Instead, the industry's performance increasingly depends on a "VIP pass" known as credit growth quotas, along with specific asset-related catalysts.

The latest reports from Saigon Securities Inc. (SSI), MBBank Securities (MBS), Vietcombank Securities (VCBS), and An Binh Securities (ABS) all maintain a positive outlook for the banking sector this year.

SSI recently raised its forecast for industry-wide pre-tax profit growth to 17.6%, up from its previous estimate of 17%. Similarly, ABS expected the banking sector's profits to grow by around 18%.

However, behind these encouraging growth figures lies mounting operational pressure. According to several securities firms, the banking industry's narrative has shifted significantly in 2026.

While the 2023-2025 period was primarily driven by NIM recovery amid low interest rates, this year's focus has shifted toward cost control, expanding non-interest income, and leveraging policy advantages.

MBS recently issued a noteworthy warning that the gap between system-wide credit growth and deposit growth has exceeded VND1,400 trillion ($53.22 billion). This indicates that lending is expanding considerably faster than deposits from households and economic organizations.

As a result, liquidity pressure is expected to intensify during the second half of the year. To secure funding, many banks will likely raise deposit interest rates, causing funding costs to increase more rapidly than previously anticipated.

South Korean bank Shinhan believes the impact of higher interest rates will gradually become more apparent in the remaining quarters of the year. As funding costs rise while lending rates cannot be increased proportionately, many banks' NIMs are expected to continue narrowing. This is also why MBS has revised its banking sector profit growth forecast downward to around 18%, below earlier optimistic projections.

A widening divergence among banks has also become increasingly evident. While some lenders are expected to maintain profit growth exceeding 20%, others may record only single-digit growth or remain largely flat compared with the previous year.

The common characteristic among the banks expected to achieve the strongest earnings growth is their higher credit growth quotas.

Following their participation in restructuring weak financial institutions through the compulsory transfer mechanism, several banks have been granted significantly higher credit growth limits by the State Bank of Vietnam than the industry average. This has become the most important competitive advantage in an environment where sector-wide NIM remains under pressure.

VCBS expects MBBank to be one of the biggest beneficiaries of this policy. Its 2026 pre-tax profit is projected to reach VND42.76 trillion ($1.63 billion), representing growth of 20-21% year-on-year. The primary driver is annual credit growth that could reach as high as 35%, substantially outperforming the industry average.

Similarly, HDBank is expected to benefit significantly from the policy. VCBS forecasts the bank's 2026 pre-tax profit at nearly VND28.73 trillion ($1.09 billion), an increase of 35-36%. Besides its credit growth advantage, HDBank is also expected to benefit from its acquisition of Vikki Bank and the planned IPOs of subsidiaries HD Securities and HD Saison.

VPBank is also viewed positively thanks to its higher credit quota and the recovery of its retail banking business. VCBS projects the bank's whole-year profit to grow by approximately 22.4%, supported by contributions from its subsidiaries FE Credit and VPBankS.

According to analysts, as NIM continues to decline, expanding interest-earning assets has become the decisive factor for profitability. In other words, banks with larger credit growth quotas can offset lower lending margins by increasing loan volumes, thereby sustaining earnings growth.

Multi-trillion-VND earnings beyond core operations

In addition to favorable credit policies, several banks are expected to generate exceptional earnings from non-core income sources.

The most notable example is Sacombank. VCBS forecasts the bank's 2026 pre-tax profit at over VND15.23 trillion ($578.97 million), representing a remarkable 100% increase from the previous year.

The primary catalyst is the completion of its long-running bad debt resolution process, particularly involving collateral assets and legacy loans accumulated during its restructuring program.

MSB is also viewed as a bank capable of delivering significant upside surprises. Its 2026 pre-tax profit is forecast to reach VND 8.61 trillion ($327.3 million), up 22%. According to VCBS, the bank could recognize an additional VND1-1.5 trillion ($57 million) in earnings from debt recoveries and provision reversals during the second half of the year.

Meanwhile, VietinBank is expected to benefit from the transfer of the VietinBank Tower project. The transaction could generate approximately VND5 trillion ($190.07 million) in one-off profit if completed on schedule.

VCBS forecasts VietinBank's Q2 pre-tax profit at around VND15 trillion ($570.21 million), up 24% year-on-year, while full-year profit is expected to increase by approximately 20.6%.

Analysts believe these banks are particularly attractive to cash flow because their earnings outlook depends not only on traditional lending activities but also on unique earnings catalysts.

Another notable trend highlighted by MBS is the changing composition of credit growth.

Corporate lending has become the primary growth engine for the banking system. In particular, commercial real estate lending has expanded by 11.7% compared with the end of last year, supported by the resolution of legal obstacles affecting numerous property projects.

By contrast, retail lending continues to face greater challenges. Higher lending rates resulting from increased funding costs have slowed the recovery in demand for mortgages, consumer loans, and loans to household businesses.

This explains why many banks traditionally focused on retail banking have experienced slower profit growth.

VCBS forecasts that Vietnam International Bank's (VIB) Q2 profit will increase by only about 5% year-on-year to VND2.73 trillion ($103.79 million). Rising funding costs are placing considerable pressure on the bank's profitability.

Likewise, banks such as Asia Commercial Bank (ACB), Techcombank, and Vietcombank are expected to maintain stable earnings growth but are unlikely to deliver the sharp profit acceleration anticipated for banks benefiting from compulsory transfer policies or unique asset-recovery stories.

As NIM continues to narrow, competition within the banking sector is increasingly shifting toward cost optimization and operational efficiency.

MBS forecasts that MBBank will continue to lead the industry in return on equity (ROE), with an estimated 20.2%. Its advantages include a high CASA ratio, low funding costs, and strong risk management capabilities.

The next group consists of VIB (17.5%), ACB (17.2%), Vietcombank (16.9%), TPBank (16.9%), and VPBank (16.9%).

According to MBS, banking sector valuations remain below their five-year average, creating attractive long-term stock accumulation opportunities for investors.

However, rather than favoring highly speculative stocks, MBS recommends CTG of VietinBank, ACB, and VPB of VPBank for investment portfolios in the second half of 2026, citing their balanced combination of earnings growth, asset quality, capital strength, and attractive valuations.

Overall, 2026 marks a period of significant divergence within Vietnam's banking sector. While banks enjoying the "VIP pass" of generous credit growth quotas or possessing unique asset-recovery opportunities continue to accelerate, many others are adopting more defensive strategies in response to increasing liquidity pressure and rising funding costs.

As a result, this year's profit race is no longer an industry-wide story but rather a competition among banks with the strongest policy advantages, superior asset positions, and the greatest ability to adapt to the new interest-rate environment.


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