link ae888

Banks end magnetic cards, require biometrics for firms from July 1

Under Circular 17/2024/TT‑NHNN issued on June 28, 2024, by the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV), all businesses must register fingerprints or facial recognition data for their legal representative before they can continue using Internet or mobile banking. ​
From July 1, all domestic transactions via magnetic‑stripe cards, including the stripe on hybrid chip cards, are switched off. (Photo: VNA)
From July 1, all domestic transactions via magnetic‑stripe cards, including the stripe on hybrid chip cards, are switched off. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - From July 1, banks across Vietnam have stopped using magnetic stripe cards and now require biometrics for company accounts to prevent fraud and improve security.

Under Circular 17/2024/TT‑NHNN issued on June 28, 2024, by the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV), all businesses must register fingerprints or facial recognition data for their legal representative before they can continue using Internet or mobile banking.

The verification must be performed using a valid chip‑based ID card (for Vietnamese citizens) or passport (for foreigners) at the branch or through a bank app. Lenders stressed they will never send links asking for login details, OTP codes or other personal data.

The SBV’s Payment Department estimates Vietnam hosts more than 200 million bank accounts, but only around 113.5 million have been matched to biometrics.

“Unverified accounts are ‘sleeping’ accounts that fraudsters can exploit,” warned the department’s director, Pham Anh Tuan.

By May 2025, 130.5 million individual profiles and 711,300 corporate profiles had been authenticated, yet Tuan said biometrics alone cannot eliminate every loophole, citing cases where fraudsters 'hire' someone’s face for identity checks.

At the same time, all domestic transactions via magnetic‑stripe cards, including the stripe on hybrid chip cards, were discontinued. Stripe cards are easily cloned, while EMV chip cards create a one‑time code for every payment, making counterfeiting far harder.

Banks have converted cards free of charge for several years and advise anyone still holding a stripe‑only card to visit a branch as soon as posible.

The first day of July also marks Vietnam’s first fintech 'sandbox'.

Decree 94/2025/ND‑CP, issued in April this year, sets up a controlled testbed for three services – credit scoring, open API data sharing and peer‑to‑peer lending – where firms can test limited live projects under SBV’s supervision.

“This is likely the country’s very first sandbox,” Deputy Governor Pham Tien Dung said, adding that new models may be admitted once regulators gain experience. /.

VNA

See more

Representatives of the Airbus plant in Seville introduce scale of the plant to Deputy Prime Minister Ho Duc Phoc (fourth, left, first row) and the Vietnamese delegation. (Photo: VNA)

Deputy PM visits Airbus plant in Spain

The Deputy PM expressed his support for Airbus’s investment expansion plans in Vietnam, particularly proposals to establish regional aircraft and equipment maintenance centres, as well as component manufacturing facilities at major airports.
Ambassador Mai Phan Dung, Head of the Vietnamese Delegation in Geneva (first from right). Photo: VNA

Vietnam praise🌞s Norway’s open trade policies at WTO review

Ambassador Mai Phan Dung, Head of the Vietnamese Delegation in Geneva, spotlighted Norway’s open trade policies, especially its mandatory electronic data exchange through the value-added tax system for e-commerce, which reduces trade costs and streamlines cross-border commerce.
The Vincom Time City shopping centre. (Photo: VNA)

Retail property supply rebounds amid global sector recovery🌠

A new trend has also emerged. While capital flow previously led the charge in boosting the retail sector, it is now the retail brands themselves that are reshaping the market. Expansion by fashion, cosmetics, furniture and F&B brands is setting the pace for sector growth and driving renewed investor interest.
The organising board of the Vietnam Private Sector Forum 2025 (VPSF 2025) makes debut (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam Private Sector Foru💃m 2025 to run from July – September

The forum is a structured journey of dialogue, moving from local to national levels, from grassroots realities to policy formulation, from the voice of entrepreneurs to government commitments. Its outcomes will be compiled in the Vietnam Private Sector White Paper 2025, offering specific and actionable policy recommendations to the Government, ministries, and local authorities.
{dagathomo tructiep hôm nay}|{link link link ae888}|{dá gà thomo}|{trực tiếp đá gà thomo hom nay}|{sbobet asian handicap}|