A New Kind of Collateral for Vietnam’s Small Businesses
For years, Vietnamese tech founders and small manufacturers have faced a common roadblock: they need capital to grow, but banks demand land titles or factory buildings as collateral—assets many startups simply don’t own. A draft amendment now under public consultation could rewrite that rulebook. Vietnam’s Ministry of Finance has proposed expanding legal collateral to include digital assets, virtual assets, and intellectual property, opening a path for crypto portfolios and tokenized IP to back business loans.
According to the original report published by WuBlockchain via Vietnam News Agency, the proposal is embedded in a draft revision of the Law on Support for SMEs. It explicitly lists future-formed assets, property rights, and digital and virtual assets among acceptable forms of collateral for bank loans, alongside intellectual property.
Taken at face value, the draft signals that Vietnamese regulators see digital assets not merely as speculative instruments but as legitimate economic resources—ones that should be usable by small and medium enterprises that form the backbone of the country’s economy.
Vietnam’s SME sector accounts for roughly 98% of businesses and 40% of GDP, yet fewer than 40% of these companies have access to formal bank credit, according to World Bank estimates. Real estate remains the dominant collateral, leaving asset-light technology firms out in the cold. Stablecoins, in particular, could serve as a practical first step—less volatile than bitcoin or ether, and already widely used for remittances and savings in Vietnam.
Tokenization and the Global Collateral Shift
The timing matters. As Vietnam’s finance ministry floats this idea, the global market for tokenized real-world assets has just crossed the $20-billion mark on-chain, according to a blockchainreporter.net tokenization roundup. JPMorgan and Ondo Finance recently executed the first live settlement of tokenized US Treasuries, showing that established financial players are beginning to accept digitally represented assets as collateral-grade instruments. If Vietnam proceeds, it could leapfrog developed markets by letting small companies pledge tokenized invoices, IP rights, or even stablecoin holdings alongside traditional guarantees.
However, the gulf between proposal and practice remains wide. Banks would need reliable valuation models for assets that can swing 20% in a day. A Bitcoin-backed loan under a 150% collateral ratio could face margin calls of a kind no local SME is accustomed to managing.
Regulatory Divergence with the West
The Vietnamese approach stands in stark contrast to the stance of US banking interests, where industry groups have been fighting to block crypto legislation just days before a key Senate vote. Banks attempted to kill the biggest US crypto bill in history by demanding last-minute changes to a compromise they had previously accepted. While Washington remains locked in regulatory trench warfare, Hanoi is quietly testing whether digital collateral can solve a tangible financing gap for its private sector. Vietnam’s drafting process shows a willingness to experiment that feels absent from many Western capitals, where fear of facilitating money laundering often overrides the practical need for capital formation.
The Developer and Adoption Factor
Vietnam consistently appears in the top percentile of Chainalysis’s Global Crypto Adoption Index, buoyed by heavy P2P trading and DeFi usage. Its developer community also punches above its weight, contributing to core infrastructure on chains like Ethereum and BNB Chain. On any given week, teams with Vietnamese roots log significant development activity, as recent blockchainreporter.net developer activity data suggests. That talent base and user familiarity make digital-asset-backed lending more plausible here than in markets where technical literacy lags.
What the Draft Doesn’t Answer
The draft law is still at the public consultation stage, and many details are missing. It doesn’t define “digital assets” or “virtual assets” precisely, nor does it explain how ownership will be verified for collateral purposes. Vietnamese law currently prohibits the use of cryptocurrencies for payments, and the State Bank of Vietnam has not issued clear guidance on digital asset custody or lending. Banks may therefore hesitate unless the finance ministry delivers a parallel framework for crypto classification and risk management.
Even if the law passes, lenders will face immediate operational questions: Which blockchains will be accepted? How will forks or airdrops affect collateral value? And what happens to a tokenized IP when a startup fails? These are not deterrents unique to Vietnam, but they remain unresolved in every jurisdiction that has tiptoed toward crypto-secured lending.
Still, the mere fact that a finance ministry in Southeast Asia is formally proposing that virtual assets can back bank debt changes the conversation. Public consultation is now open, and the feedback will determine whether the provision survives into the final law. For Vietnam’s SMEs, the difference between a draft and a binding regulation is the distance between a balance-sheet problem and access to working capital. The crypto industry will be watching.





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