South Korean banks are scrambling to expand their presence in Vietnam, betting on the emerging country’s growth potential and its intent to loosen foreign ownership limits, Nikkei Asian Review reports. South Korean financial companies’ investments in Vietnam have grown by more than 500 percent over the past 10 years, in particular marking an uptick since last year, on the back of President Moon Jae-in’s Southeast Asia-friendly initiative, according to statistics from the Overseas Economic Research Institute of state-run Export-Import Bank of Korea. Vietnam plans to remove restrictions on foreign ownership of state-owned and listed companies by the end of 2019, as Hanoi looks to open its capital-hungry economy further in order to sustain rapid growth.