Vietnam's prime minister is expected within days to
approve an amended law allowing foreigners to own up to 60 percent of shares
in some listed firms, the latest incremental move towards easing tight state
controls on the economy.
The draft, seen by
Reuters, would increase the foreign ownership limit and voting rights from 49
percent to 60 percent, but only in certain sectors and companies, and after
approval of shareholders and Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung himself.
The proposal also
increases the foreign voting rights percentage in unlisted companies to 49
percent, to match the current 49 percent foreign shareholding limit.
Investors have
welcomed the idea as a positive step towards bringing more capital into
The main stock
exchange in
It is still down
57 percent from its peak in March 2007 and only a minor player in the region
with a market capitalisation of $40 billion, an eighth the size of
Although
An official at the
State Securities Commission, who requested anonymity, said the proposal was
sent by the Finance Ministry to Dung last week and was expected to be
approved soon.
The document was
short on specifics, but said the increased foreign shareholding would not
apply to sectors "in which the state needs to control foreign
capital". It did not elaborate, or name the restricted sectors.
STATE DOMINANCE
Although the
proposal is viewed as a positive move, investors and economists say much more
needs to be done because reforms to date and those in the pipeline represent
no real shift away from heavy state controls they say have stifled growth.
The state's
dominance of the economy has been a sticking point in
What has troubled
would-be investors is a new amended constitution that takes effect on Jan. 1,
reaffirming that the state sector must "play the leading role" in
the economy.
Tran Tai, a
portfolio manager at the Japanese fund Asiavantage Global, said the stocks
would likely gain at first under the new proposal, but it would take time to
see any real impact.
"It's a positive
sign from the government, but not as good as investors expected," Tai
said.
The average
foreign shareholding in companies listed on the Ho Chi Minh Stock exchange
this year was 24 percent, the bourse's chairman, Tran Dac Sinh, said
recently, suggesting there was plenty of scope for foreigners to buy.
That, however,
depends on how attractive the companies are.
Dominic Scriven,
CEO of asset management and securities firm Dragon Capital, said a big
problem
Local funds, he
said, were managing about $1 billion in total, a tiny sum compared with
markets like
"It is
essential that these restrictions on foreign investors are quickly
removed," Scriven said.
Reuters
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Thứ Hai, 30 tháng 12, 2013
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