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Vietnamese
steel firm to take over $3bn project Taiwanese investors left behind: media
A worker is seen
at the warehouse of a steel making facility in Ho Chi Minh City in this photo
illustration. Tuoi Tre
Vietnamese steel maker Hoa Sen Group
has confirmed its intention to take over a mammoth steel project in the central province of Quang Ngai after
the original Taiwanese investor withdrew from it nearly ten years ago, local
media reported.
According to the document sent to Hoa Sen last week,
the group will sign a cooperation agreement with the Quang Ngai Province
People’s Committee, including investment in the US$3 billion steel project in
Dung Quat Economic Zone, news website Dien Dan Doanh Nghiep (Vietnam
Business Forum) said.
The intention of Hoa Sen is considered a positive sign
for the revival of the huge project that has remained idle for almost ten
years, according to Dien Dan Doanh Nghiep.
Originally initiated in 2006, when Taiwanese Tycoons
Co. was licensed to develop a US$1.7 billion project, it had a 90 percent
stake then sold to another Taiwanese investor, E-United.
E-United renamed the project Guang Lian and raised its
investment to $3 billion.
However, when the global economic downturn hit in
2007-08, the financial capacity of the investor shrank, and the project was
never implemented.
In 2012, Japanese firm JFE Steel
unexpectedly announced it would acquire a controlling stake in Guang Lian and
increase the project’s designed annual production capacity from five million
tons to seven million tons of steel, requiring an additional capital
investment of $1.5 billion.
But late last year, JFE Steel quit the project and
redirected $225 million from the fund set aside for the project to acquire a
five percent holding in the Formosa Ha Tinh Steel project in the
north-central province of Ha Tinh.
With a massive steel project left behind by foreign
investors, Hoa Sen Group has to come up with a specific plan on how to begin
again from scratch, Hai Quan (Vietnam Customs) newspaper reported.
Quang Ngai officials have advised the firm to invest in
a plant with an annual capacity of 3-5 million tons of steel.
Furthermore, Hoa Sen has yet to decide on whether to
seek a new investment license from the provincial authorities, or to receive
the project directly from E-United, after they dissolve their Vietnamese
subsidiary, Hai Quan said.
If they take over the project from E-United without
changing its scope, the Vietnamese group will have the advantage of a 10
percent reduction in corporate tax, as per the investment license granted in
2006, when the project was included on a priority list.
In addition, Hoa Sen will only have to spend money on
clearing 129 hectares of land, as E-United has already spent tens of millions
of U.S. dollars on clearing 375 hectares out of the 504 hectares allocated
for the project.
If Hoa Sen wants the provincial authorities to revoke
the investment license and grant it a new one, these advantages will
disappear, Dau Tu (Investment) newspaper said.
While Hoa Sen is one of the largest steel groups in the
country, with five subsidiaries, two manufacturing plants, and exports to 52
countries, a question still remains over whether the local outfit is capable
of bringing the massive project into life.
Moreover, a bigger challenge facing the entire industry
is a surplus supply of steel, triggered by capacity excess in China.
China’s mills – which produce about half of worldwide
output – are battling against oversupply and sinking prices as local
consumption shrinks for the first time in a generation amid a property-led
slowdown, according to Bloomberg.
Shanghai Baosteel Group Corp. forecast last week that
China’s steel production may eventually shrink to 20 percent of capacity, matching
the experience seen in the U.S. and elsewhere, Bloomberg reported.
In June, Hoa Sen started construction of a VND5
trillion ($225 million) cold rolling mill with a capacity of one million tons
in Nghe An.
As reported by Hoa Sen, with 20 years of experience in
the industry, the group's net sales from October 2014 to June 2015 reached
VND13.52 trillion ($608.4 million) with a profit after tax of VND484 billion
($21.78 million).
tuoi tre news
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Thứ Ba, 3 tháng 11, 2015
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