Vietnam
Airlines Corp., the national carrier, plans to sell as much as a 15 percent
stake to foreign investors as the government seeks to accelerate the overhaul
of state-owned companies and spur economic growth.
The government plans to sell from 10
percent to 15 percent of the airline, most likely after an initial public
offering in September, Deputy Transport Minister Nguyen Hong Truong said in
an interview in
The national carrier is among more
than 400 state-run companies that
“
The airline is in talks with
potential investors that include international carriers and financial
companies from
It’s crucial for us to have the
planned share sales done successfully to send a clear message to
international investors that we really want them to come.
The government has given its
approval for Vietnam Airlines to sell a 25 percent stake, which includes both
sales to strategic investors and shares at the IPO, Truong said. Dung still
needs to sign-off on a detailed plan for the sales, with a final shortlist of
foreign investors expected in June, he said.
Truong said he’s confident the
airline will be able to sell the full stake.
‘Flagship equitization’
A successful offering of the
national carrier would kick-start the goverment’s push for share sales of other
state companies, said Marc Djandji, a partner at Ho Chi Minh City-based Asean
Strategy Group.
“Vietnam Airlines would be a
flagship equitization,” Djandji said in a telephone interview. “It would put
the process of equitization back on the map for
Foreign investors participated in
only one of
The benchmark VN Index gained 0.1
percent at open today, paring its gains this year to 7.5 percent. The gauge
rose 22 percent last year, the biggest advance among major Southeast Asian
indexes.
Sea ports
The transport ministry also plans to
sell stakes in eight sea ports now held by Vietnam National Shipping Lines
this year and the parent company will hold an IPO early 2015, Truong said.
The government has approved Samsung
Heavy Industries Co.’s purchase of as much as a 50 percent of a shipbuilding
company held by Shipbuilding Industry Corp., formerly known as Vinashin, in
Cam Ranh Bay, according to Truong. The South Korean giant is also interested
in buying a stake in Ha Long Shipbuilding, he said.
“It’s crucial for us to have the
planned share sales done successfully to send a clear message to
international investors that we really want them to come,” Truong said. “We
have improved the stake sale process with better evaluation methods and are
determined to sell stakes in these companies.”
Vietnam is accelerating sales of
state shares as part of efforts to bolster an economy that the World Bank
estimates will expand 5.4 percent this year, a seventh straight year of
growth below 7 percent.
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung in
March instructed ministries to speed up public share sales in state
enterprises and spur these companies to focus on core businesses as the
country’s economic growth slowed and its financial system came under pressure
from
The government has been trying to boost
competitiveness in the state sector, which the International Monetary Fund
last year said is a key source of economic vulnerability. The state companies
use up about 50 percent of public investment, tie up 60 percent of bank
lending and account for more than half the nation’s bad debt, according to
the finance ministry.
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Thứ Năm, 22 tháng 5, 2014
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