Thứ Năm, 10 tháng 9, 2015

BUSINESS IN BRIEF 10/9


Vietnam, Egypt step up bilateral trade ties
Representatives from about 70 Vietnamese and Egyptian enterprises shared information on business opportunities at a forum in Cairo on September 7.
In his remarks, Vietnamese Ambassador to Egypt Dao Thanh Chung highlighted Vietnam’s socio-economic achievements, especially those during 30 years of reform, as well as its cooperation opportunities and trends.
Emphasising the comprehensive and friendly collaboration between Vietnam and Egypt in politics, diplomacy, economy, trade, investment, culture, education and tourism, the diplomat proposed solutions to elevate bilateral trade to 1 billion USD.
He suggested the two nations’ businesses set up direct contacts to ease risks caused by conducting business through third parties while actively taking part in trade fairs and investment seminars.
Vietnam and Egypt boast substantial potential for cooperation in agriculture, forestry and fisheries, he said, stressing the need for the two sides to accelerate the implementation of the agreement on establishing a joint trade office inked by the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the Egyptian Trade Union Federation in 2009.
A representative of the federation reported that Egypt is luring foreign investment in transportation, ports, agriculture, fisheries, the environment, petroleum and petro-chemistry, particularly the Suez Canal Corridor Area Project.
Tran Quang Huy, Head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Africa, West and South Asian Market Department, told a Vietnam News Agency correspondent that Egypt’s imposition of the cap on dollar deposits remains a barrier to Vietnamese exporters and importers.
Sharing Huy’s views, CEO and General Director of the Southern Joint Stock Company Nguyen Van Thanh called on Egypt to promptly adjust regulations to boost bilateral trade ties.
According to Vietnam’s Commercial Affairs Office in Egypt, two-way trade climbed from 187 million USD in 2010 to nearly 400 million USD in 2014. Of the figure, Vietnam’s export value reached 380 million USD.
Vietnam mainly exports mobile phones, spare parts, seafood, yarn, pepper, machines, equipment, coffee, cashew nuts, rubber and petrochemical products to Egypt.
Meanwhile, the Egyptian side ships yarn materials, leather, plastic materials, milk and dairy products, electronics and sugar to the Southeast Asian nation.
Vietnam’s tilapia holds promising potential for export
Tilapia, Vietnam’s 10th biggest farmed fish currency earner, holds promising potential on the back of infrastructure, farming techniques and market connectivity.
Last year, the total area of tilapia aquaculture at ponds and lakes nationwide spanned 16,000 hectares and yielded 125,000 tonnes. The figure is expected to rise to 21,000 hectares and 150,000 tonnes this year, according to the Directorate of Fisheries.
Tilapias for export are processed into skin-on fillets, skinless fillets and frozen whole fish which have gained popularity.
Professor David Little from the Institute of Aquaculture under the University of Stirling of Scotland said Central and Southern American countries are targeting North America for fresh fillet shipments, adding that wholesalers are seeking other supplies beyond China, but few are offering competitive prices.
Vietnam currently boasts 600 aquatic product processing facilities with a total yearly capacity of 2.8 million tonnes, making it easier for the tilapia breeding and processing industry to grow. It is eyeing 60 countries and territories for export with an estimated volume in excess of 32 million USD, including major markets of the US, Spain and Colombia.
Consumption demand is bouncing back not only in the US but all over the world, said Ngo The Anh from the Directorate of Fisheries’ Department of Aquaculture.
However, the sector is also facing hindrances concerning the quality of fries imported mostly from China, the high cost of feed and low disease resistance.
Going behind China, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines in terms of tilapia exports, Vietnam tends to encounter certain difficulties when navigating new markets, including the US and Europe, he added.
Pham Anh Tuan, Deputy Director General of the Vietnam Fisheries Department, said 70 percent of tilapia is bred in the Mekong Delta and the remaining is in the north. As many as 455 million tilapia fries are up on the market each year.
Under a tilapia breeding master plan until 2020, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development encourages institutes, universities and enterprises to import fries for research and self-produce those suitable to each region’s climate and soil.
On fry quality management, Departments of Agriculture and Rural Development need to conduct regular inspections and quarantines while localities are to crack down on fish cage farming to prevent pollution.
Professor Little recommended tilapia farming be up to Global Good Agricultural Practices standards and developing trademarks to compete with experienced rivals.
Dong Nai’s trade with ASEAN gains momentum
The southern province of Dong Nai posted nearly 800 million USD generated through outbound shipments to the ASEAN market within the past eight months.
According to the provincial Customs Department, the sum accounted for almost 10 percent of Dong Nai’s overall export revenue in the period with key earners including apparels, agricultural produce, electronic devices and components.
Meanwhile, the province purchased commodities worth more than 122 million USD from bloc partners.
A range of tariff lines in bloc trade have dropped by up to 10 percent since 2010 and will be eliminated with the birth of the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) by the end of 2015. Vietnam will greatly benefit from the incentives as major export products, such as garments, seafood, rice, coffee, rubber and woodwork products, will go untaxed.
Experts said the establishment of the AEC could result in minor changes to local products and create opportunities for export.
Dong Nai’s Department of Agriculture and Rural Development said a stronger link among producers and the application of advanced technology are key to maintaining the domestic market and boosting outbound shipments.
The agency is working closely with the industrial sector to carry out trade promotion and market research while announcing regular forecasts.
Thua Thien Hue expedites Chan May Port upgrading
The central province of Thua Thien - Hue is speeding up the completion of Chan May port’s Wharf No. 1 in a bid to welcome 60,000 tourists, said Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee Nguyen Van Cao.
The project, estimated to cost 310 billion VND (13.8 million USD), covers the increasing of Wharf No 1’s length from 300 metres to 360 metres, the dredge an area of 90 metres by 450 metres in front of the wharf and the expansion of the turning radius from 400 metres to 570 metres.
The Royal Caribbean International Group splashed out 5 million USD to improve infrastructure at the port, enabling it to receive super-sized ships and contribute to the province’s increasingly important tourism sector.
Upon completion of the upgrades, Chan May port will be able to accommodate the 348-metre Quantum-class ship in sizes up to 158,000 GT and the 360.3-metre Oasis-class ship in sizes up to 225,282 GT.
From the outset of this year, the province has received a number of international liners including Celebrity Millennium of Malta which carried 2,500 tourists from the US, Canada, Australia and European countries to the ancient imperial city of Hue.
Notably, the first five-star Voyage of the Seas of the US Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines with over 3,600 tourists on board docked at Chan May last month, the largest ship to ever anchor at the port. The Voyager of the Seas has 15 floors with 1,306 rooms and is 311 metres long and 48 metres wide.
15th Vietnam-China int’l trade fair to open in Lao Cai
The 15th Vietnam-China International Trade Fair will take place from November 12-17 at the Kim Thanh Exhibition Centre in the northern border province of Lao Cai to promote cooperation and friendship between participating countries.
The trade show expects to host about 1,000 booths for around 350 Vietnamese and 100 Chinese businesses as well as enterprises from several countries in the region.
At a press conference in Hanoi on September 8, Deputy Head of the Vietnam Trade Promotion Agency Do Kim Lang stressed that the fair, held by Lao Cai province in Vietnam or Yunnan province in China annually, is an important event for the two provinces in 2015.
It will provide a good opportunity for Vietnamese and overseas enterprises to introduce their products – such as farming, forestry and seafood products, machines and equipment, handicrafts and timber products – while exchanging information and seeking partnerships.
Investment projects and tours linking Kun Ming (China) and Lao Cai, Hanoi, Hai Phong and Quang Ninh (Vietnam) will also be promoted during the event.
Deputy Director of the Lao Cai Department of Industry and Trade Hoang Chi Hien highlighted province’s key position in regional economic development as it shares a 182-kilometre border with southwest China while the newly opened highway connecting Lao Cai – Hanoi has facilitated further trade expansion between the locality and other provinces across the country.
The fair aims to boost exports and imports via the Ha Khau international border gate in Lao Cai, he added.
Phu Quoc island draws 164 investment projects
The Mekong Delta province of Kien Giang’s Phu Quoc island district is hosting 164 licenced projects worth nearly 169 trillion VND (7.52 billion USD), according to a working group for Phu Quoc island development.
The projects, including 21 foreign invested ones, covers 5,630 hectares in the island district, said the group, adding that the supervision of the projects will be strengthened in the coming time.
Licences of projects lagging behind scheduled will be withdrawn, while stronger measures will be rolled out to support investors during the projects’ implementation.
Phu Quoc island, dubbed Perl Island, has a total area of 589.23 square kilometres and a population of about 97,000. It is one of the tourism hubs of Kien Giang and the southern region as well.-
Milk and dairy imports drop to US$640 million
Vietnam’s milk and dairy imports worth US$640 million in the first eight months of the year, down 18% against the same period last year, according to the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT).
The country primarily imported dairy products from New Zealand, the US, Singapore, Thailand, Germany and Australia in the reviewed period. Of these markets, New Zealand made up the largest market share at 25.8% or US$149.5 million, followed by the US with an estimated US$84.9 million.
The milk and dairy imports showed a decline in some markets and the Danish market is a typical case in point, down 89.41% or US$872,300.
In the final quarter of 2015, if the nation maintains milk and dairy imports of US$63 million per month on average, Vietnam will have to spend US$890-920 million on importing milk and dairy products by the end of 201, Vietnam Dairy Association (VDA) predicted.
Russia strengthens trade co-operation with VN
Five small and medium-sized firms from Russia yesterday visited HCM City to promote co-operation in innovative technologies, oil and gas, research and development and medicine, besides telecommunications and education.
Organised by the Tomsk Chamber of Commerce and Industry in collaboration with the Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI), the Russia-Viet Nam business event was attended by 30 Vietnamese enterprises.
Maxim Golikov, Chief Representative of the Russian Trade Office in Viet Nam, said the Tomsk region in southeastern Siberia was the oldest and the leading Russian educational and scientific centre.
Small and medium-sized enterprises employ nearly half of the total working population of the Tomsk region.
Russian Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev told a working session between Russian and Vietnamese businesses in April this year that the Russian Government has always supported bilateral co-operation projects.
He said the two countries have to promote business ties and develop B2B relationships with more investment and trade projects.
In May, Viet Nam and the Eurasian Economic Union concluded a free trade zone agreement. A Vietnamese-Russian agreement on Viet Nam providing the most favoured nation status to Russian suppliers and investors was also concluded.
Vietnamese and Russian enterprises are expected to get more opportunities to increase exports from that agreement.
In the middle of this month, a business delegation from HCM City, headed by Deputy Chairwoman of the municipal People's Committee Nguyen Thi Hong, will visit Moscow and Saint Petersburg to seek co-operation opportunities.
In November, the Viet Nam Trade Promotion Agency will organise an exhibition in Moscow to promote Vietnamese exports for the Russian market. Another exhibition, entitled "Zarubezhexpo Viet Nam," will be held in Ha Noi.
At the same time, business delegates from Omsk province and Moscow city will visit Viet Nam.
Golikov said the export of raw materials was no longer a key factor in bilateral trade. Items with added value have become the main export items, accounting for 50 to 60 per cent of the total imports and exports.
Russia mainly exports machinery and vehicles to Viet Nam, while Viet Nam exports electronic products to that market.
Viet Nam has invested US$2.4 billion in 17 projects in Russia, while Russia has invested $1.9 billion in more than 100 projects in Viet Nam.
Nguyen The Hung, deputy head of VCCI in HCM City, said in recent years, there had been a marked intensification of Russia-Viet Nam co-operation, especially in the economic sectors.
The bilateral trade between two countries has increased from $400 million (2000) to $1.8 billion (2010), $2.7 billion (2013) and $3.7 billion (2014). It is expected to touch $10 billion by 2020, he said.
He said trade ties between Viet Nam and Russia would see significant growth with the signing by the two countries in April of a co-operation agreement to implement 17 investment and trade projects, worth $20 billion.
Central SOEs make using each others' products a high priority
As part of the Government initiative Vietnamese Give Priority to Using Vietnamese Goods, members of a group of State-owned corporations yesterday signed an agreement at the central level to accord priority to using products made by the group's members.
The pact will cover the period 2015-20.
Speaking at a conference yesterday, President of the Viet Nam Fatherland Front Central Committee, Nguyen Thien Nhan, urged enterprises to enhance product quality and competitiveness as they create new products to affirm and consolidate Vietnamese brands.
Nhan said it was vital that businesses renovate technology and enhance application of advanced technologies to improve productivity and production capacity.
In addition, great attention should be paid to establish the distribution systems in order to ensure Vietnamese products and services to reach more consumers, Nhan said, adding that co-ordination in distribution or using each others' products was also important to efficiently achieve positive results of the ‘Vietnamese give priority to use Vietnamese goods' campaign.
The campaign must aim at promoting Vietnamese manufacturers, inspiring them to produce high-quality products, distributors to sell and consumers to choose such products, he said.
The priority that State-owned enterprises at the central level must accord to using products made by each other helps encourage production and use of domestic products and creates momentum for renovations while increasing local procurement rate.
Many members in the group of State-owned enterprises at the central level now have local procurement rates upwards of 70 per cent, thanks to co-ordination among members.
The group has 33 members covering key sectors of the economy, such as fuel, minerals, railway transport, marine transport, air transport, telecommunications and garment and textile, with a combined contribution of one third of the government's budget annually, and together providing 1.3 million jobs.
Gov't to lower corporate loans to equity ratios
State-owned and private companies will have to limit their ratio of loans to equity in order to exclude interests from loans from the company's income tax payments.
This is a part of a new tax law that the Ministry of Finance is drafting and plans to submit to the National Assembly's Standing Committee this month.
The ministry plans to set the maximum ratio of loans to equity at 5:1 for those in the production sector and 4:1 for those in other sectors. This allows the interest accrued from loans that a company must pay to be excluded from the income tax collection starting next year. From 2019, these ratios will fall to 4:1 and 3:1, respectively.
The ministry wants to ensure that companies won't borrow too much from banks and reduce the rate of non-performing loans for the banking sector as well improve tax collection for the State.
The finance ministry reported the current Corporate Income Tax Law does not tax interest payments from loans, even when the loans exceeding the company's capital.
In fact, a lot of companies have outstanding loans exceed their capital, causing losses for them and reducing the taxes collected for the State.
The drafting law may cause problems for some listed companies that have very high ratio of loans over equity.
The draft reported that 11 listed companies have the highest ratio of more than 5:1 and about 20 others have a ratio of 2.8:1 to 4:1, most of which are construction companies and construction materials producers, including Vinaconex 5 (VC5) with the ratio of 13.7:1, SMC Trade & Investment (SMC) and Vinavico (CTN) with the ratio of 7:1 and Construction Co 47 (C47) with the ratio of 5.3:1.
Vinh Long Cereal and Food Corp (VLF) topped companies with a loans to equity ratio of 78:1.
In the second quarter of this year, VLF reported VND290 billion (US$12.9 million) of short-term loans while its equity was only VND4 billion ($175,100) due to a loss of VND153 billion ($6.8 million).
VLF reported that it hardly found any financial resources as all banks stopped lending it to buy production inputs, making the company run weakly with most of its activities in collecting receivables, selling stockpiles and inefficiently-used assets to pay bank loans.
VLF was listed as a controlled security on the HCM Stock Exchange as the company suffered a net loss of VND71.7 billion ($3.2 million) in the first half of this year.
The draft also reported that among 57 of 85 State-owned enterprises, two of them have the ratio of more than 2:1, six of them have the ratio of 3-5:1 and the rest have the ratio below 3:1.
In addition, 9,400 foreign-owned companies with total assets of VND2,200 trillion ($105 billion) have the general ratio of loans to equity at 1.2:1 for all sectors and at 3.4:1 for the trading sector only.
Some firms, however, have to make more loans because their capital is not enough to run their business. They will suffer more if their loan interest is included in the tax collection. In order to reduce that ratio, they can reduce the loans or increase the capital, but it seems too difficult for those that have low profits.
Equitisation arm to increase charter capital
The Debt and Asset Trading Corporation (DATC), an important arm of the Government's efforts to equitise State-owned companies, will increase its charter capital from a current VND2.48 trillion (US$110 million) to VND6 trillion ($266 million) starting October 15.
The announcement came in the form of Circular 135/2015/TT-BTC issued by the Ministry of Finance.
The equitisation of State-owned companies remains slow and resolution of bad debts has fallen below Government expectations. The capital increase was done as a way to speed up DATC's work.
DATC, whose capital is fully sourced by the State, handles bad debts and unused assets of State-owned groups and corporations to improve their financial condition, restructuring process and transform them into joint-stock companies.
It provides financial services such as buying, selling and handling debts and assets.
The DATC settles debts by directly retrieving debts, resuming guaranteed assets, selling debts and changing debts into capital contribution. They also have the power to officially assign debt responsibility, extend debt payback period and adjust interest rates.
In the first half of the year, DATC brought in a total revenue of VND900 billion (US$39.9 million), including VND700 billion ($31.1 million) from debt trading.
The corporation has already dissolved debts and assets at 33 enterprises, amassing a total revenue of VND62.4 billion ($2.77 million), five times higher than the first half of last year.
Nghi Son launches construction of international port
The Nghi Son Iron and Steel Corporation started the construction of its VND5.85-trillion (US$260.2 million) international port this morning in the central Thanh Hoa Province's Nghi Son Economic Zone.
The port would be an important part of the Nghi Son Iron and Steel Complex, the company said.
It will cover 71 ha and will have a storehouse and nine wharves with a total length of 2,250m. It is expected to receive ships carrying loads up to 50,000 tonnes and will handle 30 million tonnes of goods each year.
The first three wharves are expected to become operational in October next year, the next two in 2017 and the construction of the whole complex will be completed by 2021.
Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai said at the groundbreaking ceremony of the port this morning that it was a key project of the Nghi Son Economic Zone, which is known as the engine for the development of the northern section of the central region.
The project would help to connect the sea port with other transport modes to meet the transportation demand of industries and infrastructure development in the zone, he said.
A view of the Nghi Son Economic Zone in Thanh Hoa Province. An international port will be built in the zone with investment capital of US$260.26 million. — VNA/VNS Photo Anh Tuan
Deputy PM Hai said the investors and builders should strictly follow the project plan and ensure labour safety and quality of the work.
He also asked the relevant agencies, including the provincial People's Committee and the transport ministry, to help investors address difficulties in project implementation.
Former Party General Secretary Le Kha Phieu and former President Nguyen Minh Triet also attended the groundbreaking ceremony.
Jan-Aug credit grows 9.54%
January-August credit grew 9.54% compared to the end of 2014, well above the 4.33% of last year’s same period, according to an updated report the Credit Department under the State Bank of Vietnam.
The report said of the five priority sectors, outstanding loans of credit institutions, excluding Vietnam Bank for Social Policies and Vietnam Development Bank, for the agriculture and rural development sector had reached VND811.64 trillion  (US$36.07 billion) as of the end of August, up 9% against last year-end.
Credit for production of goods for export had stood at VND184.6 trillion by June 30, up 4.99% against the end of 2014. Meanwhile, loans for hi-tech enterprises totaled VND25.61 trillion (up 29.12%), supporting industries VND110.62 trillion (up 3.2%) and small and medium enterprises at VND976.73 trillion (up 4.07%).
Despite the nation’s high credit growth of 9.54% in the first eight months of this year, HCMC had recorded growth of 6.52% by the end of last month. The city saw loans in Vietnam dong rising by 7.94% over the end of 2014 but those in foreign currencies inching down 1.23%.
Outstanding loans in HCMC as of August had not included bad debt handled via risk provisions and sold to Vietnam Asset Management Company (VAMC). If bad debt was added, growth of outstanding loans in the city was nearly the same that of the country.
GE to supply steam turbines for thermal power plant
General Electric (GE) has announced a plan to supply two sets of steam turbines and generators for Long Phu 1 coal-fired power plant in the Mekong Delta province of Soc Trang.
The thermal power facility will use two GE D850 steam turbines, configured to enhance the construction timeline with pre-assembled sections and installation features that shorten erection time. The first set of steam turbines and generators is scheduled for delivery to the plant late this year.
Russia-based OJSC Power Machines and Petrovietnam Technical Services Corporation are involved in an EPC consortium to develop the power project of Vietnam National Oil and Gas Group (PetroVietnam).
The plant is said to be of higher efficiency and more environmentally friendly compared to conventional subcritical boiler technology, and can generate 1,200 megawatts (MW) once fully online by the end of 2018. The 1,200 MW is equivalent power needed for around four million Vietnamese households.
The thermal power plant will help meet growing energy demands in southern Vietnam and improve transmission efficiencies for the entire country, Nguyen Tien Vinh, general manager of power division at PetroVietnam, said in a statement.
Dong Nai port’s new pier to handle bigger ships
Dong Nai Port Joint Stock Co. looks set to put into operation a new pier designed to handle vessels of 30,000 DWT at Go Dau Port in Long Thanh District in the southern province of Dong Nai at the end of this month after one year of construction.
The 250-meter-long, 22-meter-wide pier is one of the components of a project worth VND187 billion (US$8.3 million) invested by the company. The project also comprises an approach bridge of 32 meters in length and 12 meters in width, and an onshore 36-meter-long rail and a crane with a lifting capacity of 40 tons.
The pier has been constructed since September last year and is the first phase of Go Dau B Port project. The port currently handles vessels of 15,000 DWT.
According to Dong Nai Port Joint Stock Co., the new facility will meet increasing demand of enterprises in nearby industrial parks including Go Dau Industrial Zone. It will speed up export of alumina produced at Tan Rai facility in the Central Highlands province of Lam Dong as the port is where the aluminum oxide is shipped abroad.
Currently, Dong Nai port complex has nine piers, two barge berths and two warehouses with a total area of 47.85 hectares. The complex will be developed into a national-level general port as approved by the Prime Minister.
Wholesale, retail trade attractive to small businesses
Wholesale and retail trade accounted for 39.8% of total active micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in Vietnam as shown in a report released by the Asian Development Bank (ADB) last week.
The proportions were 20.5% for the service sector and 15.7% for the manufacturing sector, according to the Asia SME Finance Monitor 2014 report covering 20 developing countries in Asia.
The report said Vietnam had had a total of 359,794 MSMEs as of the end of 2013, making up 96.4% of total enterprises in the country. MSMEs employed 5.1 million workers, or 46.8% of Vietnam’s workforce.
Privately owned firms account for 97.2% of the total in Vietnam, foreign-invested companies for 2.7% and state-owned enterprises the remainder.
According to the report, regional integration and trade offers opportunities for smaller firms to explore offshore markets but also expose them to tougher competition.
The report stressed the need to provide financial support for Asia’s small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to grow into dynamic, internationally competitive companies. This is key to strong, sustainable growth in Asia as the world recovers from the recent global economic slowdown.
Asia has millions of SMEs but few of them are able to grow to the point where they can innovate or be part of the global supply chain. To do this, they need more growth capital and opportunities to access various financing channels,” said Noritaka Akamatsu, senior advisor in ADB’s Sustainable Development and Climate Change Department, which produced the report.
SMEs take an average of 96% of all registered firms and employ 62% of the labor force, according to the report. However, they contribute only 42% of economic output.
Governments in the region need to help SMEs become more competitive and participate in global value chains. This requires governments to facilitate SMEs to access new financing, such as supply chain finance.
Limited access to bank credit is a persistent problem in Asia and the Pacific, the report pointed out. Lending to SMEs has declined over the course of the global financial crisis and in 2014, they got only 18.7% of total bank loans.
Danang airport planned to handle 13 million passengers by 2020
Danang airport in the city of the same name will be expanded to serve 11-13 million passengers and 50,000 tons of cargo by 2020 as envisaged in a revised master plan approved by the Ministry of Transport.
According to the ministry’s Decision 3066, the international airport will meet 4E standards of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO). It would be able to handle big jets like Boeing B747, Boeing B777 and Boeing B787, Airbus A320, A321 and A350.
The airport in the economic center of central Vietnam would have its existing passenger terminal expanded to serve nine million passengers a year. Besides a VIP lounge covering 4,200 square meters, a new international terminal would go up to enable the airport to handle an additional 2-4 million passengers per year.
The Ministry of Transport expects the new international facility at Danang airport will get off the ground early next year and be finished in June 2017.
Earlier, TAH consortium comprising Thang Long Airport Services Corporation (TASECO), AOV Investment Corporation and Hanoi Construction Corporation (HANCORP) proposed building the new terminal to serve four million passengers per year under the build-operate-transfer format.
The current passenger terminal at Danang airport with an annual capacity of six million passengers was put into operation in late 2011. Last year, five million passengers went through the airport, up 16% compared to 2013.
Three local and eight international airlines conduct flights to and from Danang. The airport handles around 100 takeoffs and landings and some 10,000 passengers a day.
HCM City taxi firms to lower fares
Several taxi enterprises in HCMC will finally cut fares by VND500 per kilometer this week after a couple of fuel price reductions, according to the chairman of the HCMC Taxi Association.
Ta Long Hy told the Daily after local fuel trading enterprises cut the retail price of gasoline by around VND1,200 a liter last week, Mai Linh and Vinasun would charge lower fares from tomorrow. However, other members of the associations have not made a move.
Asked whether the fare cut is too meager compared to a sharp decline in fuel prices this year, Hy said a VND500 reduction is acceptable as from May 12 the retail price of gasoline picked up by a total of VND1,480 per liter before falling a combined VND3,380 per liter last week, leaving a price differential of VND1,900 per liter.
A number of coach operators have adjusted down fares by VND10,000-20,000 for their services between HCMC and the Mekong delta. This fare reduction is confirmed by Thuong Thanh Hai, deputy director of Mien Dong Coach Station.
Hai told the Daily that around ten passenger transport companies have informed the station of fare cuts by 4-10%. For example, Kim Hoang Company now sells one-way fares for its service between HCMC and Tra Vinh Province at VND100,000 instead of VND120,000.
However, many coach operators have not brought down fares for their inter-provincial services, especially those from HCMC to the Central Highlands provinces of Daklak and Gia Lai and Ba Ria-Vung Tau Province.
Offshore investors may get support
The HCMC government plans to partly subsidize loan interest for local enterprises to develop commercial centers and supermarkets in Laos and Cambodia and production projects in Moscow, Russia.
Interest subsidies are part of a plan drafted by agencies in HCMC for a revised demand stimulus program in the city. The city government is expected to announce the plan this month.
Investors of the commercial center and supermarket projects will enjoy interest support if they set aside at least 70% of floor space at their facilities to promote and sell Vietnamese products and ensure Vietnamese products make up at least 70% of goods for sale there.
As for domestic projects, the city’s interest subsidies will apply to investments in livestock farms, slaughterhouses, breeding farms and animal feed production facilities. Such facilities must meet food safety and hygiene requirements and do not pollute the environment.
Interest support will also go to investment projects in health, education, culture, infrastructure and environment sectors, power grid upgrade, construction of underground telecom and power cable lines, and investments in wind power/solar power/renewable energy plants.
Investors can get full interest backing for investments in production of key industrial products and supporting industries in the city’s major sectors of mechanical engineering, rubber, plastics, food processing, apparel, footwear, electronics and information technology.
The city government plans to reserve no more than VND12 trillion (around US$534 million) for loan interest support under the demand stimulus program. The city will not cover interest for investors who fail to repay principal upon maturity.
According to the HCMC Department of Planning and Investment, the city has implemented the demand stimulus program in the past 14 years and provided financial aid for around 880 projects with investment capital of between VND35 billion and VND80 billion each.
Rice exchange proposed for Mekong Delta
The Mekong Delta should open a rice exchange on a trial basis and enhance cooperation among government agencies, enterprises and farmers to promote the consumption of the staple food.
Nguyen Minh Toai, director of the Can Tho Department of Industry and Trade, proposed establishing the exchange for rice in the Mekong Delta at a discussion on solutions to improve the value and spur the consumption of agricultural products as part of the Mekong Connect CEO Forum 2015 in Can Tho City last week.
Toai said the success of the trading floor required the participation of large groups of farmers who produce rice on hundreds of hectares in total and in accordance with the same quality process to provide sufficient rice stock for the exchange.
He suggested that government agencies help farmers dry and store rice for free until volume is big enough for transactions on the trading floor at prices agreed by farmers. Via the exchange, enterprises will know the prices offered by farmers and origin of the rice products they want to buy.
The trading floor is expected to bring about win-win deals for both farmers and enterprises. Toan said once it has become a popular venue for rice sellers and buyers, the Government could stop its huge funding for annual programs to buy rice for temporary storage to support domestic rice prices. The funding will be used to provide farmers with interest-free loans equivalent to 50% of the value of their rice for the exchange to invest in their farming of quality paddy.
Economic expert Le Dang Doanh said the idea of setting up such a trading floor for agricultural products has been planned for years but certain conditions should be met to translate it into reality.
The successful operation of the exchange requires products meeting safety and quality standards and sufficient rice volumes for transactions. In addition, the exchange should be established for domestic transactions only in the initial phase of operation but opened for foreign firms in the long run given Vietnam’s deeper international integration.
Doanh emphasized the importance of having clear rules and regulations for rice transactions at the trading floor.
According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Mekong Delta has about four million hectares under paddy (unhusked rice) production with around 24-25 million tons a year, accounting for 53% of the country’s total volume.
In the past three years, Vietnam has exported 7-8 million tons of rice via different channels every year and rice production in the Mekong Delta has accounted for 90% of the nation’s total.
Data of the ministry showed Vietnam obtained a free-on-board value of US$1.76 billion for shipping abroad nearly 4.1 million tons of rice in the year to August, down 8.6% in volume and 13.1% in value year-on-year.
However, prices of both fresh paddy and rice have been stable in the Mekong Delta in recent weeks. For example, a kilo of IR 50404 paddy was sold at VND4,250-4,300 over the weekend while traders bought a kilo of rice at VND6,250-6,300, equivalent to those early this week.
SME reforms vital to progress
Local small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) need to reform themselves and also need support from the State to survive and develop as further economic integration takes place once Vietnam signs free trade deals with partners, experts said.
Now, the SMEs account for 96% of the total number of enterprises in Vietnam whose operations and finance are on a small scale and which have low competitive ability, according to the General Statistics Office.
Meanwhile, economic experts said most of the SMEs did not have much knowledge about global economic integration and do not know how and what to do as the economy integrates further with the global structure, the Tin tuc (News) newspaper reported.
The SMEs also do not know the demand of the world market, neither do they know the world quality standards and commercial rules, the experts said.
A representative of the Ho Chi Minh City Food Association said 80% of the members at the association are SMEs who did not have access to information about international economic integration.
Cao Sy Kiem, chairman of the Vietnam Association of Small and Medium Enterprises, said key issues for the SME as well as local enterprises in general include the need to improve their competitive ability by diversifying products and ensuring reasonable selling price.
To achieve the targets, he proposed that interest rates for medium- and long-term loans should be at 7% per annum against 9% to help enterprises have attractive sale price.
Kiem said the state should come up with ways to enhance the number of skilled workers in enterprises and use of modern production technology to improve competitiveness of the enterprises. This was necessary because Vietnam lacks good managers and policy makers as well as skilled workers.
CEO Dang Duc Thanh, head of the Vietnam Economist Club, said Vietnam has in the past improved its business environment to integrate into the global economy but the nation does not have many strong enterprises that are highly competitive and efficient.
To reach the targets, the State Bank should adjust credit structures to focus credit on production, business, rural area, exports, supporting industry and SMEs, Thanh said.
The state should build and develop a system of economic policies to support the SMEs in production and business and credit guarantee funds for SMEs, said Thanh, adding that the state should also reform administrative procedures and complete the legal system to protect the SMEs as well as local enterprises in general.
Dau Anh Tuan, head of the Legal Department under the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry, said information, support and consulting for enterprises as they integrate into the world economy are very important. Therefore, the state should provide information about what free trade agreements will involve. That would help local enterprises to take appropriate steps in the areas of production and business to integrate better with global system.
Mekong Delta’s sugar plants in risk of material shortage
Sugar plants in the Mekong Delta have entered their 2015-2016 production season amid alarming fall of sugarcane area.
The sugarcane area dropped 50 percent to only 700 hectares in Ca Mau province last year. Similar condition has also occurred in other provinces of the delta.
Chairman of the Vietnam Sugar and Sugarcane Association Nguyen Thanh Long said that the Mekong Delta’s sugar industry has faced many challenges comprising sugarcane area drop, which require processing plants to cooperate with farmers to overcome.
The association has reported a year on year reduction of 6,000 hectares to only 41,880 hectares in the delta this crop.
A leader of Kien Giang sugar plant said that practical area might be lower than that. Kien Giang province alone has less than 2,000 hectares not 4,600 hectares as per the association’s report.
Plants have also faced difficulties in purchasing materials with regulations on commercial cane sugar (CCS) by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, that rule that businesses are just permitted to buy sugarcane reaching at least nine CCS.
Representatives from Can Tho sugar company and the Department of Science and Technology in Hau Giang province said that they had conducted many inspections but yet to find any sample meet the requirement.
Deputy Chairman of the Hau Giang province People’s Committee Truong Canh Tuyen asked sugar plants to just start the production season when sugarcane fields have been mature enough for harvest to ensure high CCS.
Sugar plants have agreed with paying the floor price of VND860 a kilogram of 10 CCS sugarcanes, VND119 higher than requirement by the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.
However, that price is said not high enough to prevent sugarcane farmers from quitting.
Phung Hiep district, Hau Giang province is one of three largest sugarcane zones in the delta with 11,500 hectares.
Director of the provincial Department of Agriculture and Rural Development Nguyen Van Dong said that sugarcane growers have earned less than rice growers. The province’s efforts have been able to sustain 10,000 hectares of sugarcane area, a reduction of 1,500 hectares.
Authorized agencies should paid attention to control import sugar which has flowed into local market and to help farmers reduce sugarcane cost prices.
Russia's Rosneft, Japan Drilling Co ink Vietnam exploration deal
Russian oil giant Rosneft said on September 4 it had signed an agreement to drill offshore exploration wells in Vietnam with Japan Drilling Co .
"We are expanding our cooperation in the area of exploration and production of hydrocarbons by executing contracts not only in Russia, but also in Asia Pacific," Rosneft Chief Executive Igor Sechin said in a statement.
Forum looks to boost farmers' efficiency
An expected increase in demand for farm produce offers the agricultural sector in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta great potential for development, but it should improve its efficiency, panellists told a forum in Can Tho City last Friday.
Nguyen Ngoc Hoa, deputy director of the HCM City Department of Industry and Trade and former chairman of Saigon Co.op, said there was an increase in demand for farm produce in both the domestic and export markets.
In addition, consumers, increasingly concerned about food safety and hygiene and the traceability of products' origins, are willing to pay higher prices for safe products.
Nguyen Lam Vien, deputy chairman of the Business Association of High Quality Vietnamese Products and chairman of Vinamit Company, said, "The market needs high-quality produce but there is a scarcity of these products."
With their small-scale production, farmers in the Mekong Delta had limited market information and mostly crop based on traders' requirements. They only managed to get a small percentage of retail prices, he said.
Breaking down this "trader" culture and helping farmers deploy efficient practices to improve quality were very important, he added.
Nguyen Thi Thanh Ha, deputy director of the Thu Duc Agriculture Wholesale Market Management and Trade Company, said her market got 3,500-4,500 tonnes of farm produce each night, and up to 7,500 tonnes during Lunar New Year.
But most products were sold without labels and were piled up for selling, and this should be improved to win consumers' trust, she said.
Farmers should join hands to form co-operatives to work with businesses so that they could get technical support easily as well as fair prices and reduce the cost of transporting their produce to sales points, she said.
Investment to mechanise farming and processing was very important, delegates agreed.
To resolve difficulties related to selling paddy, Nguyen Minh Toai, director of the Can Tho Department of Industry and Trade, said, "We should set up a rice trading floor by encouraging farmers to form a co-operative to grow the same kind of rice with the same production process to enable traceability."
The authorities could offer free drying and storage of paddy allowing the farmers to wait for the best prices to sell, he said.
This would benefit both farmers and businesses, and even the Government, because when this model achieved a large-scale, the Government no longer had to resort to rice buying to shore up prices, he said.
"Measures to raise value of farm produce and boost their consumption" was part of the Mekong Connect-CEO Forum that attracted the participation of 600 business executives, Government officials and experts.
The Mekong Delta's 13 cities and provinces play an important role in the country's economy, accounting for 17.8 per cent of GDP, 80 per cent of rice exports, and nearly 60 per cent seafood exports.
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