BUSINESS IN BRIEF 26/10
Vietnam,
Japan discuss hindrances to trade growth
Business agencies
and companies have high hope for trade stimulation brought about by the
Vietnam-Japan Economic Partner Agreement (VJEPA), but are well aware of
domestic obstacles to the process.
The issue was the
focus of a recent Vietnam-Japan economic forum held in Hanoi with a range of
measures put forth by experts and seniors officials from both sides.
Reviewing that
Japan’s firms first entered Vietnam for export, Japanese Business Association
(JBA) Chairman Shimon Tokuyama confirmed the stable market of over 90 million
people has expanded this initial purpose to give it high potential for
long-term investment.
However, cumbersome
procedures have hindered connectivity efforts, he said, adding that the
support industry as well as public infrastructure in healthcare, transport,
water and electricity supply have yet to receive adequate attention and
investment from the State.
Planning and
Investment Deputy Minister Nguyen Chi Dung spoke about the improved business
climate, competitiveness and foreign capital inflow prompted by the VJEPA
while Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) Chairman Vu Tien Loc
underscored the management experience and advanced technology and services
Vietnamese enterprises would broadly receive and benefit from as a result of
free trade agreements.
Loc recommended
immediate action from public agencies to establish a consultation channel
providing accurate, timely and accessible information for domestic business
communities.
Chairman Tokuyama
proposed the Vietnamese Government concentrate on enhancing competitiveness,
balancing the minimum wage, specifying development policies for each economic
sector and devising suitable policies to utilise official development
assistance.
Seconding the JBA
Chairman’s view, Deputy Minister Dung advised local companies to actively
reduce costs and prices while integrating.
VCCI Chairman Loc
supplemented Dung’s advice with confirming diverse trade partners, production
overhaul and product origin.
He stated boosting
manpower competency would be essential to expediting international
cooperation.
Official government
statistics show that between 2011 and 2013, Japan topped the list of 101 countries
and territories investing in Vietnam.
Japan is currently
Vietnam’s third largest trade partner with trade expected to near 30 billion
USD and its investments are hoped to hit 38 billion USD this year.
Sumimoto to
build industrial park in Vinh Phuc province
The Vinh Phuc
People’s Committee has granted the Japanese company Sumimoto a licence to
build the Thang Long Industrial Park covering an area of 213 hectares in the
northern province.
The Thang Long
Industrial Park will be the tenth out of 19 industrial parks in Vinh Phuc
province that have been given priority for development until 2020 under a
scheme approved by the Prime Minister.
The project, which
is estimated to cost VND1.53 trillion in the initial stage, has increased
total foreign direct investment pledges to Vinh Phuc to US$3.25 billion and
those by Japanese investors to nearly US$800 million.
The new industrial
park will be located in Thien Ke and Tam Hop communes of Binh Xuyen district.
The first phase will see construction on an area of 94.5 hectares.
Calls for
investment in the Vinh Phuc Thang Long Industrial Park will concentrate on
hi-tech and non-polluting industries such as engine manufacturing,
electronics and semiconductor parts, computer software and hardware,
precision mechanics and biotechnology.
It is estimated
that the Vinh Phuc Thang Long Industrial Park will create over 25,000 jobs
and contribute an annual VND5 trillion (US$225 million) to the State budget.
Prior to the
project in Vinh Phuc, Sumimoto built two other industrial parks: the Bac
Thang Long Industrial Park to the north of Hanoi and the Thang Long II
Industrial Park in Hung Yen province.
In recent years,
Vinh Phuc has taken bold steps in administrative reforms to make its business
environment more appealing to foreign investors. Last year, it ranked 6th on
the provincial competitiveness index, a giant leap from the 26th position a
year earlier.
Hanoi
banking figures for October released
The Hanoi
Statistics Office has announced mobilized capital and credit figures for Hanoi
in October.
Total capital
mobilized by financial institutions during the month was estimated at VND1.39
trillion ($54.89 million), an increase of 2 per cent against September and
17.5 per cent higher than last December.
Deposits accounted
for 94.3 per cent of total capital mobilized, an increase of 1.9 per cent
compared to the previous month and 15.9 per cent higher than in December
2014. The issuance of valuable papers increased 4.2 per cent month-on-month
and was 51.1 per cent higher than in last December.
Deposits mobilized
from Vietnamese accounted for 74.2 per cent.
Total outstanding
credit in Hanoi in October is anticipated to reach VND1.16 trillion ($45.80
million), an increase of 1.4 per cent compared to September and up 15 per
cent against last December. Outstanding short-term credit rose 3.3 per cent
against September and was 9.3 per cent compared with December last year,
while outstanding long-term credit fell 1.3 per cent month-on-month but rose
24.9 per cent against December 2014.Textile exhibition attracts 125 firms
The Viet Nam
Textile and Garment exhibition, which opened in HCM City yesterday, has
attracted 125 local and foreign companies who are showcasing their products
and services.
Firms from Taiwan,
Hong Kong, India, Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, and Turkey have brought
machinery for sewing, knitting, spinning, cutting and printing fabrics,
processing fibres, and embroidering, garment accessories, dyes and other
products.
The four-day event
is expected to be especially important this year in the context of Viet Nam
signing off on the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) and free trade agreements
with Korea and the Customs Union of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan and the
December inauguration of the ASEAN Economic Community.
Nguyen Hong Giang,
general secretary of the Viet Nam Cotton and Spinning Association, said when
all the agreements take effect, Viet Nam's garment exports to the US, EU,
Japan, and Korea would enjoy preferential tariffs, which would give it a
considerable edge over other exporting countries.
Viet Nam needs 8.5
billion metres of fabric annually to produce garments but produces less than
3 billion metres, and has to increase its fabric production immediately, he
said.
He expected the
exhibition to help producers find machinery and technologies for the purpose.
The exhibition
organisers, Vinexad and Chan Chao International of Taiwan, will hold a
seminar today and tomorrow to discuss Viet Nam's investment environment;
solutions to improve productivity, efficiency and quality in the textile and
garment industry; FTAs and their impacts on the industry's development; and
why Viet Nam can become a hub in the global textile and garment supply chain.
The exhibition is
being held at the Tan Binh Exhibition and Convention Centre, Hoang Van Thu
Street, Tan Binh District.
Hotel
Saigon Morin wins Gold Star Award 2015
The Hotel Saigon
Morin in Hue has won the Gold Star Award 2015 of Top 200 brands from the
Central Committee of the Ho Chi Minh Communist Youth Union and the Central
Board of the Vietnam Young Entrepreneurs’ Association.
Hotel Saigon Morin
had the great pleasure of being selected as a unique brand in central Thua
Thien Hue province and this is the second time it has picked up the award.
All brands considered have made valuable contributions to the development of
the national economy and increased Vietnam’s prestige in the international
arena.
The hotel
management and staff will continue to improve upon the hotel’s achievements
and are committed to providing the best possible service, as per the hotel’s
slogan of “Historic Place - French Colonial Style - Vietnamese Hospitality”.
The hotel is now
offering a family package for stays of three days and two nights for a
maximum of two adults and two children under 10 years of age for VND4.15
million++ ($189). The package includes accommodation in a Colonial Deluxe
room with a complimentary extra bed, a one-way Hue airport or railway station
transfer by private car, and one combo set lunch or dinner featuring Hue
specialties.
Established in
1901, Hotel Saigon Morin is ideally located in the heart of Hue, with four
facades facing Le Loi, Hung Vuong, Hoang Hoa Tham, and Truong Dinh streets,
offering the best views of Truong Tien Bridge and the Perfume River. Taking
advantage of its French colonial style, its 180 well-equipped rooms and
suites are the largest in the city. All have parquet floors, marble
bathrooms, and comfortable facilities and amenities.
Investors
uninterested in social housing in HCMC
Twenty percent of
young households in Ho Chi Minh City are in need of apartments or houses
priced less than VND1 billion (US$45,000) each. However, only few social
housing projects have been implemented because of unattractive mechanisms to
investors.
After the
Government issued a decree on social housing development program early 2013,
it caused a movement of changing commercial housing projects into social type
ones by investors. Transport Engineering Construction and Business Investment
Company 584 even registered to convert all of its eight projects into social
housing.
However, the number
of social housing projects has gone gradually for recent years.
Only few have been
implemented such as HQC Plaza in An Phu Tay commune, Binh Chanh district
invested by Hoang Quan Company. The project is nearly completed with 1,750
apartments priced at VND14.5 million (US$ 700) per square meter.
The project of Thu
Thiem Investment Company has 304 apartments of 40-60 square meter flats in
Thao Dien ward, District 2.
Two other property
developers Tan Binh Real Estate Company and Quoc Cuong Gia Lai have got loans
from the VND30 trillion (US$1.34 billion) credit package to carry out their
projects.
The package has
been disbursed inconsiderably with 26 percent nationwide. It is only 10
percent in HCMC.
HCMC has planned to
sell 3,000 apartments under social housing projects. However, only four
projects have been opened for sale with 376 apartments in Districts 6, 8, Go
Vap and Tan Binh.
According to the
HCMC Real Estate Association, the social housing development program has been
unattractive with complicated mechanisms for change of commercial housing
projects into social.
For bank loans,
investors must get many signatures from provincial people’s committees to the
Ministry of Construction, the State Bank of Vietnam and commercial banks.
House buyers have met with difficulties in proving their income level to get
assistances from the credit package.
Moreover, investors
have faced with land price escalation. Investor of a project in Thao Dien
ward bought 1,900 square meters at only VND2.5 million per one square meter
in 2004.
However, the price
now increases to VND12 million per one square meter in the land price list
ruled by the city People Committee and up to VND20 million at market price.
This has raised difficulties in calculating apartment price as it will be
unfavorable to the investor if calculations base on the old price of VND2.5
million.
Chairman of the
association Le Hoang Chau said that the Government should focus on two types
of social housing including house for rent and hire-purchase because of
limited budget.
The build-then-sell
type should have own mechanisms to lure local and international investors.
At present, many
commercial housing projects have the price of less than VND15 million per square
meter.
If the Government
assists investors in VAT and business income taxes and land use fee, the
price will reduce to suit low income households, he said, adding that should
be considered as a social housing type under PPP (Public Private Partnership)
model.
US demand
grows for VN textiles and garments
Third-quarter
numbers for Viet Nam's textile and garment industry show US demand growing
and taking the lead amongst buyers, accounting for nearly 50 per cent of the
industry's total export revenue so far this year.
According to
statistics from Viet Nam's General Department of Customs, export revenue for
the first nine months of this year reached nearly US$17 billion, of which
$8.3 billion came from the US market.
While total textile
and garment export value grew by 10 per cent compared to last year, the US
market outstripped it with a 13.6 per cent increase. This means US buyers are
active leaders of the sector's expansion.
The second and
third largest importers trail the US considerably; Japan imports $2.03
billion, and South Korea $1.54 billion.
Exporters in the
industry look favourably on a constellation of recent free trade agreements,
like one already signed with Korea, the Eurasian Economic Union Free Trade
Agreement signed in May and the long-discussed Trans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP).
If the TPP is
signed, Viet Nam textile and garment exports to the US will see the current
17-30 per cent tariffs dropped.
The sector plans to
take advantage of the EU-Viet Nam Free Trade Agreement whose negotiations
were finalised in August. Once the parties sign the agreement, the 12 per
cent tax on Viet Nam's textiles and garments will cease, making the products
more competitive in the market.
Dubious GM
foods sold in Vietnam without labels
Imported
genetically modified (GM) foods, especially grains, have flooded the
Vietnamese market in recent years, but they are almost surreptitiously sold,
with people knowing little about them.
According to the
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, soy bean imports this year top
1.2 million tons, with the majority coming from the US and Canada, both major
GM producers.
But most soy bean
products in the market are not labeled as “GMO”.
Thanh Nien checked
at a supermarket in Ho Chi Minh City's district 5, and of several dozen
products made from soy beans, only one carried a label saying “wholly made
from Vietnamese soy beans.” The others did not indicate origin.
The owner of a
grains store on Tran Chanh Chieu Street in district 5 told Thanh Nien his
shop had both Vietnamese and imported soy beans. US products were cheaper
than Vietnamese but not as tasty, he said.
He said he did not
know anything about GMO.
The Quality
Assurance and Testing Center No. 3 (Quatest 3) said it had conducted a test
on some agricultural products sold in HCMC in 2010 and found 111 out of 323
samples, or 34.4 percent, were GMO. The GM products were mostly soy beans,
potatoes and tomatoes.
The tests were done
at the request of the HCMC Department of Science and Technology. None have
been done since.
An executive at an
animal feed manufacturer, who asked not to be named, told Thanh Nien the
company imported half the soy beans needed for its production from the US,
Brazil, and Argentina.
In March, this year
the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development allowed farmers to grow
three varieties of GM corn sold by Swiss firm Syngenta for food and animal
feed.
But consumers do
not have much choice since most GM products are not labelled so.
Phan Thi Viet Thu,
deputy chairperson of the HCMC Association of Consumer Rights Protection,
said the Law on Food Safety and Hygiene required products with GM ingredients
making up more than 5 percent to have labels, but the lack of detailed
instructions meant no product in the market is labeled as GMO.
“It is not fair on
customers. Authorities should quickly make it mandatory to label GM
products.”
Taiwanese
firm to invest $50 million in VN
Leading Taiwanese
apparel maker Eclat Textile plans to increase its production capacity in Viet
Nam to benefit from the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade pact,
Asia.nikkei.comreported.
The company, which
supplies major clients such as Nike and Adidas under outsourcing contracts,
will invest US$50.5 million to upgrade two factories. The expanded capacity will
top 5 million pieces of clothing each month.
Meanwhile,
Taiwanese media reported that $40 million will be spent on a factory in Ba
Ria-Vung Tau Province and $10.5 million on another plant in Dong Nai
Province. Construction of these factories will start in early 2016.
Foreign
currency use expanded
The State Bank of
Vietnam (SBV) has issued Circular No. 16/2016/TT-NHNN, amending and
supplementing certain articles in Circular No. 32/2013/TT-NHNN on the right
to use foreign currencies in Vietnam.
Circular 16 adds
some cases relating to national defense and security and oil and gas where
the use of foreign currencies is permitted after approval is sought and
gained from the SBV.
The Circular also
provides direction on the necessary documentation for such requests, such as
licenses and similar organizational paperwork, as well as proof of the need
to use foreign currencies.
If the paperwork is
found to be lacking the SBV will seek additional document within ten working
days. If everything is in order, a decision will be made within 45 days.
The Circular will
take effect on December 3.
Apparel
firms invest in technologies to prepare for TPP
Local textile and
garment enterprises regard investments in modern technologies as a way to
help them address challenges and compete as foreign enterprises are flocking
to Vietnam to benefit from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
Saigon Garment
Manufacturing Trading Joint Stock Company (Garmex Saigon) has recently spent
much on purchasing automated machines to replace outdated equipment which is
mainly operated manually and requires much labor.
According to Nguyen
An, general director of Garmex Saigon, machines are now cheaper than earlier
and many textile and garment companies are purchasing new machines with high
technology. For instance, a Juki one-needle sewing machine was sold at US$600
some 20 years ago but a programmable sewing machine of Juki is priced US$580
now.
Complex details of
old machines require workers with good skills while unskilled workers can sew
well with new machines. Besides, cloth cutting machines that Garmex Saigon
has recently bought have helped reduce the number of workers at this stage by
80% in comparison to old machines.
An said investing
in modern machines, organizing production activities systematically and
improving management are necessary for textile and garment enterprises due to
increasing competition in terms of product price and labor.
According to An,
the world economy has yet to fully recover and producing countries are
competing intensely in terms of price. As a result, using advanced machines
can help the company increase productivity and reduce material losses in
order to offer competitive prices.
In addition, with
Vietnam’s participation in the TPP, there will be more foreign enterprises
coming to Vietnam to invest in the textile-garment sector to get tariff
incentives when exporting products to TPP states like the U.S. Therefore,
Vietnamese enterprises will face tough competition regarding labor as foreign
direct investment (FDI) enterprises have special policies to attract workers.
Without investments
in technologies and modern machines from now on, textile and garment
enterprises would face stronger competition from FDI enterprises, An added.
According to Pham
Xuan Hong, chairman of Saigon 3 Garment Joint Stock Company and chairman of
the Association of Garments, Textiles, Embroidery and Knitting (AGTEK), the
textile-garment sector is not attractive to workers, making enterprises
active in the field lose staff easily.
When skilled workers
quit their jobs, enterprises normally have to employ unskilled ones and train
them. Therefore, to ensure productivity and quality, enterprises need to
invest in new technologies and equipment.
Hong said textile
and garment enterprises cared about exhibitions on machines used in the
sector like the 15th Vietnam International Textile and Garment Industry
Exhibition (VTG 2015) set to open on Wednesday in HCMC. The four-day expo
will take place at Tan Binh Exhibition and Convention Center (TBECC) in Tan Binh
District.
There are real
demands, which require exhibitors at the expo to provide useful information
for textile and garment enterprises, according to Pham Quynh Giang, deputy
general director of Vietnam National Trade Fair and Advertising Joint Stock Company
(VINEXAD).
VTG 2015 is
organized by VINEXAD in coordination with Taiwan’s Chan Chao International
Co., Ltd, Hong Kong’s Yorkers Trade and Marketing Service Co., Ltd, Hong
Kong’s Paper Communication Exhibition Services, AGTEK and the Vietnam Cotton and
Spinning Association (VCOSA).
More than 125 local
and foreign enterprises with nearly 300 booths will showcase their innovative
products and technologies. Exhibitors are from 12 countries and territories,
including Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, Japan, Hong Kong, Germany, Turkey,
South Korea, India, Taiwan, Malaysia and China.
Can Gio sea
reclamation project to expand by 480 hectares
Can Gio Tourism
Urban Area Joint Stock Company has got the HCMC government’s nod to map out
an investment plan for a sea reclamation project in Can Gio will be expanded
by 480 hectares to 1,080 hectares.
The HCMC Department
of Planning and Architecture is supporting the company to draw up a zoning
plan, scale 1/2,000, for the sea reclamation project for submission to the
city government for approval next month.
As required, the
zoning plan must contain appropriate solutions to road transport while
protecting the Can Gio Biosphere Reserve in the outlying coastal district.
The plan should comprise waterway and aviation facilities like a port and a
helipad to spur tourism in the district.
The sea reclamation
project in Can Gio, also known as Can Gio urban-tourism project, came out 15
years ago. The project worth some VND8.47 trillion (US$379.2 million) has
been delayed since it got off the ground in late 2007.
In June, Vingroup
Joint Stock Company was allowed to join the project as a strategic partner.
The city government is pinning high hopes that the project would be
implemented as soon as possible to drive the development of Can Gio.
Covering 70,000
hectares of mangrove forest, water coconut and canal, Can Gio is regarded as
the green lung of HCMC and half of its total area was recognized in 2000 by
UNESCO as a biosphere reserve thanks to its rich and diverse ecosystem.
Ministry drafts
regulations for trade activity
The Ministry of
Industry and Trade is drafting a number of decrees guiding the implementation
of the 2005 commercial law with many new regulations governing goods,
services, State monopoly in the trade sector and services limited to
trading.
Tran Do Quyen,
deputy head of the legal department at the ministry, told a review conference
for the 2005 commercial law in HCMC on October 20 that the ministry will
submit a decree on goods, services and State monopoly in the trade sector to
the Government for signing early next month.
In the second
quarter of 2016, a supplemented decree on goods trading and relevant issues
at foreign-invested enterprises in Vietnam will come out. In addition, a revised
decree on prohibited, restricted and conditional goods and services will be
introduced in the period.
In the final
quarter of next year, the ministry will seek the Government’s approval for a
revised decree on individuals conducting trading activity frequently but not
required for registration, and a revised decree on trade promotion
activities.
The State will hold
a monopoly in 16 goods and services fields such as defense, security, and
production, distribution and export-import of industrial explosives; gold bar
production and import and export of gold bars and material gold; and tobacco
imports, lottery ticket issuance and cartographic drawing for defense
purposes.
Goods and services
subject to State monopoly are essential but enterprises of other economic
sectors are unable to trade. For instance, the State holds a monopoly in
operating multipurpose hydropower and nuclear power plants and running big
power plants crucial to socio-economic development, defense and
security.
Ten years after the
2005 commercial law came into force, the law has created favorable conditions
for businesses and helped boost imports and exports. However, many challenges
have arisen during the implementation of the law. Smuggling and trade fraud
have worsened and dented economic growth.
Quyen said the
ministry will petition the Government to consider drafting a revised
commercial law in 2017 and have it passed in the following year. According to
the revised law, the ministry will work out a special mechanism for the development
of commercial infrastructure, specific trade in mountainous, rural and island
areas.
Lawyer Tran Huu
Huynh from the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) said there are
many overlapping regulations on conditional business sectors in the
commercial and investment laws. He said all goods and services associate with
a business entity.
If one business
entity is forbidden, its products are illegal too. Therefore, there is no
need for a list of prohibited goods and services, Huynh said.
Do Van Dai, dean of
the civil law faculty at HCMC University of Law, said judges had had trouble
dealing with trade fraud lawsuits as there are overlapping regulations in
different laws. This has caused losses for society.
SOE
equitization target seen unobtainable
The target to
equitize 1,309 State-owned enterprises (SOEs) in the 2011-2015 period has
become impossible to achieve as only 340 of them have gone public.
Dang Quyet Tien,
deputy head of the Enterprise Finance Department under the Ministry of
Finance, told reporters on Monday that 95 of the 340 equitized enterprises
went public in the first nine months of this year. In addition, relevant
ministries and agencies have restructured 600 other enterprises.
Therefore, only 25%
of the approved SOEs have been equitized. The proportion will be much higher
but still far below the target if the 600 restructured enterprises are added.
Tien underscored
the importance of speeding up SOE equitization in the 2016-2020 period given
clear regulations on the equitization process. More importantly, the process
should be made transparent to help attract foreign investors.
He said in the next
five years, those enterprises which have been equitized but sold fewer shares
than targeted will be transformed into public companies or listed firms to
lure investors.
Regarding the
Government’s plan to divest State holdings at ten major enterprises as
recently announced, Tien said the Government has allowed the State Capital
Investment Corporation (SCIC) to choose an appropriate timetable for State
capital withdrawals from those enterprises.
He explained the
Government made such approval this year as the market conditions were not
favorable for the sales of State stakes at these firms in previous years.
Tien said SCIC will
withdraw State capital from the companies in accordance with the Government’s
Decision 37/2014 on enterprises where the Government needs to hold or not to
hold shares. This move will buoy Vietnam’s stock markets in the coming time.
Deposits in
foreign currency up
Local banks have
reported a significant pickup in foreign-currency deposits in recent months.
In the third
quarter of this year, foreign-currency deposits grew by 8-9% while
foreign-currency lending growth slowed to 4-5%. Earlier this year,
foreign-currency credit strongly surged.
Local banks expect
loans in foreign currency to continue rising in the coming months while
deposits are projected to maintain steady growth.
Explaining the
situation, some banks said there has been anxiety over the development of the
foreign exchange market from now to early 2016. Therefore, individuals,
enterprises and banks have rushed to hoard foreign currencies to avoid
negative impact of forex rate adjustments not only in China, the biggest
trade partner of Vietnam, but also in other major markets.
According to a
macro-economic report the Government presented to the National Assembly on
October 20, this year the Vietnam dong currency has been devalued by 5%
against the U.S. dollar, the same as the fall of the Chinese yuan versus the
greenback.
Between January and
September, the central bank depreciated the dong against the dollar three
times and widened the trading band for inter-bank dollar/dong transactions
from 1% to 3%. The move was aimed to ease pressure on the domestic currency
and stabilize the foreign currency market, thus supporting exporters.
Due to
psychological factors, the greenback then turned firmer against the dong and
approached the ceiling level set by the central bank. After the central bank
deployed a host of measures as ordered by the Government, the forex rate and
the market became normal again, the report said.
If the central bank
continues to maintain forex rate stability, market sentiment will improve, at
least in the short term. However, there remain forex risks including China’s
unpredictable monetary policy and Vietnam’s rising trade deficit.
Banks also forecast
no liquidity tension on the foreign currency market toward the year-end. On
the inter-bank market, interest rates for tenors less than a week may inch up
by 10 basis points, hovering around 0.3-0.5% per annum.
Besides, foreign
banks in the country are predicted to maintain huge capital supply this year.
BIDV and
VLA come together
The Bank for
Investment and Development of Vietnam (BIDV) and the Vietnam Logistics
Association (VLA) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on
comprehensive cooperation in the 2015-2020 period.
The agreement was
signed by Mr. Le Trung Thanh, Deputy General Director of BIDV, and Mr. Do
Xuan Quang, Chairman of the VLA.
BIDV will provide
banking and finance services for VLA, while VLA will cooperate with BIDV to
provide preferential policies to customers introduced by BIDV and vice-versa.
The two sides also
commit to cooperating in communications and branding and to support each
other in terms of exchanging information.
Mr. Thanh said that
as Vietnam integrates internationally the logistics sector is facing many
challenges in human resources, training, technology, management, and
especially poor infrastructure due to limitations on financial resources.
Bank credit therefore plays a significant role in terms of supporting
business activities and increasing the competitive advantages of logistics
companies.
The signing of the
MoU was conducted at a logistics forum in Ho Chi Minh City with the theme
“Solutions to Improving Infrastructure, Facilitate Trade, and Improve the
Quality of Logistics Services for Import and Export Enterprises.”
Deputy Minister of
Industry and Trade Tran Tuan Anh told the forum that export enterprises incur
high costs in logistics services. Logistic enterprises and exporters have not
found common ground and have failed to cooperate for mutual development. The
cost of logistics is affecting Vietnam’s competitive advantage in
international markets, accounting for around 20-25 per cent of GDP over
recent years. Vietnam’s competitiveness will be improved if logistics costs
can be cut.
Who
protects apartment buyers from swindling investors?
Many housing
projects had been opened for sale before the Real Estate Business Law took
effect in July this year. However investors have not finished the projects
and run away, leaving customers in a miserably hard journey to claim their
houses while authorized agencies have not taken drastic actions to help them.
The Real Estate
Business Law requires investors of future housing projects to get bank
guarantee to ensure customers’ right in case they fail to finish the
projects. However, only one project has been guaranteed by banks in Ho Chi
Minh City so far.
Gia Phu apartment
project has been infamous in Thu Duc district because it had been approved
with 156 apartments but sold to 160 customers. At least 68 ones were sold to
more than one person. Each buyer has paid an average of VND600 million
(US$27,000).
The half-done
project has been abandoned while the company’s director and deputies have run
away. Customers have signed and sent applications to authorized agencies for
two years in vain.
After receiving the
first application, the HCMC People’s Committee Chairman Le Hoang Quan asked
the Police Department to ascertain and strictly handle the case as per the
law on June 10, 2014.
Mr.Quan required
the department to send a report within 30 days after the date they received
announcement from the committee office.
The office
continued sending the second document asking related sides to transfer the
application to the Police Department for investigation on March 26 this year.
The third
requirement in writing was sent on June 2 to the Police Department’s director
to remind him of the two above documents and asked him to report the
long-lasting case.
Customers signed
another petition to the Police Department’s director, heads of the People’s
Procuracy and the Police Agency of Criminal Investigation in Social Order
(PC45) on August 20.
The petition
proposed to investigate the case and prosecute offenders for swindling
customers out of their properties.
According to this
petition, the customers had sent letters of denunciation to the Police
Department in Thu Duc District and the city’s Police Department in March last
year.
Subsequently, the
board of directors of the city’s Police Department and PC45 assigned Squad 8
to handle the case. Officials invited the customers to get statements
afterward. However two years have gone by and the police force has yet to
thoroughly solve the issue, said Mr. Hung, customer of Gia Phu project.
Not long ago,
Adonis project in South Saigon was approved to build 15-storey apartment
block. However investor sold up to 18 stories, did nothing and fled away with
money.
Some apartment
buyers at Royal apartment block project in Binh Thanh and An Suong
residential area in District 12 have also fallen into similar situation.
Many customers of
PetroVietnam Landmark in An Phu Ward, District 2 of investor PVC Land had
previously come to the headquarters of PetroVietnam claiming their
apartments. Most of the apartments have been sold out and many customers said
they had paid 95 percent of contract value. However the project has walked on
the spot for four years and been unclear when it will finish.
Director of Hoang
Anh Saigon Real Estate Company Doan Chi Thanh said that when 60-70 percent
apartments of a project were sold, investors could completely feel secure to
implement the project.
Hundreds of
residents are still waiting for drastic actions from authorized agencies to
remedy part of their damage.
CII
proposes building bridges on Hanoi Highway
HCMC Infrastructure
Investment Company (CII) has proposed plans for building two bridges in
parallel with Hanoi Highway which will connect District 2 and districts 9 and
Thu Duc to help reduce traffic congestion on the highway.
In its documents
recently sent to the HCMC Department of Transport, the company proposed
building a 430-meter-long, 14.5-meter-wide bridge near the existing Rach
Chiec Bridge to connect the parallel roads on the right-hand side of Hanoi
Highway in the direction from District 2 to District 9. The project is worth
VND311 billion (US$13.95 million).
Having a similar
length and width to the first bridge, the second bridge worth VND319 billion
(US$14.32 million) is scheduled to go up on the left-hand side of the
highway, a backbone road link between the city’s east and neighboring Binh
Duong and Dong Nai provinces.
CII expects the two
bridges would help reduce vehicular traffic on the existing Rach Chiec Bridge
and the nearby Hanoi Highway. CII wants capital of the bridges to be added to
the build-operate-transfer (BOT) expansion project for Hanoi Highway being
implemented by the company.
CII proposed
constructing the right bridge first to ease traffic on the section of the
highway from Cat Lai Port to a toll station. The second bridge will be built
later.
CII is seeking the
city government’s nod to build an eight-lane tunnel under the Hanoi Highway
section at Thu Duc Intersection, a four-lane overpass in the direction of Vo
Van Ngan and Le Van Viet streets and access roads at the intersection. The
project is estimated to cost around VND1.42 trillion.
HCM City
raises VND24 trillion from bond sales
The government of
HCMC has issued VND23.85 trillion (US$1.07 billion) worth of municipal bonds
to raise funds for its projects in the 2003-2015 period, said Dao Thi Huong
Lan, director of the HCMC Department of Finance.
Lan told the third
day of HCMC’s tenth Party Congress last Friday that 34 commercial banks,
eight insurers, four securities companies, two finance organizations and
other investors have bought the municipal bonds with tenors ranging from two
years to 15 years.
Regarding funds for
development investments in the city, Lan said under the revised state budget
law, the proportion of tax and fee collections HCMC is allowed to retain is
in steady decline while the city needs more capital for development in the
coming years.
Therefore, the city
will continue mobilizing funds from financial markets to fuel economic growth
and meet socio-economic development targets.
Lan also reported
positive results of the enterprise-bank connectivity program which has been
implemented since July 2012, as banks have provided more loans for businesses
year after year.
In 2015 alone, HCMC
targets bank loans of VND60 trillion for the program but banks had pledged to
loan VND105 trillion to nearly 4,000 customers in the year to September, or
75% higher than the full-year plan.
Property,
logistics stocks seen attractive to investors
Securities firms
have projected that trading of tickers in real estate, plastics and logistics
sectors would be active as these sectors are expected to generate good profit
in the last quarter of this year.
Nguyen Xuan Binh,
deputy director of the analysis and investment consulting unit of Bao Viet
Securities, was cited by Dau tu Chung khoan newspaper as forecasting that the
plastics, logistics and industrial park and property sectors would be the
most attractive to buyers in the coming time. The plastics sector will
probably see a foreign ownership limit increase as Vietnam’s joining the
Trans-Pacific Partnership will give a major boost to logistics and industrial
park sectors.
Meanwhile, listed
companies in the real estate sector are expected to complete many property
projects toward the year-end and stocks in this sector could serve as a major
growth driver for the main index.
The VN-Index ended
last week up 0.85% to 593.02 points while the HNX-Index rose by 0.53% to
close at 81.18 points.
Liquidity on both
bourses stayed high but was lower than the week earlier. The HCMC market saw
matching volume down by 17.5% to 549.4 million shares. Matching transactions
totaled 191 million units on the Hanoi market, down 19.6%.
Finance stocks like
BVH, VCB and CTG were major contributors to the main index. Large caps such
as GAS, VIC, VNM, BMP and FPT also fueled the market rally.
In the middle of
last week, the Government announced State capital divestment from ten
enterprises, including some big names like VNM, BMP, FPT, VNR and BMI. These
tickers rose strongly but their gains eased off at the final session of the
week.
Speculative money
flowed into many real estate stocks, besides food-beverage, logistics,
construction materials and auto sectors since investors expected good
earnings in the third quarter of these listed firms.
Last Friday, the
HCMC market’s largest tickers moved to the upside with VNM (+1%) and the
second largest bank in Vietnam CTG (+1.9%) erasing the broader market’s
losses. Notably, there were over US$5 million worth of CTG shares traded,
accounting for 5% of turnover on the main bourse.
Meanwhile, MSN and
VIC, which were struggling to post gains during the week, finally closed in
the green. Although both were up less than 1%, they contributed a combined
0.5 point to the VN-Index.
Foreign investors
stayed on the selling side on the HCMC exchange last week. They net sold
VND168 billion worth of shares, chiefly CII, HAG, SBT and HSG. On the
contrary, they acquired some VND73 billion worth of BVH shares and VND60
billion worth of SSI shares.
On the Hanoi
bourse, foreigners net bought VND9 billion worth of shares, mainly TIG, PVS
and SHB. They sold PVS shares valued at VND5.2 billion.
Sugarcane
farmers earn profit after three years of losses
Sugarcane farmers
in the Mekong Delta have been able to earn profit in the 2015-2016 crop after
three years of making losses or breaking even.
Sugar refineries
have adjusted up cane buying prices amid an undersupply.
Nguyen The Tu, head
of the Agriculture and Rural Development Office of Phung Hiep District in Hau
Giang Province – the largest cane producing area in the Mekong Delta, said
farmers could earn profit of at least VND30 million (US$1,350) per hectare in
the 2015-2016 crop.
Tu told the Daily
that this year’s cane area in Phung Hiep District totaled 7,800 hectares,
falling 500 hectares over the last crop. “The reduced acreage has led the
supply to slide, so sugar mills have raised the cane price and farmers have
benefited,” Tu explained.
Cane in the region
is sold to refineries at VND1,100-1,150 a kilo for the ROC16 variety and
VND900-950 a kilogram for ROC11 and ROC13 varieties, up VND200-300 per kilo
compared to the previous crop.
Tran Van Tam, head
of the Agriculture and Rural Development Office of My Tu District in Soc
Trang Province, said sugar refineries now buy cane at VND900-1,000 a kilo, a
rise of VND250-300 over the 2014-2015 crop.
As the cane acreage
in the district is 250 hectares lower than last year, sugar plants have
increased the price to ensure sufficient stock.
The Vietnam Sugar
and Sugarcane Association (VSSA) estimated that farmers in the Mekong Delta
have cultivated about 41,890 hectares of cane in the 2015-2016 crop, down
6,000 hectares against the previous crop.
Tu calculated
farmers could yield 105-110 tons of cane per hectare in this crop, so cane
output in the Mekong Delta could possibly fall by 630,000-660,000 tons this
year.
According to the
Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, in the year to September 15,
sugar inventories at plants had totaled 158,300 tons, down 120,000 tons over
the same period last year.
A fall in
inventories is another reason for enterprises to step up cane purchases.
U.S. to
increase hardwood supply to Vietnam
The United States
has an ample source of hardwood supply and can double or even triple
shipments to Vietnam to meet increasing demand for materials to turn out
wooden products for export, said Michael Snow, executive director of the
American Hardwood Export Council (AHEC).
The U.S. is
Vietnam’s second biggest supplier of hardwood, with export revenue totaling
US$238 million last year, up 10.7% year-on-year, Snow told a seminar on
American hardwood held last Friday by AHEC, the Handicraft & Wood
Industry Association of HCMC and the HCMC Architects Association.
Snow said the U.S.
always exploits less than half of available hardwood, so its supply never
goes down. In addition, the nation strictly manages forests to ensure
sufficient wood supply.
Wood material
imports from the U.S. into Vietnam have surged over the years but the U.S.
can supply more hardwood to meet rising demand in this Southeast Asian
market. Vietnam’s export of wooden products to the U.S. has risen sharply.
Snow told the Daily
that the U.S. imposes strict criteria on the legality of wood and requires
imported wooden products to be manufactured from wood with legal origin.
Therefore,
Vietnamese furniture exported to the U.S. must have clear origin. The U.S.
also applies technical conditions to chemicals in imported products, so
Vietnamese exporters should study these requirements before selling wooden
items stateside.
According to a
report by the Handicraft & Wood Industry Association of HCMC, the U.S. is
now the biggest export market for Vietnam’s wooden products with export
revenue of US$1.2 billion in the first six months of this year, up 18.8%
against the same period last year.
Vietnam’s total
woodwork export revenue in the January-June period of this year rose by 8.8%
year-on-year to US$3.2 billion and is forecast at US$3.7 billion in the
second half of this year.
CAR of
banks down, total assets up
The capital
adequacy ratio (CAR) of credit institutions in Vietnam has dropped while
their total assets have gone up, especially at several commercial banks
majority owned by the State.
Basic indicators of
credit institutions released on the central bank’s website showed that their
total assets had risen by 2.32% by the end of July compared to late last year
and by 3.66% as of the end of August compared to late last year.
Total assets of the
banking system increased from some VND6,066 trillion as of August 31 last
year to nearly VND6,515 trillion at the end of 2014 and around VND6,753
trillion by August this year.
Banks credited
strong credit growth in recent times to the rise in their total assets.
According to the General Statistics Office, credit had grown 10.78% by
September 21 against the end of last year, the highest in four years.
Total assets of
commercial banks majority owned by the State had expanded 3.24% by July and
5.95% by August, mainly because these lenders recently pledged to provide
huge loans for many big projects.
Vietnam Bank for
Social Policies, Vietnam Development Bank and people’s credit funds had seen
their total assets increasing 9.99% by end-July and 10.89% as of August.
Meanwhile, total
assets of commercial banks had inched up a mere 0.38% by end-August compared
to the end of 2104, well below 0.94% by the end of July. This indicated
commercial banks had attracted fewer-than-projected borrowers.
Therefore, some
experts forecast that commercial banks might not meet profit growth targets
for 2015.
However, the CAR of
commercial banks majority owned by the State had fallen to 9.29% as of the
end of August compared to 9.6% by end-July, suggesting that the health of
these banks had declined.
The loan-to-deposit
(LDP) ratio is an important indicator for liquidity of these banks but the
central bank has not announced the ratio since June. The LDP ratio of banks
with majority State ownership had been 94.3% by end-May, above 90.74% in the
same period of 2014 and an international limit of 80%.
Data showed that
credit institutions had used 25.9% of their short-term funds for mid- and
long-term loans by end-August, higher than 20.2% at the end of last year and
19.3% in the same period of 2014.
VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VET/VIR
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Chủ Nhật, 25 tháng 10, 2015
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