BUSINESS IN BRIEF 29/10
Garment and
textile exports to the US hit US$9.4 bil in ten months
Vietnam’s garment
and textile exports to the US are estimated to earn US$9.4 billion in the
first ten months and are likely to reach US$11 billion this year.
According to
statistics from the General Department of Vietnam Customs, Vietnam’s garment
and textile exports to the US in the first nine months rose 13.6% to US$8.33
billion against the same period last year.
Last year, exports
to this market surged 12.6% to US$9.8 billion compared to the previous year’s
corresponding period.
Nguyen Thi Tuyet
Mai, Chief of HCM City office, Vietnam Textile and Garment Association
(VITAS) said Vietnam’s exports to the US market have enjoyed favourable
conditions as the number of orders jumped over 13% compared to last year’s
corresponding period.
Earnings from
exports to the US, a Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) member nation, made up
45% of Vietnam’s garment and textile export value. The substantial
tariff reduction to zero percent from the current 17%-30% under the TPP will
be favourable for businesses to expand their US market in the coming
years.
Nam
Duong Sauce gets infusion from Wilmar International
Singapore-based agribusiness
giant Wilmar International has agreed to invest US$13 million in a 49-51 deal
with Vietnamese sauce maker Saigon Co.op to produce differing types of sauces
and spices.
According to the
announcement, Saigon Co.op will form a new subsidiary – Nam Duong
International Food Co, Ltd – to construct and operate manufacturing
facilities at the Hiep Phuoc Industrial Park in the Nha Be District of Ho Chi
Minh City.
The Nam Duong brand
has been well-known for its Tau Vi Yeu soya bean sauce, which first appeared
in Vietnam in 1951.
Vietnam
losing small retailers to free trade
Retailers
throughout Vietnam should form affiliated chains to improve their
competiveness with foreign rivals, said experts at a recent seminar in Hanoi
discussing the opportunities and challenges brought about by free trade.
Director Vo Van
Quyen of the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) Domestic Market Department
said the retail sector in Vietnam has experienced an average annual growth
rate of nearly 16% over the past four years.
“However, all of
the growth has come from foreign retailers entering the market,” Quyen said
and the domestic economy has actually experienced “a drop in the number of
retail establishments”.
As of the end of
2014, foreign companies had invested in 80 supercentres, 50 specialized small
shops and 250 convenience stores in Vietnam Quyen said, adding that 10
retailers from Europe and Asia dominated the nationwide retail market.
Quyen said the
foreign retailers are having a profound effect on the economy due to their
superior business experience and managerial skills and ‘they are better
equipped financially to expand their infrastructure in Vietnam compared to
their domestic counterparts”.
Director General
Phan Chi Dung of the Light Industrial Department in turn said the
competitiveness of domestic companies is limited due to lack of access to
credit, small production scale and lack of management experience.
Most importantly,
they simply are not professional in their approach to retailing and lack the
skills to lay out detailed business and marketing plans he said, adding that
few have taken the time to specifically identify a unique selling proposition
that distinguishes them from their competitors.
Another important
part of the business plan Dung said is distribution, or in other words,
discerning precisely how customers will buy from the company. For example,
will customers purchase directly from the retail store on will they go online
and purchase at the company’s website?
Or will they buy
from other distributors or other retailers? And so on and so forth.
To create improved
conditions for domestic retailers to develop their distribution system in the
future, Quyen said the government should review and complete
regulation-related distribution activities to protect rights and interests of
Vietnam under international trade agreements.
Quyen stressed the
government should also provide support for domestic companies to improve the
quality of their work forces and advertising, apply information technology
and approach credit.
“Retailers should
form chain affiliations to increase their ability to more cost-effectively
purchase through bulk buying, and benefit by advertising together, which also
helps with developing brand recognition.”
For his part,
Central Institute for Economic Management (CIEM) Deputy Head Vo Tri Thanh
said local retailers should seize the opportunities to expand their selling
markets brought about by integration.
They should accept
competition and change from competing on price to competing in terms of
quality of product Thanh said and “they need to understand that higher
quality can only be obtained at a higher cost and in turn sales price”.
“Retailers who only
focus on selling at a lower price are doomed to failure,” Thanh underscored.
Last but not least,
Deputy Head Trinh Minh Anh of the National Committee on International
Economic Cooperation's administration office suggested domestic retailers pay
close attention to changes in the market and keep abreast of the short,
medium and long term trends.
EU
manufacturers of lifestyle products eye Vietnam market
Some 100
business-to-business meetings are tailored during “Lifestyle Trade Mission to
Vietnam 2015”, a Vietnam-EU trade promotion programme held in Hanoi and Ho
Chi Minh City from October 27-30.
The event is
jointly organised by the EU-Vietnam Business Network (EVBN) and the European
Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (EuroCham), bringing together enterprises from
Belgium, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal and the United Kingdom in the sectors
of home décor, furniture, tableware, home appliances, and lighting.
Speaking at the
programme’s opening session in Ho Chi Minh City on October 27, David
Hodkinson, Design Director of design firm Noor Ho Chi Minh, said the
Vietnam-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
are expected to pave the way for more business opportunities for enterprises.
Many European firms
have been looking for partnerships in Vietnam, the country of more than 90
million people who form a promising market for lifestyle industries,
particularly high-end brands, he added.
According to a
representative from the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI),
consumption of high-end home décor and furniture products has experienced a
sharp rise over the past few years and those produced in Europe have been
especially sought after in high demand largely because of their top-grade
designs and quality.
Delphine Rousselet,
Project Director of EVBN, urged Vietnamese businesses to add more values to
their export products.
They should also
build their own brands with more focus on product research and design, she
stated.
Digiworld
named among top 50 Vietnam brands
Technology and
electronic products distributor Digiworld Corporation (Digiworld) has been
listed among top 50 Vietnam Brands 2015 by Brand Finance, a brand valuation
and strategy consultancy.
Brand Finance
values the Digiworld brand at 19 million USD. The value of the company is 75
million USD.
Last year Digiworld
achieved revenues of 230 million USD, a 60 percent increase from 2013.
The company
distributes products made by top brands like Acer, Samsung, Dell, Toshiba,
Samsung, Gateway, Genius, Logitech, Lenovo, and Nokia.
It has 6,000 stores
around the country.
Brand Finance every
year announces the values of more than 57,000 brands in the world, and this
year the Vietnam list also includes Vinamilk, Viettel, and Vinhomes.
Savills
offers residential sales, leasing services for foreigners
Savills Vietnam on
October 27 announced the launch of its International Residential Sales and
Leasing Department in Ho Chi Minh City intended to provide services for
foreigners.
According to the
real estate service provider, the number of foreign experts flocking to
Vietnam has seen a sharp rise since the beginning of 2015.
The firm has been
receiving increasing enquiries from foreign clients who expressed interest in
purchasing or leasing a property in Ho Chi Minh City and surrounding areas.
The trend is
largely owing to the newly-amended Housing Law which allows foreigners to
lease and own a maximum of 30 percent of an apartment building or a maximum
of 250 villas or townhouses. The new law effectively provides a registered
50-year leasehold title.
Besides, overseas
experts and specialists are expected to extend their staying in Ho Chi Minh
City once the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), the ASEAN Economic Community
(AEC) and the Vietnam-EU Free Trade Agreement come into effect.
Timo Schmidt, who
has over 9 years of experience in residential property, was appointed as head
of the department. He will support foreign clients to find properties not
only in Ho Chi Minh City but also in resort cities, such as Nha Trang and Da
Nang.
Japanese
businesses laud Ha Nam’s investment climate
Japan-Mekong
Business Cooperation Committee delegation head Yoshio Arakawa spoke highly of
the investment climate in northern Ha Nam province during a meeting with the
provincial People’s Committee on October 27.
Yoshio Arakawa, who
is also President of the Universal Computer System Co., Ltd, referred to the
locality’s geographical location, infrastructural facilities and investment
promotion policies.
He affirmed that he
will introduce the sound investment environment to Japanese enterprises.
He hoped that the
province will facilitate Japanese enterprises’ operation, particularly in
workforce recruitment and procedures relating to investment certificate
granting.
Meanwhile,
Secretary of the provincial Party’s Committee Mai Tien Dung appreciated the
investments of nearly 60 Japanese enterprises in the locality in the past few
years while committing to consistent policies for Japanese investments.
Ha Nam wants to
attract foreign enterprises, especially Japanese small and medium-sized
businesses, to its support industry and high-tech agriculture, Dung said.
He highlighted that
Japanese investors will enjoy a line-up of favourable conditions, including
abundance of skillful workers, good infrastructure facilities, security and
recruitment support.
The province is
embarking on a training programme that will provide 1,000 workers for
Japanese businesses.
Dong Van Industrial
Park III covering 300 hectares is developed exclusively for Japanese
businesses involving in support industry. It will allocate land for rented
businesses in early 2016.
Dubai-based
port operator vows to expand business in HCM City
Dubai Port World
(DP World) will continue developing the Saigon Premier Container Terminal
Port (SPCT) in Ho Chi Minh City, said Rashid Abdulla, Senior Vice President
of Asia Pacific DP World and SPCT President.
He made his remarks
at a meeting with Tat Thanh Cang, Vice Chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City
People’s Committee on October 27 to learn about the City’s infrastructure
plan in the coming time.
Abdulla hoped that
local authority will pay more attention to Soai Rap River dredging and
upgrading projects, enabling cargos to move in and out the Hiep Phuoc
commune-based port more efficiently.
For his part, Vice
Chairman Cang unveiled that the construction of Hiep Phuoc port urban area
and roads that facilitate goods transport from South-eastern to South-western
regions are underway.
Besides, the City
is studying the feasibility of developing ports in the South-eastern region,
he said.
The municipal
leader pledged to offer the SPCT favourable conditions to expand its business
and suggested the firm to evaluate cargo transportation demand by foreign
corporations in Ho Chi Minh City.
During the meeting,
DP World was also introduced to several other local infrastructure projects
that are awaiting investment, including beltway, elevated highway and urban
railway projects.
DP World is a
company which owns ports around the world. It has a portfolio of more than 65
marine terminals across six continents, including new developments in India,
Africa, Europe and the Middle East.
Binh Thuan
evolves as investment hotspot in south-central
Blessed with
favourable geographical location, the central coastal province of Binh Thuan
is evolving as an attractive investment destination in the south central
region.
Sitting near the
southern key economic region and acting as an intersection of the Central
Highlands, south central coastal, and south eastern economic zones, Binh
Thuan is steadily utilising its advantages to draw investment in and outside
the country.
Potential fields
include seafood processing, construction materials, mining, fine arts and
handicrafts, according to the provincial Department of Planning and
Investment.
Director of the
department Nguyen Duc Hoa said besides enjoying tax incentives and rent-free
land, investors also receive local credit assistance in human resources
training, technology transfer, and market development.
The province is
improving the inter-regional transport system to implement a number of key
projects such as Highway 1A, Ho Chi Minh City – Long Thanh – Dau Giay
Expressway, Phan Thiet – Nha Trang Expressway, and Phan Thiet airport, he
added.
Chairman of the
provincial People’s Committee Le Tien Phuong said the locality is mobilising
all resources and making the best use of its advantages to push ahead with
rapid and sustainable economic development.
Special focus will
be placed on developing industry, service and agriculture by establishing
energy, mining processing, and marine tourism-sports centers, he revealed.
As of October this
year, Binh Thuan has attracted 7 billion USD in investment capital, including
1.68 billion USD registered by investors from 24 nations and territories.
Conference
seeks to develop national food brand name
Vietnam needs to
draw up a strategy to develop a national brand name for food as it is among
commodities with great potential and increasing added value.
Deputy Minister of
Industry and Trade Do Thang Hai made the suggestion at a conference jointly held
by the Trade Promotion Agency, the Centre for Promotion of Imports from
developing countries (CBI) and the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs
(SECO) of Switzerland in Hanoi on October 27.
A programme to
build the national brand name for the food sector began in 2014 with an aim
to increase prestige in both quality and value and push the growth of the
Vietnamese food, Hai highlighted.
However, he noted
that a number of shortcomings have been seen in brand building and marketing,
resulting in low added and export values.
At the event,
Nguyen Trung Kien, deputy director in charge of business affairs of Nafoods
Group, recommended enterprises operating in the agricultural sector combine
processing with material production, adding that it will help them increase
their productivity.
Meanwhile, Julian
Lawson Hill, Managing Director of Giraffe Consulting International,
underscored that identifying potential customers, trends and demands as well
as studying competitors and their logos are what Vietnamese food businesses
need to do in the building of their brand names.
Enterprises must
renovate machines, equipment and technology to reduce material losses during
processing and increase food hygiene and safety, he said, emphasising the
need for market study expansion, product diversification and completion of
distribution channels.
Japanese
firms called to expand investment in Vietnam
Minister of
Planning and Investment Bui Quang Vinh has called on Japanese businesses to
increase their investment in Vietnam during the third seminar between his
ministry and the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Hanoi on October
27.
He pointed out a
fact that Japanese investments in Vietnam remain much lower than those in
other regional countries such as Thailand, China and Indonesia.
“This situation
must be improved as the two countries boast their fine political relations,
strategic cooperation, 11-year joint initiative and annual dialogue,” he
said, adding that the two sides have agreed on investment strategy and
investment climate improvement, presenting a good opportunity for Japanese
investors to enter Vietnam.
However, the
minister also admitted a number of weaknesses in the business climate of
Vietnam, including poor infrastructure, incomplete legal framework, and a
lack of skilled workers.
For his part,
Yoichi Kobayashi, Chairman of the Japan-Mekong Business Cooperation Committee
called for visa exemption to create conditions for Japanese investors to do
business in the country.
According to a
survey conducted by the Japan External Trade Organisation (JETRO), Vietnam
granted investment licences to 517 Japanese investment projects last year,
including 342 new ones and 175 for business expansion.
Statistics from the
Foreign Investment Agency under the Ministry of Planning and Investment
showed that in the first seven months of this year, Japan was the fifth
largest FDI investor in Vietnam with 176 new and 82 expanded projects with
combined capital of 716 million USD.
Retails
sales revenues in 10 months rise
Total retails sale
and services revenues in 10 months of 2015 were estimated at VND2.661
trillion, a year-on-year increase of 9.6%, according to the General
Statistics Office.
In October only,
the retails sales and services revenue attained VND274,800 billion, up 1.4%
against the previous month and up 6.7% compared to the same period last year.
Of the figure, the
revenues earned from retails sales, staying and restaurants and travel
contributed VND211,000 billion, VND30,600 billion and VND2,800 billion while
revenues from other services gained VND30,400 billion.
The industrial
production index in October rose 8.8% against the same period last year,
including the growth of mines and ores (up 6.7), the manufacturing and
processing industry (up 9.1%), electricity production and distribution (up
12.3%) and water supply and waste management (up 9.4%).
The industrial
production index witnessed a year-on-year increase of 9.7% over the recent 10
months of the year.
Industrial
production increases 8.8 percent in October
Industrial
production index (IPI) posted a year on year increase of 8.8 percent in
October, according to the General Statistics Office of Vietnam.
Of these, mining
industry increased 6.7 percent, processing and manufacturing 9.1 percent,
electricity production and distribution 3 percent, water supply and waste
treatment 9.4 percent.
The index hiked 9.7
percent for the first ten months this year, it was 6.9 percent in the same
period last year. The four above industries rose 8.4, 10, 11.5 and 7.4
percent respectively.
In October,
products seeing the highest IPI increase were automobile, television, cell
phone, rolled steel and leather footwear.
Localities seeing
the highest indexes were Thai Nguyen province with 121.9 percent, Quang Nam
31.9 percent, Hai Phong 15.8 percent, Da Nang 14.1 percent, Hai Duong 10.3
percent, Dong Nai 8.5 percent, Hanoi 7.7 percent and Ho Chi Minh City 7.4
percent.
In related news,
Vietnam has attracted 1,657 foreign direct investment project as of October
20 this year, a year on year increase of 26.9 percent, reported the Foreign
Investment Agency under the Ministry of Planning and Investment.
Total registered
capital exceeded US$12.4 billion, up 24.8 percent over a year ago.
There were 667
projects licensed in previous years registered to raise investment capital
with an extra of US$6.9 billion.
New registered and
additional capital so totaled nearly US$19.3 billion, up 40.8 percent.
Disbursement was estimated to reach US$11.8 billion for the last ten months,
up 16.3 percent.
FTAs create
motive force for agricultural reform, experts
Free trade
agreements (FTA), especially the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), will create
a motive force to reform the agricultural industry and remedy its weaknesses,
because integration commitments have been made in the same direction with
ongoing efforts by the Government to develop the industry, said Dr. Vo Tri
Thanh, deputy head of the Central Economic Management Institute at a
conference on effects of TPP on agriculture.
Difficulties and
challenges do not aim to frighten businesses and farmers but urge them to
re-determine development strategies, minimize and overcome negative impacts
from integration, he added.
Many experts have
expressed concern that FTAs and TPP would put heavy pressure on the agricultural
industry, particularly breeding.
Vietnam’s
agricultural production has been scattered over small scales in most fields.
Outdated technologies in production and processing after harvest have caused
low quality and high costs.
The breeding
industry depends on import feed and regularly faces diseases. Adding to the
woes is loose connectivity, and weak environmental protection which has
resulted in low food safety and hygiene, they added.
Former Trade
Minister Truong Dinh Tuyen, consultant of TPP negotiation delegation, said
that TPP would bring opportunities but they would not turn into profits and
market strength themselves.
Mr. Tu Minh Thien
who is deputy head of the management board of the HCMC Agricultural High Tech
Park said that related sides should manage to take advantage of opportunities
and reduce challenges from TPP, make it a motive force to restructure the
agricultural industry which has long focused on quantity not quality,
Agricultural
experts said the Government would play a significant role in improvement of
the agricultural industry’s competitiveness by creating an advantageous and
fair business environment.
Dr. Nguyen Quoc
Vong said that the Government should build a long term land use policy and
goods production and supply chains, assist hi-tech application and map out
strategies for farm produce exports. Flexible policies should be applied to
help businesses improve their competitiveness, he added.
Vietnam
welcomes 6.34 million tourists, seeing slightly decrease
Vietnam welcomed over
649, 000 international tourist arrivals in October, increasing 3.6 percent
and 16.1 percent compared to last month and the same period last year
respectively.
However, number of
international tourists arrived in Vietnam between Jan. and October
decreased by 4.1 percent compared to the same period last year, reached
only 6.34 million visitors.
The number of
tourists from China, Laos, Philippines, Russia, France and Sweden visiting
Vietnam reduced sharply. The country saw a dramatic decrease of Australian
visitor number, representing 281,500 arrivals reduced by 6.6 percent.
Meanwhile, number
of visitors from the Americas increased by 1.1 percent, reaching 524,000
arrivals. The United States topped the list with the most 403, 900 visitors,
a 7.9 percent jump over the same period in 2014.
There was a
breakdown of African visitors, going up at least 48.2 percent.
77,500 new
businesses established in 10 months
As many as 77,542
businesses were established over the past 10 months of 2015, with a total
registered capital of VND486,100 billion, year-on-year increases of 29.2% in
number and 37.9% in capital, according to the General Statistics Office.
In October only,
9,195 enterprises, capitalizing VND65,200 billion, were set up, witnessing
increases of 30.6% in number and 46.4% in capital compared to the previous
month.
In comparison with
the same period last year, the number of newly-established businesses and
registered capital saw respective rises of 34.6% and 102.8%. The average
capital per one business attained VND7.2 billion, up 12.1% against the
previous month.
A total number of
157,900 jobs were created, up 25.4%, raising the total number of jobs created
in 10 months to 1.157 million, a year-on-year increase of 31%.
Total additional
capital fetched VND737,800 billion over the recent 10 months.
In October, 3,350
businesses re-operated, up 121.1% while 16,198 businesses stopped operating,
up 24.6%.
Tien Sa
Port set for major upgrade
Da Nang Port, the largest
in central Viet Nam, will invest VND1 trillion (US$47.6 million) for the
second phase upgrade of Tien Sa Port in the second quarter next year.
Crane loads
container at Da Nang's Tien Sa Port. The central city's port company plans to
invest US$47.6 million to upgrade the port in the second phase. - VNS Photo
Cong Thanh
The chief executive
officer (CEO) and chairman of Da Nang Port Company told Viet Nam News that
the upgrade was aimed at raising the port's standards to an international
level in the coming years.
"We have
raised funds ourselves and via shareholders for the second phase of Tien Sa
Port's upgrade in the 2016-18 period. The port was designed to handle 14
million tonnes of cargo, including 800,000 TEUs (twenty-foot equivalent
unit), in 2025," Thu said.
"We decided
not to use Official Development Assistance (ODA) funds for the port, and hope
to accelerate the construction process to begin operations soon," he
said.
Company General
Director Nguyen Huu Sia said the Foreign Trade Bank of Viet Nam
(Vietcombank), the Bank of Investment and Development of Viet Nam (BIDV) and
the city's Investment and Development Fund have agreed to provide loans for
the project.
"We have also
raise VND350 billion ($16.6 million) ourselves for the project, and have called
for investment from shareholders and other sources," Sia said.
As scheduled, Tien
Sa Port will be built as a ‘valley' of logistics, warehouse, transport and
digital customer clearance services, besides having representative offices of
shipping companies and banks.
Sia said two piers,
measuring 310m and 210m in length, would be constructed to dock container
ships.
Last year, Da
Nang's ports handled a record six million tonnes of cargo, and hosted nearly
120,000 tourists disembarking from cruises.
The company also
sold more than 8.3 million shares, worth 12.57 per cent of the charter
capital, in its initial public offering (IPO) in Ha Noi last June, with each
share being offered at VND11,400 ($0.54).
According to the
port, the actual value of the state capital in the port is VND654.5 billion
($31.16 million).
The company's
revenue grew in the last three years (2011-13) from VND307.9 billion to
VND446.5 billion ($14.6 million-$21.2 million), while its after-tax profit
increased from VND8.6 billion to VND44.9 billion ($409,000-$2.1 million).
The port,
established in 1976, has operated as a limited company under the ownership of
the Viet Nam National Shipping Lines (Vinalines) since 2008.
According to Viet
Nam's seaport system development plan towards 2020, Da Nang Port has been
confirmed as a major commercial port in the region, making it one of the key
gateways to the East Sea from the sub-Mekong region.
It handles cargo
communication and encourages economic development and tourism in Viet Nam's
central provinces and the Central Highlands, southern Laos and northeast
Thailand via the East-West Economic Corridor.
Currently, Tien Sa
Port allows access to only 30,000 DWT (deadweight tonnage) ships, while
50,000 DWT container ships can dock at Lien Chieu.
The central city
and the port of Kawasaki in Japan have agreed to open a shipping route
connecting the two ports in the future.
Sapporo
remains efforvescent despite consecutive losses
Sapporo Breweries,
brewer of the oldest beer brand in Japan, has reaffirmed its commitment to
the Vietnamese market and its high potential, despite consecutive years of
loss.
At a recent meeting
with the media, Sapporo Vietnam’s general director Mikio Masawaki revealed
that the company hadn’t made a profit in the past four years after the
opening of its Vietnamese factory in the southern province of Long An in
2011.
Masawaki said that
in 2014, Sapporo Vietnam saw two-digit growth in the revenue, but did not
give details. The company did not publicise its 9-month results either, but
Masawaki said this year the company was aiming for a similar growth rate.
“Sapporo invested a
lot in marketing and promotion to build the brand and create the basis for
development in the future. That’s why Sapporo is not making a profit,”
Masawaki explained, but added that “competition in Vietnam’s beer market is
tough, so we think we have to continue investing in marketing to build and
firmly position the brand.”
He remarked that in
the past 5-10 years, the Vietnamese beer market grew very strongly, but recently,
the growth decreased to about 7-8 per cent per year. However, each segment is
growing at a different speed. According to a recent research by Nielsen, the
medium-high and high-end segments of the domestic beer market should see
their market share rise to 70 per cent from the current 55 per cent.
The reason is that
Vietnam’s income per capita is on the rise, and the demand for higher end
beer is rising with the standard of living. According to Masawaki, Sapporo is
firmly positioned in this segment. “In Ho Chi Minh City, we’re right behind
Sabeco and Vietnam Brewery Limited in market share, but we don’t have
official statistics yet,” he said. “After putting in place the basis for
development, we hope to get to a phase of growth, then we’ll make a profit.”
Sapporo
Breweries can’t give information on when that will be; however, the
parent company aims to raise Sapporo Vietnam’s revenue to 50 per cent of its
total overseas revenue.
Sapporo Vietnam has
just bought a 29 per cent stake in its Long An brewery from state-owned
Vietnam National Tobacco Corporation (Vinataba). The Japanese company now
owns 100 per cent of the 6.5-hectare brewery, which has the designed capacity
of 40 million litres per year and is expected to reach the maximum capacity
of 150 million litres per year in 2019. It is Sapporo Breweries’ third beer
factory, with two others in Japan and the US. Sapporo Vietnam is also seeking
to expand its network of vendors, which remains confined mostly to the Ho Chi
Minh area, near its brewery. Around 4,000 restaurants and shops now sell
Sapporo Premium. By pushing into Hanoi, Danang, and other areas, the brewer
aims to increase this number to 7,000 or so by the Tet holiday next February.
Vietnam’s beer
market measured just 3.41 million kilolitres in 2014, but is projected to
grow about 40 per cent by 2019, according to the UK-based research company
Euromonitor. The market is still deemed attractive, with foreign breweries
continuing to affirm commitment to the country.
According to
chairman of Carlsberg Group Flemming Besenbacher, Vietnam is a potentially
huge market, with its young population base, and thus has always remained in
Carlsberg’s long-term commitment agenda. Carlsberg, which currently has four
brands in Vietnam, namely Carlsberg, Huda, Huda Gold, and Halida, is also
exporting beer produced at its Vung Tau brewery to other markets, like Hong
Kong and Singapore. In May this year, Anheuser-Busch InBev Vietnam, the
subsidiary of multinational beverage and brewing company Anheuser-Busch
InBev, started the operation of its first brewery in Southeast Asia in the
southern province of Binh Duong. The 100 million-litre per year brewery shows
the company’s long-term commitment to Vietnam, according to general manager
of Anheuser-Busch InBev Indochina Ricardo Vasques, who added that the company
was going to expand investment and production in the country.
Ho Chi Minh
City official demands $15,000 for investment license for British firm
The deputy chief of
a center under the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Planning and Investment has
reportedly asked a company to pay US$15,000 under the table to clear
paperwork issues to get an investment license.
Taiwanese
businessman Peng Jung Min and his Vietnamese employee Tran Thanh Thanh have
told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper how they received the explicit suggestion to
pay unofficial money to have their license application approved from an
official from the department’s investment support center.
In July 2015, Peng
authorized Thanh to seek an investment license for a project in Vietnam, to
be developed by K.S.T. International Holdings Ltd., which is registered in
British Virgin Islands, at the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Planning and
Investment.
The Taiwanese said
he had included all relevant documents showing that British Virgin Islands is
a British overseas territory in the license application file.
But an employee in
the department’s foreign investment office said he would not be able to get
the license because the British Virgin Islands does not belong to the UK and is
not a World Trade Organization member.
Some officials then
explicitly asked for a “service fee” to get the work done, Thanh told Tuoi
Tre.
However, when Peng
and Thanh visited the department again on August 24, some officials agreed to
take their application, and asserted the project was eligible to be licensed.
Peng then informed
K.S.T. International Holdings of the good news, and the developer earmarked
more than VND1 billion ($44,643) to lease premises, build facilities and
recruit employees to prepare for the investment.
On September 7, the
department did an about-face by officially announcing that the license
application was rejected because “British Virgin Islands is not a World Trade
Organization member,” so Vietnam does not necessarily have to open its market
to investors from this territory.
The Taiwanese
businessman said he was very disappointed to see the department giving
totally opposite decisions on the same application.
He thus called on
Tuoi Tre to look into the case, and the newspaper sent one of its reporters
to accompany Thanh to get to the department on September 28.
The Tuoi Tre
correspondent and Thanh were received by Lai Thi Kim Khanh, deputy director
of a center in charge of investment support and consulting under the
department, in her office.
Thanh told Khanh he
was facing problems in getting the investment license, and the woman said the
case would require “lobbying at the minister-level,” referring to the
Minister of Industry and Trade.
Khanh added she
would ask “an outside source if they can help,” and told Thanh to prepare up
to $15,000 as a “service fee.”
On October 2, the
woman phoned Thanh to let him know that the source had agreed to help him get
the license for a fixed price of $15,000.
Thanh demanded that
the affair succeed with 100 percent certainty, but Khanh only smiled at the
request.
“I will have to fly
to Hanoi to meet people there,” she said, after telling Thanh that the
payment had to be made in cash.
On October 7, Khanh
asserted that Thanh would surely receive the license, and demanded he give
her 70 percent of the deal, or $10,000, in advance, and she would return the
sum if the affair fails.
Thanh reported the
case to the Ho Chi Minh City administration, and the municipal chairman Le
Hoang Quan demanded that the planning and investment department resolve the
issue by October 15.
But Thanh said he
had yet to receive any information from the department as of last weekend,
and is still waiting for a reply from Khanh.
VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VET/VIR
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Thứ Năm, 29 tháng 10, 2015
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