BUSINESS IN BRIEF 13/4
Chinese firm expands investment in
Dong Nai
Center Power Tech Vietnam, a subsidiary of China’s
Vision Group, on April 11 put into operation the third phase of its factory
at Nhon Trach 2 Industrial Park in Nhon Trach district,the southern province
of Dong Nai.
Speaking at the inaugural ceremony, Chairman of the
provincial People’s Committee Dinh Quoc Thai praised the effective operation
of the group and hoped the firm will invest more in advanced technologies and
equipment to produce hi-quality and environmentally-friendly products in the
future.
Vision Group, which specialises in battery and
accumulator manufacturing, has been investing in over 100 countries
worldwide. Its subsidiary, Center Power Tech Vietnam, was granted an
investment licence in the province in 2007 and has an investment capital of
60 million USD.
The company manufactures 16 million battery and
accumulator products every year . It also makes equipment for producing one
million other products.
Currently, China has 56 investment projects in Dong Nai
with a total registered investment of 860 million USD. The country is ranked
fourth in project volume and sixth in term of investment capital among over
40 countries and territories investing in the locality.
Vietjet launches new routes to
Tainan, Kuala Lumpur
The low-cost carrier Vietjet Air will start operating
new routes from Ho Chi Minh City to Tainan (Taiwan) and Kuala Lumpur
(Malaysia) from this June.
According to the airline’s press release issued on
April 12, t he Ho Chi Minh City – Tainan City route will be operated on every
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday from June 22, with about three hours
and 15 minutes per leg.
The flights depart from Ho Chi Minh City at 10:45
(local time) and arrive in Tainan City at 15:00 (local time). The return ones
take off from Tainan City at 16:00 (local time) and arrive in Ho Chi Minh
City at 18:15 (local time).
Meanwhile, the Ho Chi Minh City – Kuala Lumpur route
will run from June 1. Flying time is about one hour and 55 minutes. The
flights depart from Ho Chi Minh City at 9:30 (local time) and arrive in Kuala
Lumpur at 12:25 (local time). The return ones take off from Kuala Lumpur at
13:00 (local time) and arrive in Ho Chi Minh City at 13:55 (local time).
The airline will also increase flight frequency between
Ho Chi Minh City and Taipei city of Taiwan from one round trip per day to
twice from June 18, 2016 with flight time of 3 hours 25 minutes per leg.
To celebrate the new international routes, Vietjet will
offer 50,000 promotional tickets just from 0 USD. The promotion, which runs
from April 12 to 18 between 12:00 and 14:00 daily, is applied for all tickets
on routes connecting Ho Chi Minh City with Kuala Lumpur, Tainan and Taipei.
Travel period for Ho Chi Minh City – Kuala Lumpur route is from June 1 to
October 30; for Ho Chi Minh – Tainan/Taipei route is from June 22 to October
30 (excluding public holidays).
Tickets can be booked at www.vietjetair.com (also
compatible with smartphones at https://m.vietjetair.com ) or at
www.facebook.com/vietjetvietnam (just click the “Booking” tab). Payment can
be easily made with debit and credit cards of Visa, MasterCard, JCB, and
American Express and ATM cards issued by 24 Vietnamese banks with Internet
banking.
Vietjet is the first airline in Vietnam to operate as a
new-age airline with low-cost and diversified services to meet customers’
demands.
Currently, the airline boasts a fleet of 35 aircraft,
including A320s and A321s, and operates 250 flights each day. It has already
opened 47 routes in Vietnam and across the region to international
destinations such as Thailand, Singapore, the Republic of Korea, Taiwan,
China, Myanmar and Malaysia. It has carried more than 20 million passengers
to date.
US requirements for imported goods
reviewed
Opportunities to export to the US and the US’s
requirements for imported food and pharmaceuticals were brought to light
during a seminar held in Hanoi on April 11.
Vietnam is currently the US’s 13th largest exporter
which primarily sells apparel, electronic machinery and spare parts, footwear
and interior décor to the American country.
However, agro-fisheries and food exporters ran minus
growth last year due to a string of barriers set up by the US, said deputy
head of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Trade Promotion Agency Do Kim
Lang.
According to the ministry, two-way trade between
Vietnam and the US soared from 452 million USD in 1995 to 1.51 billion USD in
2002 when their bilateral free trade agreement took effect.
The figure hit 37.9 billion USD last year, during which
Vietnam rose to 19th place among the US’s leading trade partners.
US technical expert David Lennarz said US firms are
interested in Vietnam and are switching to do business with Vietnamese
partners instead of those in the region.
Vietnamese enterprises are facing obstacles caused by
the US’s technical barriers and strict food safety requirements.
Moreover, the US also launched the Container Security
Initiative and set requirements for food production, processing and
warehouses, which will also add to export costs.
Besides, the US trade laws are complicated and
cumbersome.
Experts suggested Vietnamese firms thoroughly learn
about the US partners, their business rules and practices before making any
transaction.
The event was hosted by the ministry’s Trade Promotion
Agency.
Vietnam promotes investment in
Egypt’s Aswan province
The Vietnamese Embassy and Trade Office in Egypt held a
trade and investment promotion conference in Aswan province on April 11 to
draw local businesses’ attention to Vietnam.
At the event, Vietnamese Ambassador Do Hoang Long
informed local officials and participating enterprises of Vietnam’s
development policies, economic strengths and development potential as well as
its key export products.
He affirmed that cooperation potential between the two
countries is not fully tapped as bilateral trade reached just nearly 390
million USD in 2015, of which 20 million USD came from Egypt’s exports.
The ambassador also introduced the participants to the
Investment Law and preferential policies to attract more foreign investment
of Vietnam, stressing that thanks to these policies, around 20 billion USD is
poured into the country each year.
He took the occasion to ask Aswan province
administration to provide information about its policies and projects that
are calling for investment, while proposing setting up links between the
Vietnamese Embassy and Aswan province’s Chamber of Commerce to connect
businesses of the two countries.
President of the Aswan Chamber of Commerce Mohamed Abu
Al Kassem called for Vietnam’s investment in the locality’s strong fields
like seafood processing and mining, while suggesting Vietnam exempt visas for
Aswan businesses.
Tra fish prices bounce back after
long slump
After keeping costs low for so long, tra fish prices
shot up recently, yielding higher profits for farmers.
Processors buy the fish for VNĐ22,000-VNĐ22,500 per
kilogramme, an increase of VNĐ4,000 since early March.
This allows farmers to earn profits of VNĐ2,000-3,000
per kilogramme.
The Cửu Long (Mekong) River Delta has more than 6,000ha
of tra fish farms, mainly in the provinces of Đồng Tháp, Bến Tre, An Giang,
Vĩnh Long, Cần Thơ and Tiền Giang.
With prices below break-even levels, many farmers
incurred big losses and stopped raising the fish.
The remaining farms belong mostly to companies and
farmers that have contracts with enterprises.
Thus, the increase in prices only benefits a modest
number of independent farmers.
Nguyễn Ngọc Hải, director of the Thới An Seafood
Co-operative in Cần Thơ, said the number of tra fish farmers without
contracts account for less than 10 per cent.
Contracted farmers may only make small profits, but
they are stable and not affected by price volatility.
Đặng Văn Ngôn, a farmer in Thới An Commune in Cần Thơ,
said he has had a contract with a tra fish processing firm for a few years
and has earned steady profits of VNĐ1,500-2,000 per kilogramme.
While it does not offer high profits, it is a
sustainable model based on mutual benefit, he said.
“I signed contracts to breed 300 tonnes of tra fish in
our two ponds.”
According to the Việt Nam Association of Seafood
Producers and Exporters, tra exports in the first two months of 2016 were
worth US$237.3 million, a year-on-year increase of 5.6 per cent.
The US and EU were the key markets, accounting for 40.5
per cent of the exports, it said.
The Việt Nam Competition Authority said that according
to a US Department of Commerce decision, the US’s anti-dumping rate on tra
fish fillets imported from Việt Nam between August 2013 and July 2014 was
$0.41-$2.39 per kilogramme.
Accordingly, the two compulsory defendants, Hùng Vương
Corporation and Thuận An Production Trading and Service Co, Ltd, will now
have to pay duties of $0.41 and $0.97 per kilogramme, respectively.
The rates are a bit higher than the DOC’s preliminary
decision in January of $0.36 and $0.84.
The tax imposed on 14 other voluntary defendants was
$0.69.
In addition, a national rate of $2.39 remains
applicable to other companies exporting tra fish fillets to the US.
Both compulsory and voluntary defendants have to pay a
deposit on their exports this year at the tax rate stated in the DOC’s final
decision.
An exporter said the high anti-dumping tax is causing
difficulties for Vietnamese firms in exporting the fish to the US.
Australia to import VN mangoes
Australian agencies are finalising procedures to allow
the import of Vietnamese mangoes into Australia from 2016, according to the
Việt Nam Trade Office in Australia.
That was good news for Vietnamese farmers as well as
enterprises trading in fruit products, the office said. Now, the office has
implemented market research and connected with Australian partners to prepare
export activities of Vietnamese mangoes to Australia soon after receiving the
licence.
In 2013, the Vietnamese Farmers Association in North
Australia with 100 Vietnamese farming households, built a distribution system
of Vietnamese mangoes with popular brand names in the Australian market,
including Vina Mango and T.V Farms, Bình Dương Farm and Sài Gòn Farm.
On April 4, 2016, on the sidelines of the visit to
North Australia made by ASEAN ambassadors, Vietnamese Ambassador to Australia
Lương Thanh Nghị, and Head of Việt Nam Trade Office in Australia Nguyễn Thị
Hoàng Thúy, had a meeting with the executive committee of Vietnamese Farmers
Association in North Australia, reported chinhphu.vn.
The association is committed to support the import and
distribution of Vietnamese mangoes in the Australian market.
Last year, after 12 years of waiting, Việt Nam received
approval from Australia’s Department of Agriculture to export lychees to
their market.
Irradiation in the north
In a related development, the Hà Nội Irradiation Centre
is ready to implement irradiation services for fruit exports this year.
According to the department, the centre has been
upgrading equipment to reach international standards for irradiation of fruit
products.
The centre, under the Ministry of Science and
Technology (MST)’s Atomic Energy Institute of Việt Nam, was initially a small
agency providing irradiation services for products in the healthcare field.
Since the end of 2014, the Ministry of Agriculture and
Rural Development (MARD) and MST have provided VNĐ20 billion (US$909,000) in
funds to improve the centre and equip it with irradiation services for fruits
due to the high demand on exporting local fruit products to many foreign
markets, such as the United States and Australia.
Hoàng Trung, deputy head of department, said the Hà Nội
Irradiation Centre has been upgrading completely and that would ensure a
great opportunity for the export of fruit products in the north of Việt Nam,
especially lychees and longan.
That meant the fruit export enterprises would not
transport their products to the South for conducting irradiation activities
as before and would therefore save between VNĐ15 million and VNĐ16 million
per tonne of fruit in terms of transport and time.
So far, there have been five companies who registered
for the irradiation services in the centre for export lychees and longan this
year, Trung said.
The department said that in the long term, together
with irradiation services, the enterprises should ship export products to
foreign markets by sea via Hải Phòng Port in large volumes and preserve fresh
fruit products in cool containers to retain the freshness and quality of the
products.
South takes lead in attracting FDI
The southern region has received US$1.7 billion
worth of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the first quarter of 2016, according
to the Ministry of Planning and Investment's Foreign Investment Agency.
This value accounted for 51.6 per cent of the total FDI
registered in the country, making the region the leading performer in terms
of FDI attraction. The agency said in its recent report that the positive
results were due to the region's huge potential in developing industries such
as hi-tech, IT, oil and gas, in addition to several services in banking,
finance and tourism sectors.
During the three-month period, 246 new foreign-invested
projects received licences while 305 existing ones were approved to raise
capital in the region, which include HCM City, Ba Ria – Vung Tau, Dong Nai,
and Binh Duong, in addition to Tay Ninh and Binh Phuoc.
Among large projects included $115 million steel mill
emissions processing facility, developed by Zincox Resources PLC from the
United Kingdom in Ba Ria- Vung Tau Province; a $55 million-garment factory,
invested by Brunei's Promax Textile Viet Nam Co in Dong Nai Province's Nhon
Trach 3 Industrial Zone and a Brunei-funded furniture manufacturing project,
worth $38 million, in Dong Nai's Giang Dien Commune.
There were 41 countries and territories making
investments in the region in the reviewed period. Of them, Japan ranked first
with $309.3 million or equivalent to 18.1 per cent of the region's total FDI.
South Korea and Brunei came second and third with about $270 million, or 15.7
per cent, and $148.2 million, or 8.6 per cent, respectively.
Among six localities, Dong Nai attracted the lion's share
of FDI with $585.4 million, making up 34.2 per cent of the region's total
FDI. It was followed by Binh Duong with $376 million, or 22 per cent, and HCM
City with $354.2 million, or 20.7 per cent.
From January to March, the manufacturing and processing
sector was the most attractive sector to foreign investors as it absorbed
$1.29 billion, totalling 76 per cent of FDI pledged in the region. Water
supply and waste treatment ranked second with $115 million while wholesale
and retail came third with $105.7 million.
Viet Nam witnesses ‘impressive'
export-import growth, says WTO
Viet Nam is the only country to have achieved
impressive export-import growth in 2015 among the 30 leading export-import
economies of the World Trade Organisation (WTO).
This was the conclusion of the "World Trade 2016
and Prospects 2016" report announced by WTO Director General Roberto
Azevedo.
The report indicated that Viet Nam's exports soared 7.9
per cent to US$162 billion, and its imports surged 12.3 per cent, reaching
$166 billion last year.
While major exporters such as China, Turkey and Italy
recorded a falling value of maritime shipped goods, Asian countries, such as
Viet Nam, Bangladesh, Cambodia and Myanmar, posted strong growth, it said.
In overview, the report painted a dismal picture of
global trade in 2015, with the total goods value dropping 13.2 per cent to
$16.5 trillion.
The United States remains the largest importer, with a
total value of $2.3 trillion, down 4.3 per cent, followed by China with $1.6
trillion, down 14.2 per cent.
This year, Viet Nam targeted fetching a total of $178
billion from exports, up 10 per cent from a year earlier, and to control
trade deficit at 5 per cent.
Experts forecast that this was not a very difficult
target as export doors would be further widened after some bilateral and
multilateral free trade agreements signed by Viet Nam take effect.
The new investments, coupled with continued market
share gains in key products such as electronics, footwear and textiles and
apparel, should boost Viet Nam's exports, even if global demand remains weak,
the experts said.
Techcombank announces it will list
shares on UPCoM
The Viet Nam Technological and Commercial Joint Stock
Bank (Techcombank) plans to list its shares at the general shareholder's
meeting on April 23.
The bank said it will list in the Unlisted Public
Company Market (UPCoM) first, then in one of the two official bourses in Ha
Noi and HCM City.
Last year, the bank reported a profit before tax of
VND2.037 trillion (US$90.9 million), an increase of 43.8 per cent over 2014.
As of December 31, 2015, the bank's total assets
increased 9.2 per cent to reach VND192 trillion ($8.56 billion) and its
deposits from customers rose 8 per cent to reach VND142.6 trillion ($6.4
billion). It also planed a profit before tax of VND3.5 trillion.
The bank also said it would not pay a dividend this
year but had used the income to develop the future business of the bank.
Dien Quang Lamp JSC to increase
dividend rate
The HCMC-based Dien Quang Lamp JSC (DQC) will increase
its dividend rate of 2015 by 15 per cent to reach 35 per cent.
Currently, the company pays a 15 per cent cash
dividend. DQC intends to offer a 10 per cent cash payout ratio, while the
rest of the payment will be made in shares.
In 2015, DQC earned VND1.082 trillion (US$48.4
million), 14 per cent lower than its target. However, the company reported a
pre-tax profit of VND268 billion, 34 per cent higher than their target.
In 2016, the company aims to obtain revenue of VND1.1
trillion and profit before tax of VND230 billion.
Kim Long Securities plans business
shutdown
Kim Long Securities Corp (KLS) will propose
shareholders shut down the company's business, the company has recently
announced.
KLS will also propose the shareholders allow the
company to be delisted from the Ha Noi Stock Exchange after it is shut down.
The company has to be shut down due to the nature of
the small-scale stock market, which cannot allow a large number of brokerage
firms to participate, and low business efficiency last year, Ha Hoai Nam, the
company's chairman, said.
In addition, the company is unable to make large,
long-term investments in other businesses as it has encountered strict rules
from government agencies, Nam said.
In the first quarter of 2016, KLS recorded revenue of
VND38.4 billion (US$1.7 million), an increase of one-third from the same
period last year.
The company also reported a pre-tax profit of VND4
billion, an improvement from the loss of VND39 billion in last year's first
quarter.
However, the company still suffered an accumulated loss
of VND62.3 billion over a year.
At the end of the first quarter, KLS had VND627 billion
in cash and total assets worth VND1.76 trillion. The company also had
chartered capital of VND2.2 trillion and equity of VND2.27 trillion.
Ford VN reports record sales in
March
US automaker Ford Viet Nam has reported its best
ever March performance selling nearly 2,400 units, a 71 per cent year-on-year
rise.
The record month also capped the company's best ever
first quarter performance as sales rose 69 per cent from a year earlier to
over 6,500 units.
With its EcoSport, Ranger and Transit all maintaining
leadership of their segments – mini SUV, pickup, and van and bus – the
company remains one of the fastest growing in the automotive sector this
year.
The Transit saw March sales rise 53 percent to 586
units, as business owners and operators across a range of industries
continued to appreciate its durability, versatility and value proposition.
First quarter sales rose 70 percent to 1,746 units.
Sales of the Ranger surged 126 percent in March to
1,198 units and 163 percent in the first quarter to 3,161.
The sporty EcoSport compact SUV saw March sales rise 53
percent to 436 units, helping drive its year-to-date sales up 23 percent to
1,106.
Cai Mep int’l port welcomes large
container ship
A large vessel carrying 2,000 TEU anchored at Cai Mep
International Port in the southern coastal province of Ba Ria – Vung Tau on
April 11 to ship the goods to Northern Europe.
The Millau Bridge ship, which is 366 meters long and 52
meters wide, is capable of carrying 14,000 TEU (equivalent to 150,000 tonnes
of cargo). It is managed by the CKYHE Alliance of Asian container lines,
including Cosco, Yang Ming, Henjin Shipping, and Evergreen.
This is the first large container ship used by the
CKYHE to harbour in the Vietnamese port as part of the service connecting
Asian and European markets.
After anchoring at some Chinese ports, the ship arrived
in Vietnam and will visit Singapore before going to Europe to habour at
Rotterdam Port in the Netherlands and Felixstowe in the UK .
Cai Mep International Port is the only in Vietnam to be
able to receive such large vessels that can carry 150,000 tonnes of cargo.
Every week, it handles one heavy-loaded ship to the
Mediterranean Sea, two to North Europe, three to the US , two to Asia, and
four to domestic cities of Hai Phong, Da Nang and Quy Nhon.
It served 576 vessels carrying 423,000 TEU in the first
three months of 2016, up 57 percent against the same period last year.
The Ministry of Transport along with relevant agencies
and localities have actively reformed administrative procedures and improved
infrastructure quality to attract more cargo ships.
Firm imports used tyres for fuel
Chu Lai-Indevco Float Glass JSC’s pilot recycling
programme to turn used car tyres and rubber into fuel for the firm’s glass
production was a resounding success, prompting the company to submit a
proposal for authorities to allow the continued import of secondhand
materials.
According to a recent report by the Ministry of Science
and Technology (MoST), the import and recycling of used rubber and auto tyres
for Chu Lai-Indevco’s North Chu Lai Industrial Zone factory in the central
province of Quang Nam has generated the company about VND700 billion ($32
million) in profits after three years of implementation.
From 2013-2015, the company imported 271,000 tonnes of
used auto tyres and rubber. Of this, 166,000 tonnes were put into production,
while the remaining 105,000 tonnes are still kept in stock.
During this three-year period, the company also
utilised 162,000 tonnes of locally-sourced used tubes and tyres to feed
production.
Chu Lai-Indevco was reported to have collected FO-R
oil, powder coal, and steel scraps through pyrolysis of the used products,
gathering about 80,000 tonnes of FO-R oil from both imported and locally
sourced rubber.
This helped the company save around VND500 billion ($23
million) compared to importing FO-R oil for production.
Along with these savings, by selling the powder coal
and steel scraps resulting from the pyrolysis process, the company recouped
VND145 billion ($6.6 million) and VND60 billion ($2.75 million) of its costs,
respectively.
Recycling used rubber into fuel for production was
handled at Chu Lai-Indevco’s rubber and plastic recycling plant based in Nho
Quan district in the northern province of Ninh Binh.
The plant reports a daily capacity of 485 tonnes per
day, equal to 180,000 tonnes per year. According to the MoST, the factory
complies with environmental standards while providing jobs to on-site
labourers.
Due to the pilot programme’s positive results, Chu
Lai-Indevco has lodged a proposal seeking permission to continue importing
used rubber and tyres for production at a volume of 130,000 tonnes per year
until the end of 2021, to offset a shortage in locally-sourced material.
The proposal was supported by relevant government
management agencies (the MoST and the Ministry of Industry and Trade), and
the localities that host the company’s manufacturing plants.
Earlier, through Document 679/2013/TTg-KTN, the
government green-lighted the company’s import of 160,000 tonnes of used tubes
and tyres for three years (2013-2015) to recycle into fuel serving its glass
production.
In fact, used materials such as auto engines,
accessories, tubes and tyres, tractors, and motorbikes were included in the
list of products prohibited from import under governmental Decree
187/2013/ND-CP, which lists goods banned for export from or import into
Vietnam in the Commercial Law.
Decree 187 stipulates that used tyres for temporary
import and re-export can be kept in Vietnam no more than 60 days and may
undergo two extensions, each not surpassing 30 days.
To restrict individuals and organisations from
transporting waste and used materials into Vietnam, the Ministry of Finance
required the Ministry of Industry and Trade to review temporary import and
re-export activities, particularly those of used tyres and tubes, and
consider putting these products in the list of commodities whose import and
re-export should be temporarily stopped.
Singaporean group backs up southern
realty project
Singaporean financial group SynGience signed a contract
with local Minh Nguyen Long and L&L-LuckLand yesterday on the development
of a property project in District 12 of Ho Chi Minh City.
Accordingly, SynGience will pump VND400 billion ($18.3
million) into DepotMetro Tower-Tham Luong project. The sum will be disbursed
throughout the project’s different phases. The first instalment of VND40
billion ($1.8 million) was transferred on March 29 to fast-track the first
phase, according to newswire dddn.com.vn.
DepotMetro Tower-Tham Luong features two apartment
blocks consisting of about 660 apartments with areas ranging from 48 to 73
square metres. It is located in District 12’s Tan Thoi Nhat ward, near the
Tham Luong station of Metro Line No2, promising high profitability as this
area is considered a main gateway to Ho Chi Minh City from the northwest.
Besides, this is also the favoured residential area for
engineers and experts working at the nearby Tan Binh industrial park.
At the signing ceremony, SynGience representatives said
that Vietnam is an attractive market for international financial groups,
especially after the country lifted a number of trade barriers and signed a
series of free trade agreements, including the Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement (TPP).
With respect to the recent movements of the Ho Chi Minh
City real estate market, Dat Xanh Group recently launched Opal Riverside
resort complex project along the Sai Gon River, worth nearly VND1 trillion
($45.8 million) with 648 apartments.
Also, Hung Loc Phat is developing the Golden Star
project, worth VND932 billion ($42.7 million), in District 7 with 478 apartments.
Jetro reports very low localization
rate of Japanese businesses in Vietnam
According to the Japan External Trade Organization
(Jetro), despite cooperation efforts between Vietnam and Japan have seen
positive development in recent years, the localization rate of Japanese
businesses in Vietnam was very low reaching only 32.1 percent last year.
The rate was a 10 percent increase compared to 2010 but
slight reduction over 2014 when it touched 33.2 percent.
Meantime, the localization rate of Japanese businesses
in China, Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia were 64.7 percent, 55.5 percent,
40.5 percent and 36 percent respectively.
Of the 32.1 percent, the ratio of components that
Japanese firms purchased from Japanese suppliers in Vietnam was 45.1 percent,
from Vietnamese firms was 41.2 percent and others such as Taiwanese invested
companies was 13.7 percent.
Therefore the component supply ratio by Vietnamese
firms to Japanese businesses was in fact less than 13.2 percent.
Jetro proposed authorized agencies to soon solve
problems in tax policies amid the current integration context and remove
regulations raising difficulties for businesses. The Government should issue
policies encouraging and assisting Vietnamese companies to attend the supply
chain.
Steel supply abundant, prices down
According to the Vietnam Steel Association (VSA), steel
prices have reduced by VND100,000-200,000 a ton after a briefly sudden
increase in mid-March.
It has swung around VND12 million (US$538) a ton in Ho
Chi Minh City for the last few days.
Preliminary statistics by VSA show that steel
consumption in March was estimated to reach 763,000 tons, the highest level
ever in the steel industry’s history. It moved up 66 percent over February
and 15 percent over the same period last year.
The record high increase was because the annual
construction season has entered its peak time and steel stores have stepped
up stockpiling after the Ministry of Industry and Trade decided to impose
temporary safeguard duties.
Despite of the strongly hiked consumption volume, steel
inventory still hit 325,000 tons at the end of March.
Besides, the market will receive one million tons of
steel supply from a slew of new projects going to come into operation this
year. This indicates that businesses have been capable of meeting the
market’s demand so distributors and store owners should not concern about a
scarcity and stock up steel.
Business environment suffers from
non-competitive attitude
Even though the number of bankrupted firms is high,
government agencies have continued to say that there was nothing to worry
about.
Since 2011, the number of shutdown and bankrupted firms
has increased sharply. But at all seminars or press conferences, spokespeople
from the General Statistics Office and even heads of the Ministry of Planning
and Investment have said this is normal. They have often quoted the number of
bankrupted firms in Australia, France, the US or Indonesia as facts to prove that
everything is quite normal.
However, it's probably harder to make the normal claim
now as statistics for the first quarter were released. While 23,767 new firms
were established, more than 20,000 businesses shut their doors, an increase
of 23.9 percent on last year.
Nguyen Dinh Cung from the Central Institute for
Economic Management (CIEM) said, "Saying that it's normal is just a way
of offering consoling words and is frankly irresponsible. These numbers
aren’t normal."
He is probably the first economist to make such a
strong statement.
The reports from the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and
Industry from the last three years have shown that the number of medium,
small, very small and extremely small scale businesses has shot up. Big firms
often faced difficulties and have downsized in scale. Other surveys and
assessments by foreign organisations provide similar results.
According to the World Bank, 40.8 percent of a firm's
revenue is spent on taxes and fees in Vietnam, especially in recent years
when the government is trying to balancing the state budget by increasing
fees on the environment, transportation or excise tax. There have been no
cuts to give firms some breathing space.
In addition to this rampant corruption. CIEM evaluate
that since the implementation of government Resolution 19 about improving the
business environment in 2014 and 2015 the situation has actually become
worse. Bribery has actually increased.
Pham Chi Lan, member of the Advisory Group of the
Vietnam National Assembly’s Economic Commission, cited statistics from the
World Bank that stated that if a firm generated one Vietnamese dong then they
would lose VND0.72 or even VND1.02 to bribery.
"How can firms expand and develop?" she said.
Soldiers are the pillar of a country during war times
and businesses are the heart of a country in peacetime. That is because firms
play an important role and make the most contribution to the country's
development.
It's admittedly normal to see firms go bankrupt and
shut down when facing such challenges, when taxes and fees are increasing and
the business environment becomes challenging and corruption is rampant.
But because this is seen as ‘normal’, many economists
have reached the conclusion that Vietnam has refused to improve. There's
abundant FDI and ODA yet Vietnam's ranking on global competitiveness chart
has actually fallen.
Samir Dixit, Managing Director of Brand Finance
Asia-Pacific, said at the ninth forum on Vietnam National Branding that the
value of Vietnam's national brand was only higher than Cambodia's. In 2015,
Vietnam's national brand was valued at USD140bn with Cambodia ranked at
USD16bn.
World Bank expert talks down fears
over rising public debt
Vietnam's public debt may quickly exceed the ceiling
set at 65% of GDP, which will result in the national economy's budget risks,
warned a World Bank economist.
The WB’s lead economist in Vietnam, Sandeep Mahaja,
said that Vietnam has seen a rapid rise in its public debts from 59.5% in
2014 to 62.5% in 2015; and predicted increases to 63.8% in 2016; 64.4% in
2017 and 64.7% in 2018.
According to a recent report from the Ministry of
Finance, Vietnam's public debt is estimated at USD115.7 billion. So, with the
total population of 91.7 million, each Vietnamese person now has to bear a
public debt of USD28.4 million, the record figure to date.
Mahaja said, "Currently Vietnam's public debt is
still at safe level and we are not worried about Vietnam's payment ability so
far, however, the payment terms are a problem for Vietnam, because they are
almost all short. This has put a pressure for Vietnam's public debt
repayments, particularly in the context of the country's high budget deficit
at present."
He noted that spending up to 16% of the country's
budget every year to pay the public debt is a big risk for the national
economy, affecting investment for development in various areas such as
education and health. So the Vietnamese government needs to have a stable
frequent spending plan.
Multiple incentives sought for Thai
Nguyen steel project
State Capital Investment Corporation (SCIC) has
proposed the most preferential incentives ever for the Thai Nguyen steel
plant to help resume work on its second phase which has been delayed for
nearly a decade.
Assigned to solve problems faced with the steel plant,
SCIC proposed the Government and the ministries of finance and industry-trade
exempt the expansion project from import, contractor and value-added taxes.
Thai Nguyen Iron and Steel Joint Stock Corporation
(TISCO), the project investor, has conducted 10 rounds of negotiations with
Chinese contractor Metallurgical Group Corporation (MCC) to deal with the
problems with the project, SCIC said.
MCC has shown its determination to resume work on the
project. However, the two sides have not reached a compromise on several
conditions set by the Chinese contractor.
In specifics, MCC required TISCO to pay for it and its
subsidiaries nearly US$4.4 million as compensation for a construction
suspension since June 2012, and US$53 million for after-sale services, project
handover and maintenance and repair for the construction site, and purchases
of damaged equipment.
SCIC said the project would only be profitable if it
costs a total of VND7.87 trillion (US$853 million) as appraised by the
Vietnam National Construction Consultant Corporation (VNCC) and Institute of
Construction Economics under the Ministry of Construction.
In addition, the project should have construction work
finished on September 30 next year and start production on January 1, 2018.
SCIC said the project would not be effective if the
investment cost is adjusted up to more than VND9 trillion (US$405 million) as
suggested by TISCO and the selling price of steel ingots is 6% lower than the
projected price.
That was why SCIC did not agree with TISCO’s proposal
to revise up the project’s cost.
The expansion of Thai Nguyen steel plant began in 2007
with an original cost of VND3.84 trillion. Though TISCO had disbursed VND4.44
trillion for the project, it is still half-done as MCC withdrew from the
project in 2012 after it had got paid for over 90% of the equipment cost.
Bac Ninh attracts over 200m USD in
investment in Q1
The northern province of Bac Ninh granted investment
certificates to 21 foreign direct investment (FDI) projects with total
registered capital of more than 200 million USD in the first three months of
this year.
The figure represented an increase of 157 million USD
against the same period last year.
According to the provincial Industrial Zone Management
Board, Bac Ninh is now home to 816 FDI projects worth 11.8 billion USD. Of
these, industrial parks have attracted 598 projects with total registered
capital of 11.1 billion USD.
The increase is attributed to the province’s efforts to
improve its business climate and focus on hi-tech and supporting industries.
The province has also boosted administrative reform to
help enterprises.
After falling for two months, auto sales staged a
strong recovery last month with a total of 24,802 units sold, more than twice
the February figure.
Locally assembled cars accounted for more than 80% of
the sales, news website VnExpress said on April 9, citing figures from the
Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers Association.
Truong Hai Auto Corporation held 44.7% of the market
share, followed by the local units of Toyota and US carmaker Ford.
Nearly 60,000 units have been sold in the first three
months, up 23% from a year ago.
Sales dropped 49.4% to 11,718 units in February, the
lowest in a year. In January there had been a month-on-month decline of more
than 21%.
Many industry insiders have been quoted as saying in
the media that the sharp fall in February was because the country was
celebrating the Lunar New Year.
A new tax rule that took effect on January 1 forcing
auto importers to increase their prices by 2%-13% was another reason, they
said.
Now luxury tax is calculated on a car’s retail price,
unlike previously when it was calculated on their cost, insurance, freight
(CIF) price before the addition of duties and markups.
Vietnam posted strong growth of 55% last year as sales
grew to nearly 244,914 units.
Eco-complex to be erected in
downtown HCM City
A Vietnamese realty firm has said it will launch an
enviro-friendly realty project in Ho Chi Minh City soon.
Vingroup will convert the Ba Son shipyard in District 1
into an eco-urban area, named Vinhomes Golden River, the company said on its
website.
Located on the Saigon riverbank, the project will
feature financial centers, offices, high-class hotels, restaurants, museums,
schools and other services, the firm added.
According to the Department of Planning and
Architecture in Ho Chi Minh City, the area spanning parts of Ton Duc Thang
Street is designed to give the city a modern look that harmonizes with
nature.
Three renowned global design, engineering and project
management firms – ATKINS, GENSLER, and ESDA – act as the consultants of the
planned development, the property company said.
An artist’s impression of the Vinhomes Golden River
project in District 1, Ho Chi Minh City
The realty complex, to be developed on 25.3 hectares,
will adopt the eco-city model, which is built on the principles of living
harmoniously with the environment, it said.
The firm added that residents in the area can travel by
train as the first metro line linking Ben Thanh Market in District 1 with
Suoi Tien Amusement Park in District 9 will run through the complex.
Experts said that the realty project will attract lots
of potential customers as it nestles in the city’s heart as well as being a
riverside complex.
The building density of the project is 18.6%, which is
highly appealing as it will provide more green space, they added.
“The urban area just suits the surroundings in every
angle since it harmonizes with nature, the city center and the Thu Thiem
urban area nearby,” Nguyen Truong Luu, chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City
Association of Architects, remarked.
Vingroup was founded in 1993 by a group of Vietnamese
youths in Ukraine under the name of Technocom, which was mainly involved in
the food production industry.
After growing as one of the largest and most
influential companies in Ukraine by the early 21st century, Technocom looked
to Vietnam to expand its business in real estate and hospitality with the
initial key brands of Vincom and Vinpearl.
The two brands merged into Vingroup JSC in 2012, which
has since developed into one of the most dynamic, successful, and
well-capitalized companies in Vietnam.
Bac Ninh attracts over 200m USD in
investment in Q1
The northern province of Bac Ninh granted investment
certificates to 21 foreign direct investment (FDI) projects with total
registered capital of more than 200 million USD in the first three months of
this year.
The figure represented an increase of 157 million USD
against the same period last year.
According to the provincial Industrial Zone Management
Board, Bac Ninh is now home to 816 FDI projects worth 11.8 billion USD. Of
these, industrial parks have attracted 598 projects with total registered
capital of 11.1 billion USD.
The increase is attributed to the province’s efforts to
improve its business climate and focus on hi-tech and supporting industries.
The province has also boosted administrative reform to
help enterprises.
US anti-dumping duty on PE bags from
Vietnam remains in place
The US has decided to continue applying anti-dumping
duties on imports of polyethylene (PE) retail carrier bags from Vietnam and
some other countries.
The Sai Gon Giai phong (Liberated Saigon) daily
reported the Vietnam Competition Authority as saying that the decision comes
under the five-year (sunset) review process carried out by the US
International Trade Commission (USITC).
The USITC determined that revoking the antidumping and
countervailing duty orders on PE retail carrier bags from China, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Taiwan (China), Thailand, and Vietnam would likely lead to a
continuation or reoccurrence of material injury.
The anti-dumping duty rates are imposed at between 52.3
– 76.11 percent.
Countervailing duty rates of 52.56 percent are levied
on the imports of one Vietnamese company. Other Vietnamese producers or
exporters of these products are subject to a countervailing duty rate of 5.28
percent.
On July 27, 2015, the US Department of Commerce issued
the determinations of a sunset review, which kept the anti-dumping duty and
countervailing duty orders in place.
Vietnamese construction products
introduced in Cuba
Vietnamese construction firms displayed their products
for the first time at the 11th International Construction Fair (FECONS 2016),
in Havana, Cuba.
The event, which took place from April 5-9, featured
the participation of about 200 enterprises from 29 countries worldwide.
Representing the Vietnamese Ministry of Construction,
the Vietnam Glass and Ceramics for Construction Corporation (Viglacera)
exhibited products including sanitary wares, ceramic tiles, glass for
construction and showers.
Viglacera also signed an agreement on importing and
exporting construction materials with the Cuban Ministry of Construction’s
IMCO company and another on establishing a joint venture agreement with the
Cuban Geicon Group.
The ceramic firm also inaugurated its first showroom in
Havana.
An event to introduce construction products from two
Vietnamese companies, Thai Binh and Vinh Tuong, was also held during the
fair.
VN start-ups need more legal
support: firm CEOs
Vietnamese start-ups need consultancy supports on tax
policies, legal, finance and accounting, as well as training courses to help
them become professional entrepreneurs.
Trịnh Nam Thái, CEO of Koban.vn raised this idea while
contributing to the project, “The national programme to support start-up
ecosystem and innovation” built by the National Agency for Technology
Entrepreneurship and Commercialisation Development (NATEC).
Phạm Hồng Quất, the agency’s director said that NATEC
had received several ideas from ministries and sectors to complete the
project. It would be built to meet with the demand of start-ups in the
science and technology field in the first stage of development.
Specifically, an electronic platform would be
established on the network infrastructure of the National Agency for Science
and Technology Information (VISTA). The project would also build a database
and a system connecting domestic and foreign specialists, especially overseas
Vietnamese with experience in start-ups and successful entrepreneurs in the
science and technology sector.
In addition, there would be training courses
specialising in attracting funding and building business models for start-ups
with support from the Government.
“We want to create a working environment which will
help investors share business experiences as well as appeal for venture
funds. Angel investors would also act as trainers,” Quất said.
NATEC would call for co-operation from institutes,
schools and localities to build the best working environment for start-ups.
The project would also propose a mechanism for the association
between start-up centres and investment funds to help them access funds and
facilitate them in divestment.
However, successful start-ups believed that the support
should be closely linked with reality.
Nguyễn Hữu Tuất, CEO Mpos Việt Nam, said that a website
or an electronic platform would be only a tool for start-ups accessing
information. The Government should have a start-up nurturing programme to
support them and their partners, as well as a training system to turn ideas
into products.
Tuất said the Government should be active in setting up
a centre to give legal aid to start-ups on regulations with regard to
business conditions, taxes and listening to their difficulties relating to
legal issues.
He said the Government should have policies to reduce
or exempt taxes for businesses, provide support services to start-ups such as
co-working space, electricity, water and the Internet to minimise their
costs.
He expected the Government to create a process to
facilitate the entry of foreign funds and organise a discussion with
investors to resolve vexing issues.
VN-based ABT to pay 30-50% cash
dividend in 2016
Bến Tre Aquaproduct Import and Export JSC (ABT), a Việt
Nam-based company that processes seafood for export, agreed to pay a cash
dividend of between 30 and 50 per cent in 2016.
In 2015, the company earned VNĐ472 billion (US$21
million) in revenue, a year-on-year increase of 5 per cent. It earned pre-tax
profit of VNĐ72 billion and after-tax profit of VNĐ68.8 billion. Its earning
per share (EPS) reached VNĐ5,206.
The board of directors has set a target of earning
VNĐ500 billion in revenue and VNĐ60 billion in pre-tax profit this year.
VinaCapital fund moves to main
market of LSE
VinaCapital Vietnam Opportunity Fund Limited (VOF) has
completed its move from the AIM (Alternative Investment Market) to the main
floor of the London Stock Exchange, with trading beginning on March 30.
"It has come a long way since its inception in
2003, and we believe a listing on the main market marks the start of a new chapter
of growth,” Andy Ho, managing director of the VOF and chief investment
officer of VinaCapital Group, said.
“With the higher profile afforded by such a listing, we
should be in a better position to improve liquidity and reach a broader
investor base," he added.
He said the fund’s strategy is to make investments in
both listed and unlisted firms via negotiated deals, with a focus on the
equitisation of State-owned enterprises and the real estate sector.
"We will invest in prestigious property developers
as the real estate market is growing well."
Other investment priorities include the food and
beverages, education, communications, logistics, and building materials
sectors.
Listed shares account for 48 per cent of VOF’s
portfolio, real estate projects for 12.4 per cent and private equity for 12.3
per cent. The portfolio also includes hotels, unlisted shares and other
assets.
In terms of industries, food and beverages accounted
for 24.5 per cent, property and construction for 24.3 per cent and hotels for
over 10 per cent.
VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VET/VIR
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Thứ Tư, 13 tháng 4, 2016
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