BUSINESS IN BRIEF 25/4
Da Nang lags behind on FDI
The central city of Da Nang has failed to attract a
significant amount of foreign direct investment (FDI) despite its top
rankings in the Provincial Competitive Index (PCI) for the third consecutive
year in 2015, local leaders said.
In PCI 2015 - based on responses from 11,700
enterprises comprising 10,200 domestic private firms and 1,500 foreign
invested enterprises in Viet Nam - the city was applauded by surveyed firms
for its efforts in administrative reforms, especially in providing
transparency, reducing transaction costs and being pro-active.
Reports from the municipal Party Committee revealed
that the city lured only US$44.3 million worth of FDI in 2015, ranking 33rd
among 53 provinces and cities nationwide in terms of FDI.
The sluggish influx of FDI into the locality was also
seen in the past three months of this year. Only nine new foreign-invested
projects worth $2.53 million were granted licences, while four operating ones
were allowed to raise capital by more than $400,000.
The city has a good investment environment and high
competitiveness index, but investors are still not enthusiastic about
investing there, online newspaper Infonet.vn quoted committee secretary
Nguyen Xuan Anh as saying.
Deputy Secretary of the committee Vo Cong Tri said the
city's tax and land rental incentives were not on par with other localities.
For example, land rentals in the city-based Hoa Khanh Industrial Zone reached
an average of $1 per metre each year, higher than $0.8 recorded in the nearby
Dien Nam-Dien Ngoc IZ in Quang Nam Province.
A lack of cleared land has also brought the city
challenges in drawing up a specific development plan for service logistics,
as well as banking and finance sectors, he said, adding that ineffective
investment promotion was also problematic.
Vo Minh, director of the State Bank of Viet Nam's
branch in Da Nang, said the city had to deal with three major issues if it
wanted to attract large foreign investors. Those included an attractive
investment policy, high-skilled personnel and an adequate support industry.
Initially, the city should define the sectors that
should provide more incentives, he noted.
According to Anh, top priorities should be given to
improving the city's investment climate, speeding up infrastructure
development of the Da Nang Hi-Tech Park and facilitating the implementation
of licensed projects, in addition to determining the withdrawal of investment
licences for projects that failed to begin as scheduled.
Hoa Sen opens pipe factory in Binh
Dinh
Hoa Sen Group yesterday inaugurated its factory
producing plastic pipes worth VND367 billion (US$16.3 million) in the central
province of Binh Dinh.
Covering 4.6ha in Nhon Hoa Industrial Zone, the new
factory will provide 12,000 tonnes of product per year in its first phrase.
The second phrase, which is slated for completion by the end of this year,
will lift the plant's capacity up to 24,000 tonnes of product annually.
The new plant played an important role in the company's
development strategy which focused on the domestic market, the group said. It
added that besides the North, it would also continue expanding its business
in the Central and Highland regions. Binh Dinh was considered as an ideal
investment destination due to its huge potential in economic development and
its attractive investment climate.
Earlier this year, the company broke ground for its
steel plant in the province's Nhon Hoi Economic Zone. The VND2 trillion
(US$97 million) plant will have an annual capacity of 200,000 tonnes when it
goes on line in January 2017.
Three-fourths of consumers buy
homecare goods at supermarkets
Three-fourths of Vietnamese consumers have purchased
household cleaning and laundry products from large retail store chains in the
past 12 months, also the same as elsewhere in Southeast Asia, according to a
report of Nielsen.
The report shows around 58% of consumers had purchased
these products at small local, family-owned stores in the past year.
Although online retail stores have yet to gain
significant traction in Vietnam, 20% of consumers have purchased homecare
products online in the past year, the highest ratio compared to other
countries in the region such as Indonesia with 17%, Malaysia with 13%, the
Philippines with 12%, Singapore with 14%, and Thailand with 16%.
Prices and brands are among the key factors for
Vietnamese consumers to decide to buy. Around 81% of consumers say trusted
brand names are an important attribute while 73% say previous experience is
an important attribute when they make a buy decision.
The report also indicates Vietnamese pay more attention
to eco-friendly products, with 70% preferring products with organic or
all-natural ingredients, while 62% say they prefer products with
environmentally friendly packaging.
About 61% say they want to buy products with packaging
that is easy to use and store and 58% find products with packaging sizes that
fit their family needs.
For detergents, 76% seek products of high efficiency
and 67% want those fragrant. 61% seek detergents that help preserve color and
more than half of them (55%) look for detergents suitable for multiple types
of items and 54% want to buy detergents that don’t contain strong chemicals.
According to the report, the bedroom is the most
important place to be kept clean, followed by the kitchen and the bathroom.
Around 67% of Vietnamese do the laundry everyday while only 23% do it two or
three times a week.
Women buy cleaning and laundry products, so they are
responsible for daily household chores. Up to 70% say women make a final
decision on purchasing these products while only 13% say this is the
responsibility of men and 11% say this is the job of both women and men.
The Nielsen report was conducted from August 10 to
September 4 last year with 30,000 online shoppers from 61 nations around the
world taking part.
HCM City’s first quarter IIP grows
5.7%
The index of industrial production (IIP) in HCMC in the
first three months of this year expanded by 5.7% year-on-year, the highest in
five years, the HCMC Department of Industry and Trade said.
The department said business and manufacturing in the
city improved, backed by loan interest support and investment stimulus. The
5.8% year-on-year growth in the manufacturing-processing industry in the
period was evidence. Other key industries registered an average expansion
rate of 5.3% over the same period of last year.
IIP growth in January-March was well above 2.7%, 3.6%,
4.9% and 5.6% in the first quarter of 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015
respectively.
The department said local enterprises posted higher
sales in the period. Their trade and service revenues edged 11.6% higher than
in the same period last year, a four-year high.
The city saw exports, excluding crude oil, nearing
US$6.7 billion in the year to March, up 0.1% over the same period last year.
and imports shot up by 8.2% to US$7.87 billion year-on-year, hence a trade
deficit of US$1.17 billion.
The city government has taken a slew of measures to
improve the investment environment, rein in inflation, stabilize markets, and
help enterprises access capital to fuel economic growth.
IFC provides financing for Puma
suppliers in Vietnam
IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, has signed a
cooperation agreement with Puma, a leading European sports brand, to offer
financial incentives for suppliers of Puma to improve environmental, health,
safety and social standards.
In the first phase, the program will be rolled out in
Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Pakistan and Vietnam, according to
IFC.
IFC will adopt a financing structure with tiered pricing
of short-term working capital, offering lower costs for those suppliers that
achieve a high score in Puma’s supplier rating system. The ratings are
assigned based on Puma’s monitoring of suppliers’ adherence to its social and
environmental standards through an auditing process.
Sergio Pimenta, IFC’s director of manufacturing,
agribusiness and services, said in a statement that this deal with Puma
advances IFC’s efforts to encourage small and medium enterprises such as
Puma’s suppliers to improve environmental and social sustainability while
achieving strong financial results.
IFC currently provides financing for ready-made garment
and footwear suppliers through its Global Trade Supplier Finance (GTSF)
program, which provides working capital for suppliers backed by receivables
from international buyers. This is a scalable way for suppliers in emerging
markets to access affordable financing for their receivables over a period
defined by the terms of credit.
The GTSF program has run since 2010. This is a US$500
million multicurrency investment and advisory program that supplies
short-term finances for emerging-market suppliers and small and medium
exporting firms.
According to the International Labor Organization
(ILO), the textile, clothing and footwear industry attracts around 60 million
workers worldwide and most of them are young women. IFC invests in this
sector because it is a provider of formal jobs for low-skilled workers that
can make an important contribution to poverty reduction in developing
countries.
IFC’s support for the industry includes its engagement
through the Better Work joint program with the ILO. Better Work, operational
since 2009, aims to improve both compliance with labor standards and
competitiveness in global supply chains.
Few firms knowledgeable about FTAs
A mere 9% of enterprises that joined a recent survey in
HCMC are well informed of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade pact, a
clear indication that many local businesses show little interest in free
trade agreements (FTA).
The Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI)
presented the findings of the survey at a seminar last week on TPP
opportunities and challenges for Vietnam’s export and import activities.
According to the survey, 91% of businesses have had
little knowledge of the TPP, 20% have not heard about the deal, 45% have
heard about it but lack a clear understanding and 26% have done some research
on it.
Businesses said they are preoccupied by increasingly
tough market conditions at home, so they have little time to worry about
other things, a VCCI representative said at the seminar held by the Ministry
of Industry and Trade.
According to the ministry’s Export-Import Department,
the proportion of goods made to benefit from the FTAs is around 35% on
average. Surprisingly, many enterprises are not aware of the rule of origin.
Regarding the TPP, which is expected to go into force
in 2018, complying with the origin rule is a vital factor for enterprises to
enjoy tariff incentives.
If there are no early training programs and enterprises
are not well informed of FTAs, Vietnamese export products cannot compete in
foreign markets, said a source from the department.
Do Thang Hai, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade,
said when the TPP takes effect, there will be more major export markets for
local manufacturers to enter at lower tariffs.
According to Tran Ngoc Liem, deputy director of the
VCCI in HCMC, Vietnam’s exports are forecast to pick up 28.4% by 2025 thanks
to the TPP.
However, domestic enterprises should pay more attention
to the labor and environment requirements, trade barriers and defense
measures in importing countries, Liem said.
Vietnam currently participates in 16 FTAs, and the
first negotiation round of the 17th FTA, which is with Cuba, according to the
Export-Import Department.
HCM City sees oversupply in luxury
apartment market
First-quarter property market reports showed an
oversupply of high-end apartments in HCMC as this market segment expanded
swiftly and made up a bigger proportion of homes put up for sale in the
period.
According to property service firm CBRE, luxury
apartments made up 41% of the units offered for sale in quarter one, followed
by the medium segment with 39%. CBRE projected there would be over 18,200
luxury apartments in 2016.
On the contrary, the supply of homes worth VND600
million to VND1.2 billion each has remained limited.
Another property service firm, Cushman & Wakefield,
said apartments of grades A and B make up 33% and 40% of the total available
on the market at present. Meanwhile, Savills said in a report that 23% of
Grade A homes found buyers, the highest percentage among all property market
segments.
Finance-banking expert Nguyen Tri Hieu said apart from
rising demand, a surge in luxury home supply in the city has resulted from
investors’ high expectations of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and other
free trade agreements Vietnam has signed.
He said many people have purchased high-end apartments
as an investment vehicle. However, investors should consider liquidity in
this segment.
Hieu said if property credit is not tightened as
expected, an oversupply might hit the market at the end of this year and a
property bubble could burst in 2017.
He asked agencies to keep a close watch on risk factors
to take appropriate
steps.
According to Dang Hung Vo, former Deputy Minister of
Natural Resources and Environment, realty developers expect foreigners to buy
homes in Vietnam after the new Housing Law came into effect. However, there
is little foreign interest, especially in luxury apartments.
He said an oversupply on the property market is not in
sight given high demand at the moment.
Work to start in Sept on new Cam
Ranh airport terminal
Work is expected to begin on a new terminal at Khanh
Hoa Province’s Cam Ranh airport in early September and it could be up and
running in December next year, according to the Ministry of Transport.
The airport has seen a sharp spike in passengers in
recent years. Cam Ranh International Terminal Joint Stock Company (JSC) said
international arrivals to Cam Ranh airport amounted to 585,000 in 2014 and
shot up to nearly 891,000 last year. In the first quarter of this year alone,
more than half a million foreign passengers arrived at the airport.
Given the passenger traffic growth in recent years, the
company has forecast international arrivals could reach 2.5 million by 2020,
four million by 2025 and nearly six million by 2030.
According to the company, the airport should have a
terminal able to handle four million passengers by 2025, and eight million
after 2030.
The new terminal will cover 51,000 square meters and
have two separate levels with one for departures and the other for arrivals,
approach roads, car parking area and other facilities.
To serve four million passengers a year, the terminal
would have four rows with 20 check-in counters, 10 boarding gates, four
jetways, four arrival luggage belts and two departure luggage carousels.
The second runway is being constructed at the airport
to handle bigger aircraft such as Airbus A350s, Boeing B747Fs and Boeing B777
LRs. Its cost is VND1.94 trillion.
Ministry plans to tax shipping
surcharges
The Ministry of Finance is working on a plan to
classify and tax surcharges of shipping firms with annual tax revenue
amounting to thousands of billions of Vietnam dong.
The ministry might soon issue guidelines for local tax
departments to review and tax surcharges imposed by shipping firms, having
collected comments from relevant agencies on this matter in early April.
Over the years, shipping firms have registered freight
charges that are subject to a value-added tax exemption and a corporate
income tax (CIT) of only 2% but have imposed dozens of surcharges on
import-export companies to offset the low freight charges. Meanwhile, these
surcharges should have been declared under the category of other services
that are subject to a CIT of 10% and a VAT of 5%.
This practice of shipping companies has caused huge tax
losses for the State.
According to a draft document of the ministry, shipping
surcharges include those paid by enterprises for CIF (cost, insurance and
freight) exports and FOB (free on board) imports. These comprise container
handling fees; fuel surcharges; and charges for security, exchange rate
fluctuations, port congestion, peak season and winter transport, and bad weather
conditions, with all free from VAT and subject to a CIT of 2%.
Other charges levied on domestic import-export
companies by foreign shipping lines are considered service fees and will be
subject to a VAT of 5% on revenue and a CIT of 5%. VAT will be 10% for
Vietnamese firms providing export and international shipping services.
The ministry estimated the differential of different
VAT and CIT calculations is huge. For example, 20 shipping firms collected
combined surcharges of about VND77 trillion (US$3.45 billion) last year, and
the State budget would have obtained tax revenue of over VND6 trillion
(US$269 million) if these surcharges had been taxed.
International shipping firms have in recent years cut
the number of charges but have increased that of surcharges. Many shipping
lines have posted higher revenue from surcharges than that from charges.
Currently, shipping firms apply 68 kinds of surcharges
and the ministry will look into them to impose appropriate tax rates.
HCM City leader says will focus on growth
Chairman of HCMC Nguyen Thanh Phong said on April 14
the city government will mobilize all available resources this year to fuel
economic growth and improve the quality of growth and competitiveness.
The city will step up support for production and solve
problems faced by small and medium enterprises, Phong told a conference.
Phong said the city would be implementing seven
breakthrough programs in the next five years as approved by the city’s tenth
Party Congress. These programs will boost infrastructure development, improve
the cityscape and water supply, reduce traffic congestion and flooding,
enhance environmental protection and strengthen the city’s capacity to adapt
to climate change.
The city government will do whatever it takes to
realize 12 key targets for this year. They include gross regional domestic
product (GRDP) growth of 8%, total factor productivity’s (TFP) contribution
to GRDP rising to 35% or above, total investment accounting for 30% of GRDP,
trained labor making up 75% of the workforce, 125,000 new jobs, urban
unemployment below 4.5% and poverty reduction by 1%.
HCMC Party chief Dinh La Thang said at the conference
that despite many achievements, the city would have to work harder to keep up
with other cities in the region.
He said that as the leading economic, cultural,
scientific and technological center of Vietnam, the city will mobilize all
resources to speed up economic growth.
Thang called for residents to help develop HCMC into a
leading financial, scientific and technological center in Southeast Asia and
a place worth living.
U.S. investors keen on hospital
projects
U.S. investors have shown interest in hospital projects
in HCMC but have found it hard to have adequate information to make
well-informed investment decisions, heard a conference in the city on April
14.
Co-held by the U.S. Commercial Service and the HCMC Department
of Health, the conference on global trend and hospital development was to
share experience in applying the public-private partnership (PPP) format to
attract private investment into the health sector.
According to the department, the city is finding local
and foreign investors for a number of projects. They include Tan Kien
hospital complex in Binh Chanh District; a children’s hospital; an ear, nose
and throat hospital; a blood transfusion and hematology hospital; and an
oncology hospital. These projects require hefty finances.
Many HCMC-managed hospitals are also looking for
finances to upgrade their facilities such as An Binh and Binh Dan hospitals
and Children’s Hospital No. 1. Hospitals under districts, wards and communes
are in need of funding for rehabilitation as well.
U.S. investors said at the conference that they are
keen on hospital projects in the city and that medical equipment producers
and information technology and consulting enterprises want to join hospital
projects.
However, they are concerned about the transparency of
tenders and asked if their financial benefits would be guaranteed or
not.
Nguyen Ngoc Duy, head of the integrated planning
division at the HCMC Department of Health, said all information about tenders
could be found on the website of the Ministry of Planning and Investment.
Nguyen Tan Binh, director of the HCMC Department of
Health, said the department would ensure transparency in tenders for hospital
projects.
Regarding criteria for suppliers of equipment, Binh said
big names in the sector, especially those providing maintenance systems,
would be prioritized.
Binh noted the city wants to set up a center to train
people to operate equipment and that hospitals must be equipped with modern
machines and recruit skilled employees.
Patricia Williams, president and founder of Global
Health Services Network LLC, said apart from investment in facilities and
equipment under the PPP format, the city should attend to human resource
training and management models to run hospitals more efficiently.
VSSA proposes measures to stop sugar
smuggling
The Vietnam Sugar and Sugarcane Association (VSSA) has
proposed the Government allow anti-smuggling forces to possess all the
smuggled sugar they seize as a measure to crack down on sugar smuggling.
VSSA said in a recent document sent to the Government
that sugar was smuggled into Vietnam mainly through the borders with Cambodia
and Laos and that sugar smuggling has gone almost unchecked while the
capacity of anti-smuggling forces remains limited.
The association suggested that smuggled sugar should be
sold to those producing goods using sugar at auction rather than trading
companies to prevent the latter from using the bills of the auctioned sugar
to legalize their smuggled sugar.
Smuggled sugar has long been spelling trouble for local
sugar producers.
VSSA estimated that 300,000-400,000 tons of sugar is
smuggled into Vietnam a year.
Local enterprises can turn out 1.5 million tons
annually, enough to meet domestic demand. However, they find it hard to
compete with illegally imported sugar whose prices are VND500-1,000 per kilo
lower than those of local products.
Pig prices surge on rising demand
from China
Prices of pigs at farms in Vietnam have soared to
VND52,000-54,000 per kilogram compared to VND42,000 per kilogram during the
Lunar New Year holiday (Tet) in February due to increasing demand from China,
according to farm owners.
Nguyen Van Hanh, the owner of a major pig farm in
Hanoi’s My Duc District, said pig prices have grown steadily since the Tet
break when lean pigs were sold at around VND42,000 per kilogram.
More Chinese traders have come to Vietnam to buy pigs
to offset an undersupply on their market and they buy as many pigs as
Vietnamese farm owners can supply, Hanh said.
He added that pigs are priced at about VND63,000 per
kilogram in China.
Nguyen Trong Long from livestock cooperative Hoang Long
in Hanoi’s Thanh Oai District shared Hanh’s view, saying that farm owners can
earn profit of VND600,000-700,000 per pig when they sell to Chinese traders.
On April 4, China’s National Development and Reform
Commission forecast pork prices in the northern neighbor would continue the
upward trend as Chinese farmers have scaled down pig farming due to low
profit. As a result, pork prices in China have risen steadily in the past
year after years of decline.
Earlier, Reuters reported that China would boost pork
imports this year to one million tons from 770,000 tons last year. As many as
five million Chinese households suspended pig farming last year due to losses
and strict conditions on this.
MARD announces overall planning for
Macadamia development
The Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development on
April 5 approved a plan to develop Macadamia farming in the northwestern and
Central Highlands regions by 2020.
The plan will give directions to localities in the two
regions on scale and processing facilities to sustainably develop Macadamia
nut production.
By 2020 Macadamia nut fields in the two regions will
span 9,940 hectares.
The plan also set a target of building 12 more
processing facilities with a capacity of 50-200 tonnes each in the regions.
By 2030, Macadamia plants will cover 34,500 hectares,
7,000 hectares of which is dedicated only to the tree. Of the dedicated area,
the Northwestern region will have 4,800 hectares.
The number of processing facilities in both regions
will increase to 30, 20 of which will be in the Central Highlands.
The MARD encourages localities in the planned region to
develop saplings locally and carry out market research. Farmers are advised
to use modern methods of farming.
Macadamia is a genus of four species of trees indigenous
to Australia. The trees are native to northeastern New South Wales, and
central and south eastern Queensland.
Agribank given Best International
Payment award
The Vietnam Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development
(Agribank) was given the Best International Payment 2015 award by the UK’s
Standard Chartered Bank (SCB).
Anurag Bajaj, Managing Director and Global Head of
Sales for Banks at Standard Chartered , said that with a huge number of
transactions in 2015 qualifying for high standards, Agribank could be
confident of the quality of its transactions.
SCB and Agribank established branch-level ties in 1996.
Now up to 22 SCB branches in 22 countries have ties with Agribank.
In 2015 Agribank was restructured. It has maintained
business activities and its position as a key lender for agriculture and
rural development.
Works begin on fruit canning plant
in Vinh Long
A ceremony was held to kick off construction of a plant
producing canned fruit and vegetables in the Mekong Delta province of Vinh
Long last week.
Located in an area of 4.7 hectares in Dong Thuan ward
in Binh Minh town, the factory is invested in by the Song Hau Farm High-Tech
Agricultural Production Company ( SOHAFARM ) and has a total investment
capital of VND705 billion (over US$3 million).
The plant will have the capacity to process tens of
million of litres of canned fruit and vegetables anually, with standards
issued by the US Food and Drug Administration.
All of the products will be supplied to the USFI, a
joint venture between the US Foods International Group and the Hyundai Group
from the Republic of Korea (RoK).
The project is expected to be completed in June, 2017.
Tay Ninh completes SOEs equitisation
plan
The southern province of Tay Ninh has fulfilled its
plan on equitisation of State-owned enterprises (SOEs) for 2011-2015.
Nguyen Van Duoc, Acting Director of the provincial
Department of Finance, told a review conference on April 7 that a total of
five SOEs were restructured over the past five years, including two with more
than half of State stakes – The May 1 Tay Ninh Rubber and Tay Ninh Water
Supply and Drainage.
The three others are Tay Ninh Auto Register, Tay Ninh
Mechanical and Tay Ninh Sugar.
The selling of State-owned stakes in the five
one-member limited liability companies brought 429.1 billion VND (19.3
million USD) to the coffer.
According to Duoc, after the equitisation, the
companies have maintained stable operation with better profits.
Vice Chairman of the Tay Ninh province People’s
Committee Duong Van Thang, who is also head of the provincial board for
business renovation and development, suggested the Finance Department
coordinate with the equitised enterprises to continue strengthening
management and improve the operation efficiency of the companies.
The department should also assign capable officials to
represent State ownership at enterprises in which the State still holds a
stake to ensure the proper and effective use of State capital.
Thai Amata VN granted licence for
US$23 mln land project in Vietnam
Thailand's industrial park developer Amata VN Pcl said
it had been granted a new licence by Vietnam's government to develop land for
a US$23 million residential and commercial project at Long Thanh, near Ho Chi
Minh City.
The "Amata Service City Long Thanh 1" project
will cover area of 55.4 hectares, or around 53% of the total land plot for
which the company submitted licences in the southern province of Dong Nai,
the Thai firm said in a statement.
The construction of the project including warehouses
and a logistics facility is expected to start in 2018 and completed in 2019,
when the land will be ready to serve both domestic and foreign investors, the
statement said.
The company is developing its Amata City Long Thanh, a
high technology industrial park project on 410 hectares of land for which it
received a licence in 2015 and is expected to be ready for investors in 2017.
Amata VN also applied for another two licences to
develop two projects with a combined area of 801 hectares and is expected to
receive the licences in the third quarter, it said.
Amata VN, one of top three foreign-owned industrial
park developers in Vietnam, has run Amata City Bien Hoa since 1994.
Bright prospects for Vietnam-US
agricultural cooperation
There is huge potential for Vietnam and the US to
cooperate in agriculture in the coming time, especially when the
Trans-Pacific Partnership is likely to be approved.
Andy Anderson, managing director of the Western US Agricultural
Trade Association (WUSATA) made the statement after leading a delegation to
visit Vietnam last week.
Mr Anderson said Vietnam, a member of TPP, was a high
growth market. As US businesses are eager to expand export markets to
Vietnam, WUSATA decided to make a fact-finding tour of the country to seek
cooperation opportunities.
During its stay in Vietnam, the delegation discussed
with the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development and the Ministry of
Industry and Trade measures to boost cooperation among businesses from the
two countries.
They also met Vietnam’s major importers and visited
wholesale and retail units and ports.
The US businesses pledged to provide technological
support to help Vietnam improve the quality of agricultural produce to meet
US import requirements.
According to WUSATA, Vietnam has experienced modern
trends in marketing and sales. So, high quality agricultural products will
find outlets in commercial centres and supermarkets as well as overseas
markets.
Jim Barbee, Director of the Nevada Department of
Agriculture, and WUSATA President, said Vietnam had a high demand for US high
quality agricultural products. This was a good time for businesses from
Western States, particularly small-and medium-sized enterprises, to spur exports
to Vietnam.
WUSATA reported that agricultural exchanges between
Vietnam and the US have grown rapidly year by year. US agricultural exports
to Vietnam increased from US$1.5 billion in 2010 to US$2.6 billion in 2015.
US renews anti-dumping tariffs on PE
bags
The Vietnam Competition Authority has announced that
the US International Trade Commission (ITC) has voted to renew antidumping
duties on polyethylene (PE) retail carrier bags.
The ITC made the decision to continue imposing high
anti-dumping duties of 52.30-76.11% after determining that allowing the
tariffs to expire would cause irreparable harm to manufacturers in the US.
The duties, covering bags from China, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam, are subject to review by the ITC
every five years. The commission voted 6-0 in favour of extending the duties.
The US plastic bag industry began to focus on cheaper
imports around 15 years ago, when the influx of products from Asia more than
doubled from 2001 to 2003, according to commission testimony last February
from Mark Daniels.
Mr Daniels, who is the Chairman of the American
Progressive Bag Alliance (APBA) industry group, testified that led to
anti-dumping duties imposed against China, Malaysia and Thailand.
That didn’t resolve the problem said Mr Daniels
because, “market share was simply shifted to Indonesia, Taiwan and Vietnam.”
Rapidly increasing low-priced imports from Asia, said
Mr Daniels, are “something we [manufactures in the plastics industry] cannot
likely endure.”
Lumia 650 now on sale in Vietnam
Microsoft Vietnam today announced the retail
availability of the Lumia 650 throughout Vietnam with a recommended retail
price of VND3,990,000.
The Lumia 650 brings the power of Windows 10 to
consumers’ pocket with beautiful craftsmanship and protection against modern
security threats.
“We crafted the Lumia 650 with the finest detail while
delivering a consistent and familiar Windows 10 experience,” said Vu Minh
Tri, general director of Microsoft Vietnam “Lumia 650 brings the best of
Microsoft productivity, beautiful design and an affordable price.”
With a highly polished, diamond cut and anodised
aluminum frame, measuring at only 6.9mm thick, the Lumia 650 is Microsoft’s
thinnest phone ever. Its crisp 5 inch HD display provides a clear and bright
viewing experience, even in direct sunlight. The Lumia 650 also features up
to 200GB of expandable memory for flexibility on the go.
From next Tuesday, purchasers of the Lumia 650 will
receive on year of Office 365 Personal with fully installed Office
application on up to three different devices and 1 TB free cloud storage.
Smartphones are replacing the role of PC in Asia
youth’s life, resulted by Microsoft in the Asia Millennial Survey last
September on 1,200 people in Asia countries, including Vietnam. With the
rapidly increased demand for smartphones, the need of productivity on the go
is becoming more important. Office applications for example enables them to
access and share working materials from anywhere, anytime. Office 365 can provide
everything that the familiar Office can do, only better. Users and access,
create, edit and securely share documents, data and presentations from
anywhere.
Vietcombank targets 13.5% increase
in assets
Vietcombank has set a target of VND765.43 trillion
($34.33 billion) in assets this year, an increase of 13.5 per cent against
2015, according to documents submitted at its 2016 annual general meeting.
Other targets for the year include granting credit of
VND452.96 trillion ($20.31 billion), an increase of 17 per cent against 2015,
customer deposits and valuable paper issuance reaching VND578.45 trillion
($25.94 billion), an increase of 15 per cent, profit before tax of VND7.5
trillion ($336.45 million), an increase of 10 per cent, a dividend of a maximum
of 10 per cent, and non performing loans to be lower than 2.5 per cent.
The bank also set a target of increasing its charter
capital via issuing bonus shares to existing shareholders and a private
offering of shares to foreign investors, with a proportion of 35 per cent and
10 per cent of the bank’s charter capital at the time of issuance.
$31.6 million canned fruit & veg factory breaks
ground
Construction of a VND705 billion ($31.6 million) canned
fruit and vegetable factory began in the Mekong Delta’s Vinh Long province on
April 6.
The factory will produce 11.25 million one-liter cans
of fruit and vegetables per year, five million one-liter plastic containers
per year, and 45 million one-liter cardboard containers or 45 million 333-ml
aluminum cans per year.
All will be supplied to USFI Inc., a joint venture
company between US Foods International from the US and the Hyundai Group from
South Korea.
The Wemakesohafarm Co. Ltd is the investor of the
project. With construction at about VND305 billion ($13.67 million), the
factory covers an area of 4.78 hectares and meets US and South Korean
standards.
It is expected to open by the middle of next year.
Thanks to efforts to improve its business environment,
last year Vinh Long province attracted an estimated $524.7 million in
investment, an 8.32 per cent increase against 2014. Foreign investment
increased 24.46 per cent, and State investment 9.4 per cent.
The province is now focusing on completing
infrastructure and industrial zones to help enterprises expand their
business. It is also disbursing registered investment capital and attracting
new investment.
May opening for five-star Wyndham
Legend Halong
Wyndham Legend Halong will be the first five-star hotel
of international standard in Vietnam under the Wyndham Hotels and Resorts
brand, one of the world’s largest hotel groups, when it opens in May.
The hotel features 217 rooms and suites with a wide
selection of upscale facilities and world-class services, six restaurants and
bars, two 750 sq m luxury penthouse suites on the top floor, and ultra-modern
meeting and conference spaces. It boasts a prime location on Ha Long Street,
overlooking Ha Long Bay and Bai Chay Bridge.
Wyndham Hotels and Resorts, the largest hotel group in
the US, signed a cooperative agreement with the Ha Long Star Tourist Service
JSC on September 15, 2015 to build the Wyndham Legend Halong.
“Vietnam is a key tourism destination in Southeast
Asia, drawing just shy of 8 million visitors in 2014, and Ha Long Bay is one
of the country’s premier attractions,” Mr. Barry Robinson, President and
Managing Director, South East Asia and Pacific Rim, at the Wyndham Hotel
Group told the signing ceremony last September.
“With its unique beauty, its growing popularity among
travelers, and its key positioning along Vietnam’s main route to southern
China, Ha Long Bay is exactly the kind of destination we’re expanding in
right now,” he went on. “Wyndham Legend Halong will provide visitors to this
beautiful part of the world with all the comforts and amenities you would
expect from a world-class, upscale hotel.”
Wyndham is one of the largest hotel groups in the
world, owning and operating more than 7,500 hotels worldwide. The Wyndham
Legend Halong is its first investment in Vietnam.
Various violations found at the
state-owned Deposit Insurance of Vietnam
The Government Inspectorate has just revealed various
violations at the Deposit Insurance of Vietnam (DIV), from financial planning
to cost management and use of finances from 2011 to 2013.
According to the reports, the DIV did not follow the
Ministry of Finance's planning. Even though its expenditure exceeded its set
limits, it failed to file a report with the ministry. From 2012 to 2013,
spending on uniforms reached VND3bn, and expenditure on phones and phone
calls was over-budget by VND1bn (USD45,500). The DIV also splurged huge
amounts on items such as briefcases for their staff, incredibly exceeding the
set budget by VND3.2bn. The organisation also spent nearly VND4bn on buying gifts
including vases or pens.
The DIV is accused of violating the accounting law and
having spent an excess of over VND5bn on official businesses trips or to
conferences. It calculated staff monthly wages wrongly and as the result, an
excess of over VND48bn in the form of salaries, welfare and bonuses was
spent.
The tendering procedures and price appraisal of its
current renting office as well as the on-going constructions of its
headquarters in the Central Highlands and southern central region also have
problems.
In 2013, it spent over VND2bn on bonuses for
individuals and organisation outside of the sector without any signatures or
verification papers.
The Government Inspectorate proposed that the State
Bank of Vietnam, the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Labour, Invalids
and Social Affairs should punish violators and the individuals should engage
in 'self-criticism'.
Deposit Insurance of Vietnam was inaugurated in July
2000 to protect the rights of depositors, provide assistance to financial
institutions, supervise and prevent risk in banking operations.
Dung Quat Shipyard hands over
accommodation barge to Vietsovpetro
The Dung Quat Shipyard Company (DQS) handed over the
VSP-06 accommodation barge to the Vietnam – Russia oil and gas joint venture
(Vietsovpetro) at a ceremony held in Quang Ngai province last week.
The barge was invested by Vietsovpetro and built by
DQS, which took nearly three years under the direct supervision of Norwegian
and Vietnamese register agencies.
It measures 122m in length, 32.3m in width, 7.5m in
height and has a capacity of 11,000 tonnes.
The VSP-06 accommodation barge is a multipurpose
specialised barge which is capable of accommodating up to 150 workers working
offshore for long periods of time.
The barge serves the construction, repair and
replacement of spare parts of offshore floating oil and gas facilities and
the transportation of goods.
In addition, the VSP-06 will provide services to serve
oil and gas exploration activities for drilling rigs and mines.
The successful construction of the VSP-06 barge by DQS
affirms the accurate policy of the government in developing the shipbuilding
industry in Vietnam as well as marking the success of the Vietnam Oil and Gas
Group in restructuring its operations in the field of shipbuilding.
Local property market still remains
positive in Q1
The positive development of the local economy was the
continued growth of the domestic property market in the first quarter of this
year, according to experts.
The General Statistics Office reported that property
trading in the first quarter gained a growth of 3.43 percent year-on-year
(y-o-y), the highest recorded growth rate since 2012.
The Ministry of Construction said in March, that Hanoi
had 1,200 successful transactions on the property market, and HCM City had
1,150. The successful transactions belonged to the projects that were
developed as schedule, had a reasonable and flexible payment method and were
owned by reputed investors.
Meanwhile, according to Jones Lang LaSalle Vietnam (JLL
Vietnam), one of the foreign real estate services firms in Vietnam, despite
the lower GDP growth compared to the first quarter in 2015, the number was
still higher than first quarters of the 2011 to 2014 periods. This was partly
due to the impact of climate change to agricultural production. It is too
early to say whether the economy will slow down this year as Vietnam’s
economic growth typically accelerates towards the year-end.
The company’s quarterly reports on the property market
in Hanoi and HCM City said that Foreign Direct Investment disbursement as
well as newly registered capital in the first quarter of this year increased
on a y-o-y basis. This confirmed that Vietnam continues to be an attractive
investment destination for foreign investors. Real estate ranked second in
attracting FDI during the quarter, as newly registered capital reached nearly
240 million USD from a total of 11 projects.
JLL Vietnam reported the residential market of both HCM
City and Hanoi continued to achieve positive outcomes. Total new supply in
both cities reached nearly 20,000 newly launched units in the first quarter
of this year. The total number of units sold was recorded at 18,000 units,
which is an impressive figure compared to that of recent years. It can be
seen the market in the first quarter continued its uptrend witnessed in 2015,
with numerous projects achieving sales rates of up to 90 percent at launched.
Condominium prices continued the upward movement
between 1 percent and 2 percent per quarter as expected. JLL Vietnam believed
that the market would maintain this tendency in the foreseeable future.
Savills Vietnam also agreed that the domestic property
market developed stably in the first quarter of this year.
Its quarterly reports on real estate markets said that
in Hanoi there were more than 5,600 units sold, a decrease of 13 percent
quarter-on-quarter (q-o-q), but unchanged y-o-y.
Tu Liem district continued to record the largest sales
with a 24 percent market share. Grade B still led the market with more than a
66 percent share. In HCM City, transaction volume was approximately 6,300
units, down 18 percent q-o-q but up 49 percent y-o-y.
CBRE Vietnam Ltd Company said in its quarterly reports
that in the Hanoi property market, high-end and mid-end segments dominated
sales in this quarter, with market shares of 48 percent and 36 percent
respectively. Low-end segment saw a dip in sales, which could be attributed
to the recent changes in the implementation of the 30 billion VND package.
The credit facility will soon expire by June 2016, according to Circular
11/2013/TT-NHNN, which has started affecting buyers of the affordable sector.
“The Vietnamese property market has seen 25 years of
development with various ups and downs. The market is developing and maturing
at a faster rate than previously seen. Developers, investors, banks and
government authorities are more alert to market dynamics and prudent in their
actions and roles,” Stephen Wyatt, general director of JLL Vietnam, said.
“JLL believe in strong parameters and development of
the property market in the future, and 2016, in particular, will remain a
year of promising prospects despite global challenges.”
However, CBRE Vietnam said there was a proposal of a
draft amended Circular 36 regarding limits and ratios of bank financing to
the property market to continually improve risk management in banking systems
and encourage credit flow into other industries rather than the property
segment.
The change, if approved, would also create difficulties
for property developers, investors, and buyers, especially as the types of
financing among local developers are currently limited largely to bank financing.
Moving forward, the West and South West still gather
the most in terms of number of units, accounting for 75 percent of total
supply, CBRE Vietnam said. Besides, Ba Dinh district was expected to welcome
three high-end projects, supplying 488 units. Given the strong supply in the
pipeline and a seemingly strong sales, the market might be stabilising after
experiencing unprecedented growth in 2015.
VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VET/VIR
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Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 4, 2016
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