These days Thu Huong no longer shops at the fresh produce market near
her home, opting instead to hop in a taxi and head off to Aeon Co.’s
9-month-old mall in Hanoi. There, as she shops for her family of five, she
can bask in the air-conditioning and enjoy free Wi-Fi.
“It’s very convenient to
shop there, I can buy all the different things that my family needs for a
whole week. I also feel more modern and fancy when shopping in a place like
this,” said the 30-year-old dairy company employee.
With a young population,
an expanding middle class and one of Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing
economies, Vietnam is an alluring market for Aeon, Takashimaya Co. and Seven
& i Holdings Co. The reason: China is slowing and growth is flat-lining
at home.
“The Vietnamese economy
is growing rapidly and its middle class is explosively expanding,” said
Nagahisa Oyama, who oversees Vietnam operations as the company’s chief there.
“Its retail market is growing very quickly with strong appetite for spending,
especially among young people."
Young
demographics
And there are plenty of
them in the nation of 93 million. Almost 60 percent of Vietnam’s population
are under 35 years old and are becoming better educated, according to market
research company Nielsen Vietnam.
The Aeon Mall in
Hanoi. Photo: Bloomberg
Four days after an Aeon
Mall opened in Ho Chi Minh City July 1, it recorded sales that were 18
percent higher than originally estimated, according to the company.
Aeon, Japan’s largest
retailer by sales, currently operates four malls and 54 supermarkets in
Vietnam. The number of Aeon supermarkets in the Southeast Asian country is
more than double the grocery stores the company’s invested in China and
comprises a third of supermarkets the Japanese business has opened outside
its home market.
They’re not the only
Japanese firms looking to sow profits in the Vietnamese market. About 20
consumer companies from Japan -- from a chocolate maker to noodle company to
a green tea manufacturer -- met with potential Vietnamese partners last
Wednesday at an investment conference in Hanoi organized by Mitsubishi UFJ
Financial Group Inc. and Vietnam JSC Bank for Industry and Trade.
Japanese corporations are
increasingly looking outside of the nation for growth. Aeon recorded a net
loss for the March to May period, its third quarterly loss within a year as a
declining and increasingly frugal Japanese population capped sales.
“We think competition in
the Vietnamese retail market will increase with Japanese convenience stores
as well as Korean and Thai companies entering there,” Oyama said.
The company’s tie-ups
with local grocery chains Citimart and Fivimart will help expand its
business, he added.
Shares of Aeon rose 0.4
percent to 1,505 yen as of 10:15 a.m. in Tokyo trading, trimming this year’s
drop to 19.4 percent. Takashimaya gained 1.9 percent to 793 yen while Seven
& i advanced 0.9 percent to 4,488 yen. Japan’s benchmark Topix index
climbed 0.8 percent.
The world’s fastest-aging
major nation saw its Japanese population drop the most on record, falling for
a seventh straight year in 2015. By contrast, Vietnam’s young demographics is
also bolstered by growing average incomes which rose to $2,111 last year
compared with just $433 in 2000, according to World Bank data.
Evolving
retail
Consumers in Vietnam
increasingly desire better quality shopping experiences, prompting the
country’s retail model to evolve from one mainly dominated by neighborhood
wet markets that sell fresh produce, according to Nielsen Vietnam.
Sushi at the
Aeon Mall in Hanoi. Photo: Bloomberg.
The country has nearly
9,000 wet markets, 800 supermarkets and more than a million small stores run
by individual households, according to a government report in June. Spending
at formal retail stores and centers, as opposed to traditional local shops, is
expected to rise to 40 of consumer spending by 2020, up from 25 percent
currently, the report showed.
Vietnam’s retail shift
took off two years ago, aided by “both local giants and multinational
companies who are accelerating their development to build solid footprint,”
Roberto Butragueño, Nielsen Vietnam associate director of retail services,
said in an e-mail.
Shoppers in the country
are also becoming more demanding. While six in 10 Vietnamese expect stores to
be within reach, nearly as many also want them to be organized in such a way
that enhances the shopping experience, according to Nielsen, which surveyed
30,000 people in 61 countries.
Young
population
Department store operator
Takashimaya will open a 15,000 square-meter (161,000 square feet) department
store in the Saigon Center in Ho Chi Minh City this month, its first in the
country to tap faster-growing markets abroad especially in Southeast Asia,
Tokyo-based spokesman Hironobu Hanai said.
Vietnam’s young
population and high growth rate is attractive and Takashimaya has invested
about 5 billion yen ($47 million) into the nation since 2012, including in
the new store and other real estate, Hanai said.
Japanese convenience
store giant 7-Eleven last year signed a franchise agreement with Seven System
Vietnam as part of its expansion plan in Pacific Rim. And the interest is not
limited to Japan, as Korean retail conglomerate Lotte Group targets to open
60 supermarkets in Vietnam by 2020, while Thailand’s TCC Holding Co. acquired
Metro AG’s Cash & Carry wholesale business in Vietnam for 655 million
euros ($720 million)
Plastic bags
Homegrown retailers are
pushing back. Hanoi-based Vingroup aims to open as many as 500 supermarkets
and 8,000 convenience stores under its VinMart and VinMart+ brands in the
next five years, even as large retailers from overseas have "created
difficulties for local companies,” the property developer said in an e-mail.
Mobile World Investment
Corp., Vietnam’s top mobile-phone retailer, plans to launch grocery stores
next year. This new segment is expected to grow much faster than its
mobile-phone and consumer electronics retail business, Chairman Nguyen Duc
Tai said in an interview.
“The market is very huge
here. People change mobile phones only every two years on average while they
have to buy fresh food and meat everyday,” Tai said. “Ten years ago, you see
women carrying plastic bags to the wet markets to buy food every morning, but
you may not see this image in the future. This is what we call ‘generation
change.’”
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Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 7, 2016
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