Vietnam finance ministry unit pushes
for change in brewers' privatisation
A department of Vietnam’s finance ministry suggested
transferring responsibility for the privatisation of brewers Sabeco and
Habeco
A
department of Vietnam’s finance ministry on Wednesday suggested transferring
responsibility for the privatisation of brewers Sabeco and Habeco if the trade
ministry does not publish sale prospectuses by the end of the month.
Saigon Beer Alcohol Beverage Corp
(Sabeco) and Hanoi Beer Alcohol and Beverage Joint Stock Corp (Habeco) hold
60 percent of Southeast Asia’s biggest beer market by litres consumed. They
have drawn interest from foreign peers such as the Netherlands’ Heineken NV
and Japan’s Kirin Holdings Co Ltd , Sabeco’s former chief previously told
Reuters.
The pair were earmarked for
privatisation almost a decade ago as part of a nationwide program to trim
stakes in state-owned enterprises, many of which have low profitability. But
progress has been slow given the small stakes on offer, sizable state control
and concerns about vested interests.
Only with a change in government
last year has progress been made with Sabeco and Habeco, with the Ministry of
Industry and Trade - which holds shares in the brewers on behalf of the state
- hiring advisors, listing the firms and targeting a 2017 sale.
On Wednesday, the Ministry of
Finance’s Department of Corporate Finance waded in with an unusually public
push.
“The complete sale of state capital
in Habeco and Sabeco must be fulfilled to ensure money is transferred to the
Foundation To Support The Arrangement And Development of Enterprises before
Dec. 1,” the department said in a report on privatisation and divestment.
If sales prospectuses are not
published by Sept. 30, then the state’s shares should be transferred from the
trade ministry to the finance ministry’s State Capital Investment Corporation
(SCIC), the government’s investment arm, the department said.
“The transfer will ensure a faster
pace of divestment as SCIC is an organisation specialised in divestment ...
and will simultaneously help the trade ministry focus on completing state
management tasks,” the department said in the report.
The department would ordinarily
submit any such suggestions to higher up within the finance ministry for
further consideration.
The trade ministry holds 89.6
percent of Sabeco and 81.8 percent of Habeco, together worth 168.8 trillion
dong ($7.43 billion) at market value, Reuters data showed. The
ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The government aims to fully divest
from the brewers by the end of the year. The prime minister has approved a
plan to sell 53.59 percent of Sabeco, showed a report seen by Reuters
earlier this month, which did not detail a timeline or valuation.
Danish brewer Carlsberg A/S wants to
increase its stake in Habeco to at least 51 percent from about 17 percent
now, local media previously reported.
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Thứ Sáu, 29 tháng 9, 2017
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