Eximbank and Sacombank plan merge
The Vietnam Export Import Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Eximbank) and the Sai Gon Thuong Tin Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Sacombank) have unveiled merger plans at a cooperative agreement’s signing ceremony in Hanoi on January 29.
The agreement specifies the two banks will submit a plan of merger to State agencies and a general assembly of shareholders in the next three to five years.
Eximbank is Sacombank’s largest shareholder. The merger will help both banks overcome their respective difficulties, improve their competitive capacity, and contribute to the sustainable development of the Vietnamese banking system and economy.
Under the agreement, both banks will support each other in optimising capital resources and liquidity.
They will also work together to meet customer demand in foreign currency and gold trading while complying with the regulations of the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV).
Eximbank currently has a charter capital of VND12,355 billion. By the end of 2012’s third quarter, the bank’s total assets were valued at more than VND160,000 billion. Sacombank’s charter capital is VND10,739 billion and its total assets exceed VND147,000 billion.
Slump in pangasius exports
According to the Directorate of
Fisheries under the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the
breeding area for pangasius fish is currently around 5,910 hectares with
output around 1.28 million tons and export turnover of US$1.74 billion,
a year-on-year drop of 3.4 percent.
These figures were revealed
at a meeting organized by the ministry on January 25, to review
production and consumption of pangasius in the Mekong Delta in the year
2012 and plans for 2013.
At the meeting, Truong Dinh Hoe, General
Secretary of Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers
(VASEP), predicted that the production of pangasius in 2013 will
decrease below one million tons or around 800,000 tons, resulting in low
export turnover of $1.5 billion.
This fall is the result of the
present economic crisis. However, it needs to be addressed and problems
solved for the sector to develop and grow pangasius exports by 2014.
The
pangasius breeding sector has never before fallen into such difficult
times, with price down to VND19,200 per kilogram while feed and other
overheads have increased, resulting in farmers suffering a huge loss of
VND4,000 per kilogram.
More worrisome is the fact that seven out
of ten of Vietnam’s major export markets for the fish, such as the EU,
the U.S., China, middle eastern countries and Egypt have decreased
imports of the fish due to economic woes and spending cuts.
The
country has around 300 exporters but only 70 of them have processing
facilities. Many enterprises that cannot directly process have ruined
the market by decreasing prices.
Nguyen Huu Dung said that the
Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers are dishonest as
they pour water into the fish to increase its weight, a practice which
is most unacceptable.
Many FDI projects in Vietnam’s real estate sector
At
the end of 2012, 389 Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) projects in real
estate worth US$49.8 billion were licensed, according to a report of the
Ministry of Planning and Investment released yesterday, January 24.
Thus, Foreign Direct Investment in the real estate sector accounts for about 23.32 percent of total FDI in Vietnam.
Ho
Chi Minh City attracted the bulk of FDI with 163 projects worth $12.4
billion, followed by Hanoi, Ba Ria-Vung Tau, Phu Yen, Binh Duong and
Dong Nai.
Singapore is currently the largest foreign trade
partner in Vietnam’s real estate sector with 55 projects and capital of
$8.6 billion. The Republic of Korea ranks second with 79 projects worth
$6.7 billion.
Most foreign investors are involved in the
construction of luxury hotels, resorts, offices for lease, and high-end
apartment buildings.
According to the Ministry of Planning and
Investment, progress was made in FDI disbursement, but a number of
projects were moving far too slow due to policy issues on land use and
management.
Compounding the problem were difficulties caused by
economic slowdown, inflation, land acquisition and compensation, and
complicated procedures on investment licenses.
To attract more
foreign investors, the Ministry of Planning and Investment suggested
simplifying investment procedures, reforming the legal framework on
mortgage loans, and setting up funds for housing development in specific
localities.
Professional motorbike taxi service in Hanoi
A professional motorbike taxi service (xe om) has been started in Hanoi.
Tran
Dinh Bach, Director of Nam Minh Joint Stock Company, said the company
had about 20 motorbikes, but plans to expand to other areas after Tet.
Driver
Dinh Xuan Hoang said the service has attracted quite a lot of
customers, who appreciate the ability to call the switchboard directly
to order motorbike services. He said that his salary has increased to
around VND5 million per month.
Not only are the motorbikes
equipped with metres, but drivers are also fitted with uniforms so they
will be distinguishable from individual motorbike drivers.
The initial ten kilometres is costs VND6,000/km and is reduced to VND4,000 per km after that, he said.
This business model has been in operation in HCM City for some time.
"After
three months we see that customers are happy at not having to bargain
for the price of a ride. Also, each of our motorbikes is equipped with
GPS so that the driver will be able to take the shortest route," said
Doan Huu Phat, Director of Thien Khach Company who was also in charge of
setting up the service in HCM City.
Experts show ‘grave concerns’ about economy
The
nation’s leading economists expressed their grave concern about the
challenges the economy will have to face after going through a very
tough year.
They were speaking at a workshop called “Vietnam
Economy 2012-2013 – Corporate Restructuring and Macroeconomic Balance”
held by the Economic Committee of the National Assembly (NA) and the
National Economics University in Hanoi on Sunday.
Truong Dinh
Tuyen, former minister of trade, said the Government was having a hard
time dealing with short-term risks being businesses in trouble and a
long-term risk of high inflation.
“The Government must find a
connecting point for the issues in the short and long term. The
short-term problems cannot be left unsolved, while the long-term goal
cannot be missed,” he said.
In the short term, the situation
remains bleak with negative credit growth, but prices are still rising.
Moreover, the aggregate demand of the economy is very low, he remarked.
Bad
debt is driving the economy into a deadlock as enterprises with good
projects cannot borrow loans and banks cannot lower lending rates. “The
governor keeps speaking about an interest rate cut, but how?” he
wondered.
In the long term, he said bad debt settlement and bank
restructuring were moving at a slow pace, hindering the cash flow into
the economy. State-owned enterprises (SOEs) are granted much credit and
public investment has not shown any sign of reform.
Vo Tri Thanh,
vice president of the Central Institute for Economic Management, added:
“The so-called economic achievements are incomplete. Macroeconomic
stabilization is full of risks and high inflation will likely return.”
For
the first time in history, disbanded companies outnumber
newly-established firms in January and the inventory index is as high as
21%.
Meanwhile, given the current difficulties in the State
budget collection, the Government is facing a severe lack of resources
to save businesses.
“Perhaps, the Government wants to quickly
stimulate the economy, but finds many risks and has no idea about the
market reaction,” he said.
Associate Professor Pham Hong Chuong
from the National Economics University said the Government was
responsible for both macroeconomic stability and economic stagnation.
He
predicted it would take at least five years for Vietnamese enterprises
to improve their competitiveness, which had been adversely affected by
an excessive focus on real estate speculation over production and
business activities.
“We are being surpassed by other nations in the region, including those previously well behind our country,” he said.
Meanwhile,
economist Vo Dai Luoc said that although economic growth in 2012 was
higher than in 1999, the economic situation was much better back then.
He said Vietnam cannot implement economic restructuring if insisting on SOEs playing the leading role in the economy.
“When
carrying out economic restructuring, the specific features of Vietnam
cannot cancel out the advanced and modern features of the world,” he
stressed, hinting at the wrong way of positioning the State sector as
the driving force.
Former Deputy Prime Minister Vu Khoan
described the economic restructuring program as shapeless. It has not
been touched after being submitted to the NA.
“The 2013 economic
situation has been exhaustively discussed. The Government has made a
resolution and the NA has approved it, so all discussions are
meaningless now,” he said.
Minister in the dark about state of real estate market
There
have been no complete statistics on the actual state of the real estate
market, especially financial contributions of homebuyers to the ongoing
projects, Minister of Construction Trinh Dinh Dung said on Thursday.
Currently,
about 42,200 houses, mostly apartments, 100,000 square meters of office
space, 100,000 square meters of retail space and 7.9 million square
meters of land lots in 50 provinces remain unoccupied. The total value
of inventory is some VND111.9 trillion, says a report by the
construction ministry.
“This figure is much smaller than the
reality,” Dung noted at the question and answer session of the National
Assembly (NA) Standing Committee.
He explained the report only
covered the projects that are complete or basically complete. Meanwhile,
data on ongoing and inactive projects, to which homebuyers and
secondary investors have contributed finances, has not been gathered.
“Consumer
and business loans improperly used for investment in real estate, along
with outstanding loans with collateral being properties, account for
around 46.5% of the total outstanding credits,” said the minister,
estimating such loans are worth over VND1,000 trillion. Therefore, 6.5%
is not the accurate ratio of bad debt to total property outstanding
loans.
“The figure of unsold properties reflects only a part of
the reality. The inventory of the incomplete contracts has not been
counted. This leads to bad debts of customers and disputes between
project owners and customers that need to be settled,” said Dung.
He said the majority of realty firms could hardly pay due debts because of their unsold products.
In
fact, the property market has got a little warmer than before, he said.
Many projects in Hanoi and HCMC have offered discounts of up to 50%,
and the Government has passed Resolution 02 with several solutions for
the property market.
The NA deputies present at the Q&A
session wondered whether inventory settlement would fully resolve the
problems of the property market, or just rescue certain interest groups.
In addition, they asked why banks had not sued property companies for
their inability to pay debts and what the Construction Ministry and
relevant agencies are responsible for.
Deputy Tran Du Lich said:
“Developing the real estate market at present is like selling air
tickets only to business-class customers. If intervention is necessary,
it should be made in accordance to the market rules, or else the market
would become more complicated.”
In response, Dung said rescuing
the property market is necessary, but it is not an easy task. The
solutions given in Resolution 02 will help resolve the market’s problems
gradually, not immediately.
“The most important thing is a long-term vision so as to achieve a supply and demand balance,” he said.
He
said there had been no regulations on which the ministry must be in
charge of developing the property market or managing its development.
However,
NA vice chairwoman Nguyen Thi Kim Ngan disagreed with his opinion. She
ascribed the slow release of legal guidelines for the real estate sector
to the spontaneous and rampant development of property projects. “The
accountability of the ministry is very clear,” she stressed.
For
example, the Law on Urban Planning became effective three years ago, but
not until recently has a decree giving guidelines for this law been
issued. “If the decree had come out earlier, the market would not suffer
such chaos,” said Ngan.
The inspection into 33 banks in 2012
reveals that banks did not force any of their debtors to file for
bankruptcy, but injected more capital into the incomplete projects so
that they could be finished early. Moreover, since the bankruptcy
procedure was not perfect, most creditors did not want to adopt this
method, said Nguyen Thanh Binh, deputy governor of the central bank.
In
related news, at a conference on the January socio-economic situation
of HCMC taking place on Thursday, To Duy Lam, director of the central
bank’s branch in the city, said the banking regulator would continue to
take appropriate credit measures to remove difficulties for enterprises.
The
central bank has requested State-run banks to set aside a certain sum
to lend to low-income earners and public employees to buy low-cost
houses or commercial houses of less than 70 square meters each, priced
at VND15 million per square meter.
In addition, banks will
continue to give loans with preferential interest rates to developers of
low-cost housing projects or those seeking to convert their commercial
home projects into low-cost ones.
Japan remains Vietnam’s largest investor
This
month’s foreign direct investment (FDI) approvals are forecast to be
higher than in the same period last year, with Japan continuing taking
the lead, according to the Foreign Investment Agency (FIA).
Like
last year, Japan has this month continued topping the list of foreign
investors in Vietnam, with total capital pledges amounting to US$157.7
million, 56.1% of the total in the country. Thailand came second with
US$54.2 million, making up 19.3%, and France third with US$20 million,
representing 7.1%.
Citing data from provinces and cities, FIA,
which is under the Ministry of Planning and Investment, said the nation
has attracted 37 new projects this month with total commitments of over
US$257 million, up 293.6% year-on-year. Nine operational FDI projects
have applied to increase capital by a total of US$24.3 million.
Pledged
investment capital of operational and new projects has amounted to more
than US$281 million this month, surging 74% versus the year-ago period.
Foreign investment management authorities see this as good news for
this year’s FDI picture.
FIA said disbursed capital of FDI enterprises is high this month, at some US$420 million, a year-on-year pickup of 5%.
Processing
and manufacturing industries in the year to date have taken the lead in
FDI attraction with 21 newly-registered projects and capital pledges of
around US$203 million, 72.1% of the total. The real estate sector ranks
second with US$50 million, or nearly 17.8%.
The Planning And
Investment Ministry predicts registered FDI capital at US$13-14 billion
in all of 2013, with disbursements at US$10.5-11 billion, equivalent to
the figure in 2012.
HCM City posts high FDI attraction
Total
foreign direct investment (FDI) capital in industrial parks (IPs) and
export processing zones (EPZs) in HCMC in the first quarter is estimated
at US$250 million, Nguyen Tan Dinh, deputy head of the HCMC Export
Processing Zones and Industrial Parks Authority (Hepza), said.
The
forecast figure as such jumps 110% year-on-year and realizes 50% of the
2013 plan, Dinh told a conference on the January socioeconomic results
in HCMC on Thursday.
Dinh noted that Japan’s Nidec Tosok Company
in Tan Thuan EPZ a few weeks ago applied for a capital increase by US$95
million. Similarly, he said, Japan’s Saigon Precision Company in Linh
Trung EPZ had asked for approval for scaling up capital by US$120
million.
“The fact that the two entities, who have already
invested in Vietnam, continue putting money into new projects is a
positive sign for the city’s investment attraction in 2013,” Dinh told
the Daily on the sidelines of the conference.
Total FDI poured
into EPZs and IPs citywide from January 1-23 including fresh and
additional capital was US$26.1 million, surging 2.25 times year-on-year,
he said.
Hepza in 2013 has set the target of drawing FDI of
US$500 million into local IPs and EPZs. The authority also set the same
target last year but it finally saw only 85% of the goal achieved as a
result of the current difficult economic conditions.
Most FDI
schemes approved in HCMC this month specialize in making synthetic
plastic fiber, stirring machine, medicine and drug storehouses.
Despite
FDI flow’s recovery, investment activities of local firms have recorded
a sharp fall in HCMC. Both new and increased investment capital of
local enterprises in local IPs has only stayed at VND150 billion this
month, shrinking up to 77.3% year-on-year.
Concerning the
municipal socioeconomic situation in January, HCMC chairman Le Hoang
Quan stated that the city’s economy has shown signs of recovery, citing a
contraction of nearly 6% of manufacturing inventory indexes compared to
the same period last year.
The city’s report on industrial
production indicates that up to 36 out of 39 industries have posted
growth from the same period last year, with foodstuff and milk rising
7.3%, footwear 56.7%, cosmetics, soap and washing-up liquid 61.5%,
cement 79.5% and medicine 51.4%. Only the auto and electronic appliances
industries have recorded a drop in production, at 6% and 35.5%
respectively.
HCMC has this month exported US$2.7 billion worth
of goods, a year-on-year pickup of 42.2%, focusing on seafood, textile
and footwear. Total sales of the retail and services industries of the
city has reached VND52.74 trillion, marking up 21.5% year-on-year
Wood firms face labor shortage in peak season
January
is the peak month for wood processing enterprises to fulfill orders
ahead of the Lunar New Year (Tet) holiday that falls on February 10, but
the sector is facing a labor shortage.
According to a wood
exporter in Dong Nai Province, his firm’s number of orders this month is
10-15% higher than in previous months, and customers are also urging
the firm to finish deliveries before Tet.
However, he said that
workers, mainly coming from northern provinces, tended to quit jobs and
return to their hometowns for family reunion at Tet, which has created
his firm a headache.
“Several workers returned to hometowns right
after receiving salaries and year-end bonuses and do not stay and
receive January salaries and Tet bonuses,” he said.
According to
Dien Quang Hiep, director of Binh Duong Province-based Mifaco Co., many
workers have decided to quit their jobs with low bonuses as the reason.
In fact, some local wood enterprises are in trouble and thus pay low
salaries or even no bonuses, which discourages workers from working.
Statistics
of the General Department of Customs showed that Vietnam exported over
US$209 million worth of wood products in the first half of this month,
up 11% year-on-year. Besides, the export of such products last year
amounted to over US$4.6 billion, up 18%.
Ben Thanh metro terminal linked with city spots
Ben
Thanh central terminal of the Metro Line No.1 heading to Suoi Tien
Theme Park in HCMC will be connected via underground areas to be
developed in 23/9 Park and nearby buildings, the local authorities
revealed.
For Metro Line No.1 project, the city’s government has
assigned the Department of Planning and Architecture to cooperate with
the HCMC urban railway management board to make surveys and design the
terminal in line with the zoning plan of urban railway routes.
Specifically,
the terminal’s design will be closely connected to the zoning plan of
underground spaces of basements which will be developed in 23/9 Park and
nearby buildings in the Ben Thanh Quadrilateral and the Saigon Hospital
area.
The planning department by June will complete zoning plans
of underground spaces at a number of intersections which railway routes
run across.
The intersections include Cong Hoa Roundabout of
Nguyen Van Cu, Hung Vuong and Ly Thai To streets and Dan Chu
Intersection of Vo Thi Sau, Ba Thang Hai and Cach Mang Thang Tam
streets.
The Ben Thanh-Suoi Tien metro line project started
construction of a 17.1-kilometer elevated section in August. The line,
when in place in 2017, will transport 186,000 passengers a day, with the
number increasing to 620,000 by 2020 and 1,020,000 by 2040.
Wind farm commissioned on Phu Quy Island
PetroVietnam
Power Corporation (PV Power) on Thursday inaugurated a wind farm on Phu
Quy Island in the offshore district Phu Quy of Binh Thuan Province.
The
power facility consists of three turbines with a total capacity of 6MW.
Work on the VND335 billion project started two years ago, said Vu Huy
Quang, president and CEO of PV Power.
When operating, it will provide around 25.4 million kWh of electricity every year.
The
6-MW wind power plant will meet about 50% of the electricity demand on
Phu Quy Island, and the other half will be satisfied by thermo-power.
“PV
Power is considering developing another wind mill on Phu Quy in the
coming time in order to increase the percentage of wind power to 80%,”
said Quang.
The wind power project has great meaning to Phu Quy
District of Binh Thuan Province, especially in terms of economic
development, national security and defense.
Phu Quy District
comprises ten islands, with Phu Quy being the largest and only inhabited
island. The district has three communes, ten hamlets and 5,400
households with nearly 27,000 people, who make a living fishing and
providing marine logistics services.
The district has a potential
to supply around 5,000MW of wind power. The government of Binh Thuan
has approved development of 12 wind power projects, two of which were
built before the plant on Phu Quy.
Bitexco launches shopping center
Bitexco Group has brought into service the retail area of the 68-storey building Bitexco Financial Tower in downtown HCMC.
Brian
Cannon, deputy director of Bitexco Financial Tower, said the city’s
tallest structure’s Icon68 Shopping Center is opened to customers,
featuring international fashion, home and leisure shops, cafes and
international dining and a seven-screen Cineplex.
The Icon68
Shopping Center spreads over five floors with total floor area of almost
10,000 square meters. It will serve as a shopping and entertainment
destination for families, giving a chance for them to cast a view upon
the city from the building’s observation floor named Saigon Skydeck from
the 49th floor, some 182 meters from the ground.
Around two
years ago, the group opened the office area in the Bitexco Financial
Tower, providing the local office market with 39,000 square meters of
Grade A office.
Realty firms doubt market bailout feasibility
Though
advocating the State policy of converting commercial housing projects
to low-cost ones and buying unsold apartments for the resettlement
purpose, real estate companies wonder how this policy is carried out.
Le
Huu Nghia, director of Le Thanh Commercial Construction Co., said it is
not easy to turn a commercial apartment project into a low-cost one. In
this process, the apartment sizes must be reduced to meet the demand of
buyers, and thus the number of residents in a project will increase.
Meanwhile,
Nguyen Xuan Quang, chairman of Nam Long Investment Corp., said a
commercial project is much different from a low-cost one. Therefore, not
all projects can be converted into low-cost ones.
He predicted
when those wanting to buy low-cost apartments can access low-interest
loans, the market will start moving. Then, enterprises will be willing
to switch to the low-cost segment.
Tran Minh Hoang, chairman of
VinaLand, remarked that as many developers are seeking to pull out of
the market, many commercial condo projects currently have lower prices
than low-cost and resettlement housing projects. Therefore, it does not
matter if a project is of the low-cost housing segment, but finance is
the major problem.
“The State can offer homebuyers soft loans,
rather than classifying projects as low-cost or not, because the
conversion procedure is very complicated,” said Hoang.
He said
rescuing the property market by promoting the low-cost housing segment
would not produce any effect, but it would even pose a risk of bad debt.
Buyers of low-cost houses have limited ability to repay debts, so banks
will not dare to grant them loans, he explained.
Resolution 02 of the Government encourages localities to buy unsold apartments from commercial projects to use for resettlement.
Quang
of Nam Long deemed this policy theoretically feasible, but the problem
is whether localities have enough money to buy commercial apartments. In
fact, owners of several commercial projects have lowered prices in a
bid to quickly pull out of the market.
Nghia of Le Thanh said
most of the unsold apartments have large sizes and high prices, not
suitable for resettlement. Moreover, in the projects which have been
partly sold, the buyers would object to turning the remaining flats into
resettlement houses.
HCMC has bought more than 1,000 apartments
from the resettlement project Rach Chiec developed by Duc Khai Co. and
470 condos of the Era Town project also developed by Duc Khai in
District, together with some other projects in District 2.
In
addition, the city placed orders for apartments of several projects,
including 75 units from the Good House project and 160 units from the
Carina project in District 8, but these deals were unsuccessful as the
buyer failed to make payments on time.
Ford Vietnam holds Special Sales Day
Ford
Vietnam announced on Thursday that it will hold a Special Sales Day
from 8:00 to 21:00 tomorrow at all of its dealers nationwide to
celebrate the 150th birthday of Henry Ford, who created Ford Motor.
Joining
this day, customers will be able to take test drive and experience
professional service as well as added value offered by the dealers. In
particular, the lucky draw will provide participants a chance to win
valuable gifts, including iPad Mini, miniature models of Ford cars,
kettles and others.
In addition, a promotional program will be
introduced to support customers with discount of VND10-VND35 million per
car. The promotion will be applied to Focus, Fiesta, Escape, Mondeo and
Everest vehicles.
Aussie wool producers eye Vietnamese suppliers
Australia is looking to develop a sustainable supply chain for its wool industry in Vietnam.
Towards
this, Australian Wool Innovation (AWI), the research, development and
marketing organisation for the Australian wool industry, has been
implementing a so-called Out of Vietnam project since last June.
The project not only aims to develop a sustainable supply chain in Viet nm, but also to expand its manufacturing sector.
With
Australia currently sending about 80 percent of its wool to China and
becoming increasingly reliant on this country, AWI sees the need to
develop a new processing and manufacturing market for Australian wool,
its General Manager for Product Development and Commercialisation, Jimmy
Jackson, told the English-language daily Vietnam News.
"Vietnam comes out on top in comparison with other countries," Jackson said.
"Vietnam
meets a host of essential criteria, including its low sovereign risk,
its well-established textile manufacturing industry and infrastructure, a
large, skilled workforce, its large and growing exports of textile
products, its large trade access including a Free Trade Agreement with
the US and an abundant supply of water,' he said.
After visits
and meetings with potential partners, the key message that has emerged
is that "the time is right for wool in Vietnam."
Jackson said the country offers an alternative to relying so heavily on China as the major buyer of Australian greasy wool.
"We
have received a fantastic response to this project. Apart from the 30
partners we also have four new wool spinning plants looking to invest as
well as about 20 knitters."
AWI owns the Woolmark Company, which is the world's leading wool textile organisation.
The Out of Vietnam project was launched in Hanoi on June 6 and its second phase commenced in HCM City on November 29 last year.
Ten
industry partners including leading weaving companies have agreed to
participate in product development trials commencing March 2013, Jackson
said.
Nine leading spinning companies from Italy, Germany,
China, Thailand and India participated in a Spinners Meeting held in
Hanoi from December 10-12 last year, where they held one-on-one meetings
with 16 companies from Hanoi and HCM City.
A healthy
relationship had been established between AWI and Vietnam National
Textile and Garment Group (Vinatex) – the State-owned arm of the
Vietnamese textile industry, Jackson said.
AWI also plans to host
two fashion shows in Hanoi and HCM City as part of the celebrations of
40 years of diplomatic and trade relations between Vietnam and
Australia, showcasing a collection of garments all made from Australian
Merino wool.
The motto for the fashion shows is "Grown in Australia, Made in Vietnam," said Jackson.
He added that AWI would open a representative office in Hanoi between March and July this year.
Foreign remittances estimated at $10bn
Last
year’s overseas remittances into Vietnam have been calculated between
$9.5 billion and $10 billion, considerably exceeding the total of $9
billion for 2011.
Luong Thi Bach Van, chairwoman of the Ho Chi
Minh City-based Association for Liaison with Overseas Vietnamese, put
her total estimate at $10 billion.
Meanwhile calculations by
Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy director of the State Bank’s Ho Chi Minh City
Branch, showed that the 2012 result would be $9.5-9.6 billion based on a
fact that overseas remittances into the southern hub accounted for
about 43 per cent of the country’s total for years.
“About $4.1 billion in foreign remittances were sent to Ho Chi Minh City in the entire 2012,” he said.
The
Ministry of Industry and Trade estimated Vietnam’s 2012 total export
revenues to be around $114.5 billion. If the year’s all foreign
remittances reach $10 billion, it will be represent almost 8.74 per cent
of the export performance.
Vietnam’s 2011 foreign remittance result of $9 billion was equal to 92 per cent of the country’s trade deficit.
Around
4.5 million Vietnamese, including some 500,000 guest workers, are
living in more than 100 countries and territories worldwide, according
to the State Committee for Overseas Vietnamese Affairs. Over 80 per cent
of them are settling in developed nations.
Vietnam plans to send
90,000 people to work in foreign countries and territories in 2013,
mainly to South Korea, Malaysia, Russia and Taiwan, according to the
Vietnamese Ministry of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs. Last year’s
number was about 80,000.
At present, remittances sent back home
by Vietnamese guest workers from Malaysia, Taiwan and elsewhere in Asia
have increased considerably, while those from Europe and the U.S. have
decreased, according to Maritime Bank’s forex and foreign remittance
department.
Bike brands hitting the fast lane
Famous
motorbike brands continue to be top targets of local parts
manufacturers with production volumes from 3-3.5 million motorbikes per
year.
In a recent meeting on implementation of 2013 business
plans of the Vietnam Engine and Agricultural Machinery Corporation
(VEAM) the business set a target of achieving 10 per cent hike in
supporting industry production revenue from supply to Japan-backed
motorbike maker Honda Vietnam Company (HNV).
Since VEAM holds a
30 per cent stake in HVN, after HVN kicked-off operations, VEAM’s
several member companies made great efforts to become HVN’s production
satellites through spare part and components supply.
VEAM’s four
members, Machinery Spare Parts JSC 1 (Futu1), Pho Yen Mechanical JSC
(Fomeco), Song Cong Diesel Co (Discoco) and Vikyno Co, have become HVN
satellite units.
In 2012, VEAM reaped VND842 billion ($40
million) from component and spare part supply to HVN. Of this, except
Vikyno which earned only VND4.2 billion ($200,000) revenue posted by
Futu1, Fomeco and Vikyno was in the range of VND250-VND300 billion
($12-$14 million) each.
Apart from production units, VEAM’s some
other members providing transport services for HVN like Vetranco JSC and
Matexim also revealed fairly good business outcomes in 2012.
Also
in 2012, Futu1 inked a contract on technical devices supply worth
VND128 billion ($6 million) to VAP, a joint venture in which Japan Honda
and HVN hold a ruling stake.
Generally, motorbike parts
manufacture generated VEAM revenue of VND1.2 trillion ($57 million) in
2012, accounting for 30 per cent of its total industrial production
revenue.
However, it took several years before some of VEAM’s
member units were acknowledged as HVN production satellites as the
products needed to meet strict quality standards at reasonable costs,
according to the executives at HVN satellites.
However, in return
when scores of mechanical businesses faced stagnant production due to
lack of orders and low consumption, HVN satellites held stable
production with better year-on-year revenue figures.
Labourers’
average per capita incomes at HVN satellites are from VND5-9 million
($240-$430) per month, almost double to those at other mechanical units.
Thereby, concentrating resources into parts manufacture for HVN is a priority for VEAM and its members.
A
VEAM executive unveiled this year VEAM would strive to witness 15 per
cent hike in component and part supply to HVN against 2011 which was the
year HVN eyed record production output exceeding two million
motorbikes, in which HVN satellites target 10 per cent hike in
supporting industry production value against 2011.
Amata, partner plot bold “Future City” plan
Thailand’s
Amata Corporation plans to expand its foothold in northern Vietnam with
a large property project in Quang Ninh province.
The property
developer would join hands with Tuan Chau Au Lac for developing a 3,000
hectare urban project, Future City, in the province’s Quang Yen town,
said a source at Quang Ninh Provincial Investment Promotion Agency.
Amata,
which entered Vietnam in 1994, now owns a 1,353ha industrial park -
Amata Bien Hoa City in southern Dong Nai province. The well-known
industrial park has attracted 100 multinational companies to make
investments. The Thai developer last year also announced plans to
develop a giant Amata Express City project in Dong Nai, worth $20
billion.
In Quang Ninh, Amata plans to develop Future City within
three years, comprising a green industrial park, residential urban
area, sport facilities, convention centre, schools and university and
entertainment facilities, according to the source. However, he declined
to reveal the estimated investment of the planned project.
“Everything
is in the initial stage. We will discuss it further with the developers
to reach a final decision,” the sources said. Quang Ninh provincial
leaders, he added, acknowledged the project, if implemented, could be a
breakthrough to attract more foreign direct investment capital to the
province.
“Amata is a well-known developer in Thailand and it has
been successful with the industrial park in Dong Nai. More foreign
investors will pay attention to Quang Ninh once Amata invests here,” he
said.
Bordering Lang Son, Bac Giang, Haiphong and Hai Duong
provinces and China’s Guangxi province, Quang Ninh is now the third
largest economic hub in northern Vietnam, after Hanoi and Haiphong. It
is also the site of the largest coalmine in the country.
The
Vietnamese government saw Quang Ninh as part of the pivotal economic
development triangle of Hanoi-Haiphong-Quang Ninh in northern Vietnam
that would drive the economic development in the northern region.
To
enhance the appeal to private investors, Quang Ninh has recently
proposed the Vietnamese government unprecedented incentives for
investors starting business in the province’s Van Don and Mong Cai,
which are planned to be special administrative and economic zones in the
future.
Outlook not rosy for supporting industries
A
2012 survey of more than 650 companies in supporting industries in Ho
Chi Minh City, Dong Nai and Binh Duong provinces provides a mostly
cloudy forecast on growth for the next three years.
According to
the report, only 35.9 per cent of the surveyed companies offered a
positive outlook in the development of supporting industries in Ho Chi
Minh City and the two neighbouring provinces, as well as Vietnam as a
whole.
But more than 25 per cent of the surveyed companies
expressed a negative outlook, and the remainder said they did not a
clear outlook for such development, said Nguyen Viet Se, the chief
author of the survey.
The fact that almost two-thirds of the
companies gave such dreary answers showed that corporate confidence in
development policies and opportunities in supporting industries was low,
said Se, director of the Ho Chi Minh City Branch of the National Centre
for Socio-Economic Information and Forecast under the Ministry of
Planning and Investment.
On a more positive note, 41.4 per cent
of the surveyed firms said they would continue to invest in business
expansion over the next three years, including 42.3 per cent of private
Vietnamese owned firms and 40.6 per cent that of foreign-invested
enterprises (FIEs). The proportion of companies with no definite answer
to a decision for business expansion investments over the next three is
42.3 per cent, he said. Specifically, the rate of private Vietnamese
enterprises is 38.7 per cent, of FIEs is up to 44.5 per cent. While the
overall rate of companies expressing no plans to expand was 16.3 per
cent, there were wide differences in sectors. The footwear section saw a
36.4 per cent rate, textile and garment 24.1 per cent, rubber,
chemicals and plastics 13.8 per cent, engineering 16.5 per cent and
automobile production 11.7 per cent.
The survey was conducted
over 650 companies – 250 in Ho Chi Minh City, 200 in Dong Nai province,
and 200 in Binh Duong. In terms of market selection, 54.5 per cent of
the surveyed businesses said they gave top priorities to the Vietnamese
market, and the rest chose overseas markets.
Japanese investors look on bright side
More than two-thirds of Japanese firms operating in Vietnam plan to expand investment in the country over the next two years.
This despite challenges like wage hikes, according to a survey of Japan External Trade Organisation (Jetro).
The
survey, released by Jetro Hanoi office last week, points out that 65.9
per cent of Japanese companies operating in Vietnam wanted to continue
expanding business in this country in 2013 and 2014, while 32.1 per cent
responded they would keep the same size. Only two per cent said they
would downsize in Vietnam or relocate to other countries.
Japanese
companies’ interest in Vietnam was lower than that of Indonesia,
Myanmar and Cambodia, but higher than that of Thailand, China, Malaysia,
Singapore and the Philippines.
Head of Jetro’s Hanoi office
Hirokazu Yamaoka said it meant Vietnam remained among the best choices
of Japan’s firms for overseas investment expansion.
“Information
technology, software, wholesale and retail, chemical and healthcare will
be the most interesting industries for Japanese investors to invest in
Vietnam,” he said.
According to the survey, the proportion
respondents planning for expansion in China at this time was 52.3 per
cent, a 14.5 point decline, which was the greatest drop among the
surveyed countries or regions.
The main rivals of Vietnam in the
investment attraction from Japan were Indonesia and Thailand, which were
getting considerable attention from Japanese firms, said Yamaoka.
Yamaoka
said many Japanese firms were concerned they could not recruit enough
labour for their investment in Thailand at this time and this was an
advantage of Vietnam to attract Japan’s investment.
The business
result of Japanese companies in Vietnam last year remained positive,
with 60.2 per cent of firms expect to make profit. Meanwhile, 20.3 per
cent expected to make a loss, according to Jetro’s survey.
Though
the proportion of profitable firms decreased for the third straight
year in Vietnam, like in China and Indiana, a business confidence index
of Japanese firms in this market improved to 34.2 points, an increase of
13.8 points on-year.
“This is a positive signal for the Vietnamese government to attract investment from Japan,” said Yamaoka.
However,
Japanese firms also face challenges in Vietnam, such as rising wages.
According to the survey, Vietnam’s average wage increased 19.7 per cent
in 2012, the highest rate among the surveyed countries and regions. And
the rate in 2013 is expected to increase 17.5 per cent, also among the
highest increases.
JX Nippon looks for the good oil
Japan-based
JX Nippon Oil and Energy Corporation has started construction of its
lubricant blending plant in Haiphong’s Dinh Vu Industrial Zone.
The
four-hectare, $40 million JX Nippon Oil and Energy Vietnam Lubricant
Blending project is planned to begin commercial operation in early 2014
with an annual productivity of about 40,000 tonnes.
JX said it
expected Vietnam to be a potential market for lubricant oil and the
corporation selected Dinh Vu because of its strategic location, easy
access, good transport infrastructure and tax incentives.
Most
importantly, JX said the industrial zone already had built its jetty and
supporting pipe rack system for clients in petrochemical industry.
JX Nippon Oil and Energy Corporation is the eighth Japanese investors to have developed a project in Dinh Vu Industrial Zone.
So far, Dinh Vu has attracted 47 projects of with Japanese investment accounting for 50 percent of the total registered capital.
In 2013, Dinh Vu Industrial Zone expect to attract some more $100 million in foreign direct investment.
JX
Nippon Oil and Energy started its lubricant business in Vietnam in 1996
and established its representative office in Ho Chi Minh city in 2010.
Ascendas ready for new investment opportunities
Singapore-based Ascendas is upbeat about its development potential in Vietnam despite some headwind.
Han
Ann Foong, country head of Ascendas Vietnam, said the company had
received increasing enquiries and visits, especially from Japanese
companies, to its new industrial park in Binh Duong province.
“We
are hopeful to have more closed deals,” said Foong. In May 2012,
Ascendas completed the infrastructure for phases 1 and 2 of the
500-hectare Ascendas-Protrade Singapore Tech Park (APSTP), which focuses
on developing industry clusters for the electronics, pharmaceutical and
food and beverage production, and general industries. Foong said
Ascendas could begin building infrastructure works for phases 3 and 4 of
the park once there were signs of new demands.
Vietnam, he said,
was well poised to benefit from the “China+1 or +2” strategy of
multinational firms and he had observed a continuous trend of those
companies relocating out of China to South East Asia to reduce costs,
especially Japanese investors.
Foong said the negative impacts
from the global economic woes in the past few years had delayed new
investment and expansion plans of many companies contacted by Ascendas.
“However,
they are also telling us that they continue to pursue a ‘plus two’
policy. We firmly believe that stands to be one of the main
beneficiaries of this trend,” he added.
With optimistic forecasts
of the economic recovery in the US and China since 2012’s last quarter,
Foong said Vietnamese manufacturing sector may benefit from the
improved external demand.
“We continue to be optimistic of long-term fundamentals of the Vietnamese economy,” he said.
“This
year we will continue to focus on promoting our industrial park, APSTP,
as well as leverage on our global networks to attract more new
investments. We will also keep a lookout for acquisition opportunities
or new projects at good value,” said Foong.
Ascendas, which
first entered Vietnam in 1996, has boasted it understands how to develop
a successful industrial park in the country by effectively addressing
problems encountered in other industrial parks such as lack of essential
amenities for workers and environment pollution treatment.
Ascendas
has therefore invested substantially in waste water treatment systems,
which will relieve most of its tenants from the need to build their own
treatment plant.
“With worker dormitories and amenities offering
training facility, food courts, and green areas, APSTP will be the new
generation of industrial parks in Vietnam,” Foong added.
Source: VEF/VNA/VNS/VOV/SGT/SGGP/Dantri/VIR
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