VietNamNet Bridge – Directors have been worried to death because their businesses have cleaned out, while they need to spend more at the end of the year.
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Where’s the money gone?
Tran Anh, Director of the Hoang Mai Company in Hanoi, said he could not
understand where the money has gone.
“The business account is empty. Clients have not made payment. We ourselves
still owe money to some material suppliers. Meanwhile, my workers are expecting
the Tet bonuses,” Anh complained.
Anh’s company is not alone. Doan Trong Ly, President and General Director of the
Livestock Breeding, Processing and Import-Export Company, said all businesses
now complain about the money exhaustion.
“The problem is that businesses cannot access bank loans, cannot sell their
products and cannot make profits,” Ly said.
In the husbandry industry, he said, farmers have to spend 45,000-55,000 dong to
create a kilo of live pork, but they can sell at 42,000 dong per kilo only
instead of 60,000 dong in the past. As a result, farmers have given up farming,
while processing enterprises have been encountering big difficulties due to the
unsalability.
“I know a big food processing company with the total assets of 130 billion dong.
Its four food shops have been shut down because of the low sales. The owner of
the company is considering leasing the retail premises, but he still has not
found clients,” Ly said.
“How can businesses arrange money if they cannot sell their products?” he added.
Businesses are both creditors and debtors
Minister of Industry and Trade Vu Huy Hoang affirmed at important business
forums that the inventory index tends to decrease, which is really good news for
the national economy.
However, a lot of enterprises still have high inventories and low liquidity.
In the real estate sector, Quoc Cuong Gia Lai Group is a typical example. Its
finance report showed that by September 2012, it had had only 39 billion dong in
its account, while the total short term debt had reached 1931.4 billion dong,
and the inventories’ value had reached 3511.7 billion dong. It’s obvious that
Quoc Cuong Gia Lai would not be able to pay debts if cannot sell its products,
because the balance of 39 billion dong in account is really a modest sum of
money.
According to the Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP),
2.5 kilos of catfish materials is needed to make one kilo of catfish fillet.
With the current catfish material price at 22,000 dong per kilo, enterprises
would have to pay 55,000 dong in materials for a kilo of catfish fillet.
However, since the export markets have been narrowed in the global economic
crisis, enterprises have to sell finished products at 2.2-2.4 dollars per kilo,
or less than 50,000 dong, lower than the production cost. Meanwhile, the
unsalability has cost enterprises 700 dong per kilo more.
Businesses understand that they sell products at a loss, but they still have to
do that. If not, their accounts would be empty and they would not have cash to
cover the basic expenses to maintain enterprises.
Tran Anh Vuong, Deputy Chair of the Hanoi Young Entrepreneurs’ Association, said
enterprises now are both big creditors and debtors. Big enterprises and
contractors are owing to small businesses and contractors. Meanwhile, the big
enterprises and contractors don’t have money to pay debts, because they still
get paid from their partners, possibly bigger enterprises, local authorities or
state funded projects.
Tran Thuy