Showing posts with label corporation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corporation. Show all posts

Friday, February 4, 2011

IFC to invest in Vietnam bank

IFC to invest in Vietnam bankThe International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group, will invest in the Vietnam Joint Stock Bank for Industry and Commerce or Vietinbank, according to the corporation.

The investment is still subject to approval by both parties and the corporation’s Board of Executive Directors, according to the statement. However, on Sunday (Oct 10), both partners signed a memorandum of understanding on the investment.

Local newspapers said the corporation would spend US$190 million to acquire 10 percent of what used to be the second-largest state-owned financial institution in the country. The corporation plans to sink VND26,000 billion into the new venture by the end of the year.

An official from the corporation confirmed the acquisition agreement in the MOU and said both partners were negotiating the final details of the investment.

In return for the investment, the corporation will grant a long term loan to the bank which will improve access to finance for small and medium enterprises and support the equitization of the financial and banking sector in Vietnam.

The 10-year loan will amount to $110 million at LIBOR, plus 1.5 percent interest a year, according to the newspapers. LIBOR, or the interest rate at which banks can borrow funds within the English system, is fixed on a daily basis by the British Bankers' Association.

“By helping Vietinbank build up its capacity and strengthen its products and services, IFC will assist the bank in reaching more small and medium enterprises through its nationwide network,” said Simon Andrews, the corporation’s Regional Manager for Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand, in the statement.

The corporation will help the local bank, expand its SME loan portfolio, thus supporting job creation and private sector growth. Vietinbank plans to sell off another 15 percent of its shares later this year.

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Thursday, February 3, 2011

IFC to invest in Vietnam bank

IFC to invest in Vietnam bankThe International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group, will invest in the Vietnam Joint Stock Bank for Industry and Commerce or Vietinbank, according to the corporation.

The investment is still subject to approval by both parties and the corporation’s Board of Executive Directors, according to the statement. However, on Sunday (Oct 10), both partners signed a memorandum of understanding on the investment.

Local newspapers said the corporation would spend US$190 million to acquire 10 percent of what used to be the second-largest state-owned financial institution in the country. The corporation plans to sink VND26,000 billion into the new venture by the end of the year.

An official from the corporation confirmed the acquisition agreement in the MOU and said both partners were negotiating the final details of the investment.

In return for the investment, the corporation will grant a long term loan to the bank which will improve access to finance for small and medium enterprises and support the equitization of the financial and banking sector in Vietnam.

The 10-year loan will amount to $110 million at LIBOR, plus 1.5 percent interest a year, according to the newspapers. LIBOR, or the interest rate at which banks can borrow funds within the English system, is fixed on a daily basis by the British Bankers' Association.

“By helping Vietinbank build up its capacity and strengthen its products and services, IFC will assist the bank in reaching more small and medium enterprises through its nationwide network,” said Simon Andrews, the corporation’s Regional Manager for Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, and Thailand, in the statement.

The corporation will help the local bank, expand its SME loan portfolio, thus supporting job creation and private sector growth. Vietinbank plans to sell off another 15 percent of its shares later this year.

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Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Trees at downtown park to be chopped for car park

HCMC – The Investment and Development for Underground Space Corporation (IUS) has said it will cut down 27 large trees, and remove and transplant 362 other trees in Le Van Tam Park in downtown HCMC to build the city’s first underground car park.

IUS will also make the pavements narrower around the park, bordered by Vo Thi Sau, Dien Bien Phu and Hai Ba Trung streets, to make the road wider, Le Tuan, president and CEO of IUS said at a press briefing on Wednesday.

The city government has already approved the reduced pavement width to reduce traffic congestion when the parking lot opens at the end of 2013, he said.

IUS called on Wednesday’s press conference after local newspapers reported two weeks ago that IUS had started construction without a permit or legal land-use procedures.

Tuan said on Wednesday that IUS still hadn’t received the permit from the city’s Department of Construction because they had yet to agree on land use procedures. “We expect to have a construction permit in five or six months, then we will officially start construction of the project,” said the CEO. “The biggest difficulty now is to ascertain how much land would be exempt from land use taxes.”

The US$110 million parking lot will be able to accommodate over 2,000 motorbikes, 1,250 cars and 28 buses and trucks in five underground storeys. The corporation said the fees would be a maximum VND7,000 for motorbikes and VND80,000 for cars.

The Daily reported two weeks ago the city authorities ruled that the corporation should place a deposit of VND43 billion at a local bank as a guarantee that it would restore Le Van Tam Park. Tuan admitted on Wednesday that IUS still hadn’t placed the deposit.

He said the corporation has hired a company to relocate and replant the trees. After the corporation completes the construction of the car park, Le Van Tam Park will be renovated according to a new design.

According to the built-operate-transfer contract for the car park signed between IUS and the city government, the corporation will operate the car park within 50 years.

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