Showing posts with label general director. Show all posts
Showing posts with label general director. Show all posts

Friday, February 11, 2011

Stock market has youngest general director

Nguyen Hoang Giang, who now heads VNDirect, is chosen for his team leading skills - Photo: Vnexpress
HCMC – VNDirect Securities Co. has appointed 24-year-old Nguyen Hoang Giang as general director after only three years in the company, making Giang the youngest ever to hold the position in Vietnam’s finance and banking sector.

Giang is a graduate of the U.S.-based University of Nebraska, majoring in economic mathematics and computer science. As one of the university’s four most excellent students, he has received a Phillip Schrager Scholarship and was the youngest lecturer in the mathematics faculty there.

Giang entered the securities industry in early 2008 as a collaborator in VNDirect’s professional solution department. He then became manager and director of the department after just a little over one year.

Giang was appointed as the chief architect for the risk management system and professional solutions department while the enterprise and other securities firms were suffering during the global financial crisis. His contributions brought positive results for VNDirect that reported an after-tax profit of VND212 billion in 2009 and VND195 billion in the January-September period this year.

Giang said it would be a big challenge for a 24-year-old as general director of a securities enterprise capitalized at VND1 trillion. “It is not important to show myself off, but I have to know everyone’s strong points and unite them to achieve the target,” he was quoted by Vnexpress as saying.

VNDirect chairwoman Pham Minh Huong said the board of directors had found that Giang was the best candidate for the position, even though the choice for general director of a securities firm is normally the best business director. “Although Giang is not the best in the business sector, he can cooperate well with colleagues and help them run the enterprise,” Huong said.

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Sunday, January 30, 2011

Caravelle acquires Mercedes-Benz in-car Hotspot E-Class

(From left) Nguyen Van Duc, general director of Haxaco; Udo Loersch general director of Mercedes-Benz Vietnam; Martyn Davies, general director of Chains Caravelle Hotel Joint Venture Co. Ltd., and John Gardner, general manager of the Caravelle Hotel, shake hands for the long-term cooperation - Photo: Uyen Phuong
HCMC – The Caravelle Hotel in downtown HCMC has become the first customer of Mercedes-Benz in-car hotspot, which makes it possible for passengers to use the Internet and email wirelessly and rapidly while on the road.

Haxaco, a dealer of Mercedes-Benz Vietnam (MBV), has handed over two Mercedes-Benz E-Class sedans to the five-star hotel. With these two top-of-the-line E-Class vehicles, the Caravelle Hotel now has the latest models of Mercedes-Benz to replace and increase its existing fleet.

John Gardner, general manager of the Caravelle Hotel, says in a statement that the two state-of-the-art sedans fit well with the hotel’s policy of bringing comfort to customers and protecting the environment.

“We are proud to further update our fleet with the latest model E-Class cars with environmental features consistent with our own environmental policies and inbuilt WiFi for complimentary Internet access for our guests,” he said. He also notes that his hotel has worked closely with Mercedes-Benz for the last several years as the supplier of vehicles.

The two E-Class sedans are the first updates for the Caravelle hotel, to be followed by another fleet expansion soon in 2011.

John Gardner, general manager of the Caravelle Hotel, enjoy the in-car hotspot
The updating of the new Mercedes-Benz fleet is a continuation of long-term co-operation and trustworthiness of the Caravelle Hotel to Mercedes-Benz.

The automaker says it has continuously introduced new innovations to its cars, especially those supplied to top-rated hotels.

“Mercedes-Benz has strong cooperation with five-star hotels and resort chains all over the world. We not only provide top image via our innovative cars and brand, but also integrate innovative features to provide the best solutions for our partners. Like this time, we integrate the hotspot to satisfy the demand of the Caravelle’s needs to provide internet and email service for their customers in car,” said Udo Loersch, general director of Mercedes-Benz Vienam.

The Caravelle’s progressive approach to Wi-Fi means clients can now log in before they check in the room. Even in their transportation of guest, the Caravelle has made Internet service available. And now, with the hotspot from Mercedes, the internet and email in-car service is more and more improved which will bring more convenience and satisfaction to their customers.

Hotspot is a device to transfer data wirelessly that can be installed in car and is technically connected with the car’s roof aerial. All one needs is a WLAN terminal device such as a laptop or smart phone and a SIM card that allows data communication.

The system supports rapid and stable connection to the most familiar data network through the car’s roof aerial. This hotspot with SIM card will be installed in the car by Mercedes-Benz technicians. Then rear passengers can get in-car wireless Internet on the move on their laptop or mobile phone everywhere, at any time. 

E-Class is the top luxury sedan, and is also currently the most luxurious business sedan made in Vietnam. Beside the top image with luxury eye-catching design, E-Class with top-of-the-line technology gives passengers top safety, superlative comfort and a peaceful feeling, just like sitting in a luxurious room of a five-star hotel.

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Caravelle acquires Mercedes-Benz in-car Hotspot E-Class

(From left) Nguyen Van Duc, general director of Haxaco; Udo Loersch general director of Mercedes-Benz Vietnam; Martyn Davies, general director of Chains Caravelle Hotel Joint Venture Co. Ltd., and John Gardner, general manager of the Caravelle Hotel, shake hands for the long-term cooperation - Photo: Uyen Phuong
HCMC – The Caravelle Hotel in downtown HCMC has become the first customer of Mercedes-Benz in-car hotspot, which makes it possible for passengers to use the Internet and email wirelessly and rapidly while on the road.

Haxaco, a dealer of Mercedes-Benz Vietnam (MBV), has handed over two Mercedes-Benz E-Class sedans to the five-star hotel. With these two top-of-the-line E-Class vehicles, the Caravelle Hotel now has the latest models of Mercedes-Benz to replace and increase its existing fleet.

John Gardner, general manager of the Caravelle Hotel, says in a statement that the two state-of-the-art sedans fit well with the hotel’s policy of bringing comfort to customers and protecting the environment.

“We are proud to further update our fleet with the latest model E-Class cars with environmental features consistent with our own environmental policies and inbuilt WiFi for complimentary Internet access for our guests,” he said. He also notes that his hotel has worked closely with Mercedes-Benz for the last several years as the supplier of vehicles.

The two E-Class sedans are the first updates for the Caravelle hotel, to be followed by another fleet expansion soon in 2011.

John Gardner, general manager of the Caravelle Hotel, enjoy the in-car hotspot
The updating of the new Mercedes-Benz fleet is a continuation of long-term co-operation and trustworthiness of the Caravelle Hotel to Mercedes-Benz.

The automaker says it has continuously introduced new innovations to its cars, especially those supplied to top-rated hotels.

“Mercedes-Benz has strong cooperation with five-star hotels and resort chains all over the world. We not only provide top image via our innovative cars and brand, but also integrate innovative features to provide the best solutions for our partners. Like this time, we integrate the hotspot to satisfy the demand of the Caravelle’s needs to provide internet and email service for their customers in car,” said Udo Loersch, general director of Mercedes-Benz Vienam.

The Caravelle’s progressive approach to Wi-Fi means clients can now log in before they check in the room. Even in their transportation of guest, the Caravelle has made Internet service available. And now, with the hotspot from Mercedes, the internet and email in-car service is more and more improved which will bring more convenience and satisfaction to their customers.

Hotspot is a device to transfer data wirelessly that can be installed in car and is technically connected with the car’s roof aerial. All one needs is a WLAN terminal device such as a laptop or smart phone and a SIM card that allows data communication.

The system supports rapid and stable connection to the most familiar data network through the car’s roof aerial. This hotspot with SIM card will be installed in the car by Mercedes-Benz technicians. Then rear passengers can get in-car wireless Internet on the move on their laptop or mobile phone everywhere, at any time. 

E-Class is the top luxury sedan, and is also currently the most luxurious business sedan made in Vietnam. Beside the top image with luxury eye-catching design, E-Class with top-of-the-line technology gives passengers top safety, superlative comfort and a peaceful feeling, just like sitting in a luxurious room of a five-star hotel.

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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Easing of safety rules sparks lending rush

Easing of safety rules sparks lending rushLocal banks are taking advantage of the central bank’s recent relaxation of bank safety regulations to boost lending and meet the year’s credit growth target after a sluggish nine months.

The general director of a Ho Chi Minh City-based lender said the bank had faced difficulties in attracting deposits during the first nine months. Besides, it had to set aside reserves to meet strict safety requirements supposed to take effect this month.

Now that the rules have been amended, his bank wants to focus on lending, after posting a credit growth of only 5 percent over the last nine months, he said.

Do Minh Toan, deputy general director of the Asia Commercial Bank, said the bank will focus on businesses in the agricultural sector who are in need of funds to purchase rice and other crops. These clients can help increase the bank’s credit growth, he said.

Other bankers have said they are targeting corporate clients, especially exporters.

Dam The Thai, deputy general director of the HD Bank, said the competition between banks is getting harsh. His bank will slightly lower its lending rates this month to make sure it can retain and get more customers, he said.

The Vietnam Banks Association has asked members to reduce deposit rates to no more than 11 percent by October 15, according to a statement on the central bank’s website on Monday.

For non-term deposits and deposits of less than three months, the association asked commercial banks to make a bigger reduction to create a “suitable” interest-rate curve to attract long-term funds, according to the statement. Members were also asked to lower dollar-deposit rates and to cut borrowing costs to spur lending, according to the statement.

This call for interest rate cuts came after the State Bank of Vietnam adjusted safety rules last week, allowing banks greater scope to lend. Among the adjustments is permission to use 25 percent of non-term deposits made by businesses for lending, starting October 1.

Economist Le Tham Duong of the Ho Chi Minh City Banking University said dong-denominated loans have expanded at a slow pace so far this year. As a result, local banks will compete for clients in the next months, which will help bring interest rates down.

Duong said to speed up this process, the government should increase money supply and lower the yields on government bonds to less than 10 percent a year. When banks cut back their investments in government bonds, they would pay more attention to lending to businesses, he said.

The Vietnam Banks Association has requested that the central bank cut its refinancing rate, discount rate and interest rates in open market operations to help banks lower their interest rates. The central bank on September 27 set its refinancing rate at 8 percent and its discount rate at 6 percent.

Loans are estimated to have risen 19.5 percent in the January to September period. Vietnam has set an annual target of 25 percent credit growth for this year.

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Easing of safety rules sparks lending rush

Easing of safety rules sparks lending rushLocal banks are taking advantage of the central bank’s recent relaxation of bank safety regulations to boost lending and meet the year’s credit growth target after a sluggish nine months.

The general director of a Ho Chi Minh City-based lender said the bank had faced difficulties in attracting deposits during the first nine months. Besides, it had to set aside reserves to meet strict safety requirements supposed to take effect this month.

Now that the rules have been amended, his bank wants to focus on lending, after posting a credit growth of only 5 percent over the last nine months, he said.

Do Minh Toan, deputy general director of the Asia Commercial Bank, said the bank will focus on businesses in the agricultural sector who are in need of funds to purchase rice and other crops. These clients can help increase the bank’s credit growth, he said.

Other bankers have said they are targeting corporate clients, especially exporters.

Dam The Thai, deputy general director of the HD Bank, said the competition between banks is getting harsh. His bank will slightly lower its lending rates this month to make sure it can retain and get more customers, he said.

The Vietnam Banks Association has asked members to reduce deposit rates to no more than 11 percent by October 15, according to a statement on the central bank’s website on Monday.

For non-term deposits and deposits of less than three months, the association asked commercial banks to make a bigger reduction to create a “suitable” interest-rate curve to attract long-term funds, according to the statement. Members were also asked to lower dollar-deposit rates and to cut borrowing costs to spur lending, according to the statement.

This call for interest rate cuts came after the State Bank of Vietnam adjusted safety rules last week, allowing banks greater scope to lend. Among the adjustments is permission to use 25 percent of non-term deposits made by businesses for lending, starting October 1.

Economist Le Tham Duong of the Ho Chi Minh City Banking University said dong-denominated loans have expanded at a slow pace so far this year. As a result, local banks will compete for clients in the next months, which will help bring interest rates down.

Duong said to speed up this process, the government should increase money supply and lower the yields on government bonds to less than 10 percent a year. When banks cut back their investments in government bonds, they would pay more attention to lending to businesses, he said.

The Vietnam Banks Association has requested that the central bank cut its refinancing rate, discount rate and interest rates in open market operations to help banks lower their interest rates. The central bank on September 27 set its refinancing rate at 8 percent and its discount rate at 6 percent.

Loans are estimated to have risen 19.5 percent in the January to September period. Vietnam has set an annual target of 25 percent credit growth for this year.

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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Russia to provide ESPO crude oil for Vietnam

Russia’s TNK-BP Oil Group will provide the first shipment of 100 tons of crude oil for the PetroVietnam Oil Corporation (PV Oil) via the Eastern Siberia-Pacific Ocean (ESPO) in November this year.

To this effect, a contract was signed between PV Oil General Director Nguyen Xuan Son and Deputy Chairman of TNK-BP’s Management Board Maksim Barskiy in Moscow on September 29 at the presence of Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai.

Speaking after the signing ceremony, Deputy PM Hai expressed his hope that the partnership between PV Oil and TNK-BP will further develop and harvest more results in the future.

He stressed that the signing of the ESPO crude oil contract will be the foundation for the two sides to expand cooperation, including the exchange of experiences in crude oil trading and processing.

The Deputy PM declared that the Vietnamese government supports the cooperation between PetroVietnam and TNK-BP in exploring and exploiting oil and gas in the two countries’ territories and in third countries.

PV Oil General Director Nguyen Xuan Son said he hoped that after the signing, TNK-BP will continue to participate in oil processing, refinery and distribution in Vietnam .

The contract was an initial step for the two companies to sign other agreements in order to boost cooperation and mutual investment, he added.

According to PetroVietnam General Director Phung Dinh Thuc, PetroVietnam considers Russia a strategic area and with the contract, TNK-BP has become the third biggest partner of PetroVietnam and PV Oil, after Zarubezhneft and Gazprom.

He informed that the first oil stream resulting from the cooperation between PetroVietnam and Zarubezhneft will run in the next several days.

PetroVietnam has so far signed 20 oil and gas contracts with foreign companies, he added.

 

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Russia to provide ESPO crude oil for Vietnam

Russia ’s TNK-BP Oil Group will provide the first shipment of 100
tonnes of crude oil for the PetroVietnam Oil Corporation (PV Oil) via
the Eastern Siberia-Pacific Ocean (ESPO) in November this year.


To this effect, a contract was signed between PV Oil General Director
Nguyen Xuan Son and Deputy Chairman of TNK-BP’s Management Board Maksim
Barskiy in Moscow on September 29 at the presence of Vietnamese
Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai.


Speaking
after the signing ceremony, Deputy PM Hai expressed his hope that the
partnership between PV Oil and TNK-BP will further develop and harvest
more results in the future.


He stressed that the
signing of the ESPO crude oil contract will be the foundation for the
two sides to expand cooperation, including the exchange of experiences
in crude oil trading and processing.


The Deputy PM
declared that the Vietnamese government supports the cooperation
between PetroVietnam and TNK-BP in exploring and exploiting oil and gas
in the two countries’ territories and in third countries.


PV Oil General Director Nguyen Xuan Son said he hoped that after the
signing, TNK-BP will continue to participate in oil processing, refinery
and distribution in Vietnam .


The contract was
an initial step for the two companies to sign other agreements in order
to boost cooperation and mutual investment, he added.


According to PetroVietnam General Director Phung Dinh Thuc,
PetroVietnam considers Russia a strategic area and with the
contract, TNK-BP has become the third biggest partner of PetroVietnam
and PV Oil, after Zarubezhneft and Gazprom.


He
informed that the first oil stream resulting from the cooperation
between PetroVietnam and Zarubezhneft will run in the next several days.


PetroVietnam has so far signed 20 oil and gas contracts with foreign companies, he added./.

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Sunday, November 7, 2010

Local drug firms say didn’t lobby for flu pill stockpiling plan

Huynh Tan Nam, general director of Pymepharco, talks with local reporters in HCMC on Monday - Photo: Dao Loan
HCMC – Four local pharmaceutical firms involved in the Government’s Tamiflu-like drug stockpiling plan in 2005-2006 said on Monday they did not resort to any connections to win a contract as news reports about his had emerged recently.

Imexpharm, Stada Vietnam, Pymepharco and Pharimexco said in a joint press conference in HCMC that they had not lobby for the deal to sell Oseltamivir 75 mg pills, which is used to treat H5N1 bird flu patients, to the Ministry of Health.

The general directors of Imexpharm, Stada Vietnam, Pymepharco denied an inquiry by the Government Inspectorate which had asked these companies to deposit more than US$2.8 million in the inspectorate’s temporary account pending an official settlement.

The central inspection agency had suspected the amount was what the companies received from Stada IE Hong Kong as commissions, but the drug producers insisted it was the compensation from the foreign supplier of pharmaceutical material.

The general director of Pharimexco was not present at the news conference as he was late for his flight, reporters were told.

Local news reports that have surfaced suggest the price of imported material was too high and that Imexpharm, Stada Vietnam, and Pymepharco received commissions worth hundreds of thousands of U.S. dollars from the supplier.

“In late 2005, the Ministry of Health asked pharmaceutical firms to urgently find material to produce Oseltamivir 75 mg for H5N1 treatment. We were selected because of our capacity of seeking material at a time of falling supply of flu pill material worldwide and of producing the medicine,” said Tran Thi Dao, general director of Imexpharm.

The four companies are big enough to fulfill the order from the ministry in this emergency situation as they hold 20% of the local medicine production output.

Huynh Tan Nam, general director of Pymepharco, said the firms had inked the deal to provide the drug to the ministry, not material, so it was the companies’ right to decide who supplied material. Pharimexco chose a Singaporean supplier while the other three selected Stada IE Hong Kong.

“We bought material at a higher price but we sold the drug at US$1.75 per pill, lower than the US$2.49 quoted by Roche,” Dao of Imexpharm said.

The firms claimed they sold the medicine at a loss because the price was fixed by the ministry. “Our actual price was US$1.9, US$1.91 and US$1.92 per pill. We did not want to lose the deposit of US$2 million for material, so we had to produce the medicine,” she explained.

The ministry still owned the companies VND8 billion in the deal, according to these companies.

Ong Van Dung, general director of Stada Vietnam, said Stada IE Hong Kong sent US$986,000 to Imexpharm, and US$930,000 to each of Stada Vietnam and Pymepharaco to compensate for the lower-than-expected production.

“The supplier pledged that one kilogram of material could be used to produce 10,100 pills but the actual production was lower. That was why we received the compensation. This was included in our deal,” Nam of Pymepharco said.

However, the firms declined to give figures of the real production when asked by reporters but promised to do so soon after reviewing their data.

The ministry on January 17, 2006 inked a deal to buy five million Oseltamivir 75 mg pills from the four companies at a price of US$1.75 per pill.

Dao of Imexpharm said around half of the total volume fell due but it still met quality standards. The firms are asking the ministry to consider whether to extend the expiry date. “As a rule, the producer can ask the drug administration to test the medicine to see whether to extend the date,” she said.

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Four more detained at debt-laden shipbuilder

HCMC – Ministry of Public Security police have arrested four more former senior executives of the debt-laden shipbuilding giant Vinashin in a high-profile mismanagement case, according to a statement of the ministry.

The statement, which was posted on the Government site at about 3:30 p.m. last Friday, half an hour after Lt. Gen. Hoang Kong Tu, chief investigator of the ministry, called a news conference in Hanoi, says the four are accused of intentionally violating state regulations causing serious consequences.

Tran Quang Vu – who succeeded Pham Thanh Binh as general director of Vinashin shortly after the Party Central Committee’s Commission for Inspection proposed disciplining the then chairman and general director Binh over mismanagement two months ago – is among the four put into police custody last Friday for interrogation.

Late last month Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung signed a decision suspending Vu from the board of directors of the state-owned Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group (Vinashin) and asking the board to suspend him from the post of general director.

Tran Van Liem, another board member and chief controller who was also suspended by the Government leader, is the second to be arrested. The other two are Nguyen Van Tuyen, ex-general director of Hoang Anh Shipbuilding Industry Co. Ltd., and Nguyen Tuan Duong, ex-chairman of Cuu Long Investment Co.

The Ministry of Public Security statement says clues were uncovered during the probe into Pham Thanh Binh, who was arrested in Hanoi early last month over intentional violations of State rules on economic management which caused serious consequences and put Vinashin on the brink of bankruptcy. Vinashin’s total debt is VND86 trillion (about US$4.5 billion) while its combined assets are VND104 trillion.

The clues indicate the Prime Minister’s instructions had not been strictly implemented and violations of regulations on economic management causing serious consequences committed in connection with the purchase of a secondhand Italian-built ship locally known as Hoa Sen, the development of Song Hong power station and the sale of a mortgage asset by Nam Trieu Shipbuilding Industry Corporation (Nasico).

Tran Quang Vu, while serving as Nasico CEO, was aware that the Government did not allow the buying of used vessels but he and the then Vinashin chairman Binh approved a plan to convert Bach Dang Giang ship, which Vinashin had bought for steel, into a floating hotel.

Vu used the ship as collateral to borrow VND105 billion from Vinashin Finance Co. with funding coming from an international Government bond sale. But finding that the vessel could not be converted, Vu ordered its dismantlement for steel scrap without seeking consent from Vinashin leadership and reporting to Vinashin Finance.

The money gained from the sale of the steel scrap was not returned to Vinashin Finance, according to the ministry’s statement.

Tran Van Liem was assigned by Binh to oversee the project to buy Hoa Sen ship but he did not organize a competitive tender. Even worse, he signed the purchase contract before the project was formulated, and no technical inspection was done before delivery, the acts that went against a Government decree on ship buying.

Nguyen Van Tuyen of Hoang Anh Shipbuilding Industry Co. Ltd., and Nguyen Tuan Duong of Cuu Long Investment Co., together with Pham Thanh Binh, decided to build Song Hong power plant in Nam Dinh Province though they all knew the Government had not permitted it.

Tuyen and Duong bought equipment made in the 1960s from two old power stations in South Korea which stopped generation in 2004, including transformers containing a toxin which was banned from export by South Korea and prohibited from import by Vietnam.

The two even used falsified documentation in the name of the ministries of Natural Resources and Environment, and Industry and Trade to facilitate the import of the equipment.

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Sunday, October 10, 2010

OCB rushes to raise funds

Trinh Van Tuan (C), general director of OCB, introduces his bank’s new product and promotion program at a news briefing in HCMC on Wednesday - Photo: Thu Thuy
HCMC – With a new rule on higher safety ratios coming into force in early October, Orient Commercial Bank (OCB) on Thursday launched a new deposit product and a VND7.5-billion promotion program to accelerate fund raising.

The bank’s promotion program from September 1 to November 27 will award VND7.5 billion in prizes for depositors in lucky draws. Those who deposit a minimum of VND5 million or US$300 are eligible to join the draws.

The special prize is an apartment worth VND1.1 billion in Thinh Vuong Residential Place project in District 2 in HCMC.

The bank’s new product links payment and call deposit accounts for customers, so they just need to register a maximum amount for payment when opening the account. The surplus in this account will be automatically transferred to a demand deposit account with a higher interest rate, at 5.8% per year.

Trinh Van Tuan, new general director of the bank, told a news briefing in HCMC on Wednesday that those products were designed to retain existing customers and attract new deposits to meet the safety ratio requirement provided in the central bank’s Circular 13.

The circular requires banks to ensure the ratio of outstanding loans to raised funds is 80%. But the current ratio of OCB is 90%.

In the first eight months of the year, OCB obtained VND250 billion in pre-tax profit, 62.5% of the year’s target.

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

Gov’t determined to pursue express railway project

Vinashin leaders suspended over alleged irregularities

HANOI – The Government has reiterated its intention to press ahead with a controversial big-ticket project to build the country’s first express railway linking the two biggest cities, Hanoi and HCMC, but two priority stretches will be studied first.

“(Vietnam) cannot help having a second north-south (express) railway after the existing one,” Minister of Transport Ho Nghia Dung told reporters in Hanoi on Tuesday, days after news reports said the project had resumed though the National Assembly disapproved of it two months ago.

Dung said the project should start with the reservation of land for a dozen years later but when the Government would forward the project to the legislature for approval remained unknown because it would take years to collect as sufficient data as needed.


Local media has in recent days reported that the ministry was considering developing the first two sections of the cross-country railway, with one connecting Hanoi and Vinh and the other linking HCMC and Nha Trang, instead of the whole line worth around US$56 billion as originally proposed.

The Government approved in principle a proposal on July 23 to allow the ministry and the Vietnam Railways Corporation to get technical assistance and grants from the Japanese government to conduct a feasibility study for the two said sections and that for a rail line between Hanoi and Noi Bai International Airport.

“This is a feasibility study and it will take three to four years to finish before it goes before the National Assembly,” said the transport minister.

He went on to say that the Government had found it necessary to study the project to make clear the points questioned by National Assembly duties during their meeting in Hanoi in June, including scale, time frame, efficiency and financial viability.

There is concern that once Vietnam receives Japanese grants to do the feasibility study, it will have no choice but to opt for Japanese contractors and technology suppliers. Minister Dung, however, said, “We will reserve the right to choose technology and contractors.”

But Japan is now Vietnam’s largest bilateral aid donor and its aid normally goes to key social and economic infrastructure.

* Regarding the recent suspension of Vinashin general director Tran Quang Vu and chief controller Tran Van Liem, Minister Dung said investigators had found the two committing violations.

The police had asked the Government to suspend them to facilitate a probe into their alleged irregularities, he said.

Explaining why the suspension came less than two months after Vu was picked for the job, Dung said the unripe selection of Vu for the post of general director at Vinashin resulted from a crisis situation in which Pham Thanh Binh was removed from the posts of chairman and general director.

The Vinashin board is undergoing a gradual revamp, he said.

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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Weaker dong enhances inflation threat: experts

Weaker dong enhances inflation threat: expertsRelatively low incremental increases in prices over the last few months have lulled consumers and others into a sense of false security, experts say, warning that inflation continues to be a serious threat in the coming months.

The recent devaluation of the dong against the dollar only enhances the threat, they add.

Production enterprises dependent on imported materials have to bear higher input costs and are likely to increase prices.

The State Bank of Vietnam on August 18 set the daily reference rate of the dong two percent lower at 18,932 to a dollar, the third devaluation since last November, in a move aimed at reducing the trade deficit.

The dong was little changed at 19,485 per dollar as of 9:10 a.m. Thursday in Hanoi, compared with 19,490 a week ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Dao Duy Kha, deputy general director of the Vietnam Plastics Corporation, said up to 90 percent of materials for the country’s plastic production was imported, thus the lower value of the dong was a big blow.

The gasoline price hike early this month had already pushed up their production costs and the higher dollar prices now make an increase in selling prices “unavoidable,” he said.

Some association members have already increased their prices, while others will do so soon, with an average increase at 1-2 percent, he added.

Kha said firms have not increased their prices sharply because current purchasing power in the market was still low. “However, the prices will continue to rise in coming months when the demand for products goes up.”

Tran Trung Hieu, general director of Hanoi Investment and Footwear Export-Import Company, which imports materials for footwear production and sells them to local producers, said he will increase prices to match the dollar hike.

However, he cannot raise prices under contracts signed months ago that are due to be delivered now. “We are suffering losses from the contracts,” he said. His company imports materials worth US$100,000-200,000 each month.

Meanwhile, the price hike has also affected a number of customers. “Some customers have cancelled their orders, while others have cut their buying volumes,” Hieu said. His company has had to lower its profits significantly to keep their traditional customers, he added.

The increase in costs of imported materials has also prompted many supermarkets to announce plans to increase their retail prices.

Nguyen Thanh Huyen, public relations manager for the Big C supermarket chain, said some distributors have proposed to raise their products’ prices by 5 to 10 percent.

Another supermarket chain, Maximark, has received proposals from over 100 distributors on increasing, by 3 to 10 percent, prices of 500 kinds of products, mainly food, cosmetics and home appliances.

The price increases have sparked inflation fears.

Vietnam’s consumer price index rose 8.18 percent in August from a year earlier, and 0.23 percent from a month earlier, the General Statistics Office said. In July, the index rose 8.19 percent from a year earlier.

“A very important implication is that the outlook for inflation is likely to be affected by the devaluation. The devaluation, of course, is going to raise the risk of imported inflation in the months ahead,” Bloomberg quoted Tai Hui, head of Southeast Asian economic research at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore, as saying.

The dong will trade near 19,500 per dollar for “at least the next several weeks,” he said.

If inflation accelerates or the trade deficit deteriorates, “you may see more selling pressure on the dong. But, of course, that’s very much down to the upcoming data that we expect to see at the end of the month,” he said.

Vu Dinh Anh, deputy head of the Institute of Market and Price Research, said: “Inflation control should be the most important target for the end of this year. There is now a subjective complacence as consumer prices have only seen small hikes in recent months.”

The government aims to cap inflation at 8 percent this year, though many local analysts say that will be difficult to achieve.

Firms should carefully watch for changes in the exchange rate. They should prepare sources of the greenback to repay dollar loans on schedule, and use other foreign currencies, which have lower exchange rates, Anh said.

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Weaker dong enhances inflation threat: experts

Weaker dong enhances inflation threat: expertsRelatively low incremental increases in prices over the last few months have lulled consumers and others into a sense of false security, experts say, warning that inflation continues to be a serious threat in the coming months.

The recent devaluation of the dong against the dollar only enhances the threat, they add.

Production enterprises dependent on imported materials have to bear higher input costs and are likely to increase prices.

The State Bank of Vietnam on August 18 set the daily reference rate of the dong two percent lower at 18,932 to a dollar, the third devaluation since last November, in a move aimed at reducing the trade deficit.

The dong was little changed at 19,485 per dollar as of 9:10 a.m. Thursday in Hanoi, compared with 19,490 a week ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Dao Duy Kha, deputy general director of the Vietnam Plastics Corporation, said up to 90 percent of materials for the country’s plastic production was imported, thus the lower value of the dong was a big blow.

The gasoline price hike early this month had already pushed up their production costs and the higher dollar prices now make an increase in selling prices “unavoidable,” he said.

Some association members have already increased their prices, while others will do so soon, with an average increase at 1-2 percent, he added.

Kha said firms have not increased their prices sharply because current purchasing power in the market was still low. “However, the prices will continue to rise in coming months when the demand for products goes up.”

Tran Trung Hieu, general director of Hanoi Investment and Footwear Export-Import Company, which imports materials for footwear production and sells them to local producers, said he will increase prices to match the dollar hike.

However, he cannot raise prices under contracts signed months ago that are due to be delivered now. “We are suffering losses from the contracts,” he said. His company imports materials worth US$100,000-200,000 each month.

Meanwhile, the price hike has also affected a number of customers. “Some customers have cancelled their orders, while others have cut their buying volumes,” Hieu said. His company has had to lower its profits significantly to keep their traditional customers, he added.

The increase in costs of imported materials has also prompted many supermarkets to announce plans to increase their retail prices.

Nguyen Thanh Huyen, public relations manager for the Big C supermarket chain, said some distributors have proposed to raise their products’ prices by 5 to 10 percent.

Another supermarket chain, Maximark, has received proposals from over 100 distributors on increasing, by 3 to 10 percent, prices of 500 kinds of products, mainly food, cosmetics and home appliances.

The price increases have sparked inflation fears.

Vietnam’s consumer price index rose 8.18 percent in August from a year earlier, and 0.23 percent from a month earlier, the General Statistics Office said. In July, the index rose 8.19 percent from a year earlier.

“A very important implication is that the outlook for inflation is likely to be affected by the devaluation. The devaluation, of course, is going to raise the risk of imported inflation in the months ahead,” Bloomberg quoted Tai Hui, head of Southeast Asian economic research at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore, as saying.

The dong will trade near 19,500 per dollar for “at least the next several weeks,” he said.

If inflation accelerates or the trade deficit deteriorates, “you may see more selling pressure on the dong. But, of course, that’s very much down to the upcoming data that we expect to see at the end of the month,” he said.

Vu Dinh Anh, deputy head of the Institute of Market and Price Research, said: “Inflation control should be the most important target for the end of this year. There is now a subjective complacence as consumer prices have only seen small hikes in recent months.”

The government aims to cap inflation at 8 percent this year, though many local analysts say that will be difficult to achieve.

Firms should carefully watch for changes in the exchange rate. They should prepare sources of the greenback to repay dollar loans on schedule, and use other foreign currencies, which have lower exchange rates, Anh said.

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