Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label investment. Show all posts

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Vietnam industry investor survey launched

The Foreign Investment Agency (FIA) under the Ministry of Planning and
Investment (MPI) and the United Nations Industrial Development
Organisation (UNIDO) launched the Vietnam Industry Investor Survey 2010
in Hanoi on October 19.


Surveys will be conducted in the nine cities and provinces in Vietnam
where most foreign direct investment and domestic enterprises are
located.


The sample surveys will be carried out at
1,644 manufacturing, utility and construction enterprises randomly
selected from Hanoi city, Hai Phong city, Vinh Phuc, Bac Ninh, Da Nang
city, Ho Chi Minh City, Dong Nai, Binh Duong and Ba Ria-Vung Tau.


The survey findings will be consolidated on the web-based interactive
“Vietnam Investment Monitoring Platform” which allows relevant
enterprises and individuals to make enquiries to better understand the
characteristics of Vietnam’s investment environment.


Do Nhat Hoang, General Director of FIA emphasised that through the
programme, enterprises would have the opportunity to get free access to
business partners, suppliers and potential customers who have been
taking part in the UNIDO international network of Investment and
Technology Promotion Offices.


According to a
representative of UNIDO, the survey will help policy makers generate
systematic evidence in assessing the impact of foreign investment sector
on the development of Vietnamese economy, especially in the industry
sector.


The survey also provides an analysis of the
dynamics of enterprises’ performance and enhances the State
institutions’s capacity in investment promotion and investment climate
improvement.


Over the next two years, similar
surveys will focus more broadly on other sectors of the economy, aiming
to design more efficient policies in investment attraction through MPI./.

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Friday, February 18, 2011

Province lures investors

Zinc-plated corrugated steel is rolled at the Hoa Sen Group factory in the southern province of Ba Ria – Vung Tau. — VNA/VNS Photo The Anh

Zinc-plated corrugated steel is rolled at the Hoa Sen Group factory in the southern province of Ba Ria – Vung Tau. — VNA/VNS Photo The Anh

HCM CITY — Southern coastal Ba Ria – Vung Tau Province has attracted an increasing number of investment projects over the last five years, according to the province's Department of Planning and Investment.

From 2006 through 2010, the province issued 196 new investment licences with total committed capital of US$24.26 billion.

The investment projects now number at 280, with total committed capital of $27 billion.

Most investment projects are in the tourism and industry sectors.

The number of projects has doubled, while committed capital has increased 10 times compared to the target set for the 2006-10 period, according to the department.

Implemented capital reached $3.39 billion, a rise of 1.5 times compared to the 2001 – 05 period, about $650 million higher than the target.

According to the department, foreign investment projects, mostly in the tourism sector, have accounted for 60 per cent of total investment capital and 50 per cent of export turnover.

During the 2006-10 period, foreign-invested projects made up 20 – 30 per cent of the total budget and created more than 20,000 jobs.

Local investors have focused on projects to develop seaports, residential areas and other infrastructure projects.

They include projects to develop Long Son Oil and Gas Industrial Park ($169.7 million), An Phu shipbuilding factory ($144.1 million), Chau Duc residential area ($63.43 million) and Nui Lon – Nui Nho tourist resort ($71.79 million).

Tan Thanh District in the province has attracted 127 projects with total investment capital of VND86,357 billion ($4.4 million).

Vung Tau City ranked second in the number of projects, with 76, and a total investment capital of VND24,099 billion ($1.2 million).

Viet Nam's membership in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 2007 has helped spur foreign investment growth, especially in Ba Ria – Vung Tau Province.

In 2007, the province attracted investment capital of only $1.4 billion, but capital rose to $11.6 billion in 2008.

Le Kim Huong, director of the province's Department of Planning and Investment, said the province wanted to create the most favourable conditions for both local and foreign businesses to invest.

The executive director of Ho Tram Beach Resort, Le Ngoc Quynh, noted that when his company invested in tourism in Phuoc Thuan Commune in Xuyen Moc District, local authorities supported them by improving infrastructure, such as power and telephone lines.

Because of the global recession, investors have also faced challenges in luring capital, particularly for large projects.

In addition, frequent changes in Government policies about land-use have postponed site clearance work because of lawsuits on compensation for displaced residents. This, in turn, has delayed progress on large projects.

Located in the major southern economic zone more than 100 kilometres from HCM City to the southeast, Ba Ria – Vung Tau Province is a major tourism site, favoured by nature with a long, beautiful coast.

The coastal province is also the country's only site for the offshore oil and gas industry. — VNS

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Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Investors face tougher financial capacity tests

HA NOI — A new regulation being drafted by the Ministry of Planning and Investment would impose stricter financial capacity requirements on foreign investors.

Disbursement of foreign investment has lagged far behind the commitments made by foreign investors, suggesting that investors without sufficient financial capacity have still been receiving licences from investment authorities, says the director of the ministry's legal department, Pham Manh Dung.

In many cases, Dung added, foreign investors had registered projects without an intention to bring foreign capital into Viet Nam to implement the projects. Instead, they had sought financing in Viet Nam after obtaining an investment licence.

To deal with these issues, the ministry has drafted a decree that would require investment agencies to verify investors' financial capacity, requiring investors to provide confirmation from internationally reliable banks and credit institutions or other investor guarantees on the source of funding for a project.

The decree would also allow for the withdrawal of investment licences after an assessment of financial capacity of an investor, Dung said.

Thousands of foreign-invested projects had been licensed and allocated land, only to remain idle for years, he noted. Some projects in Ba Ria-Vung Tau Province, for instance, had not broken ground a full decade after being licensed.

Without regulations providing for the withdrawal of licences, some provinces have required foreign investors to post a security deposit equal to 5 per cent of the project's total budget in order to keep the land.

The draft decree would authorise municipal and provincial planning and investment departments to set up boards empowered to suspend foreign-invested projects that have not been put into operation as scheduled without a valid explanation for the delay.

Under the draft decree, projects with investment capital in excess of VND300 billion (US$15.4 million) would also have to be examined for compliance with development master plans for industries and localities.

Projects that had a small scale of investment but required large areas of land could also be turned down on the basis of waste, Dung said, with the regulation aiming to make the most efficient uses of available land.

The draft decree would guide the implementation of the 2005 Law on Investment and, if approved, would replace Decree No 108/2006/ND-CP issued in 2006, Dung added. — VNS

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Thursday, February 3, 2011

SHTP licenses two R&D projects

(From right) Le Thai Hy (2nd), head of SHTP management board, awards an investment certificate to TMA Solutions on Tuesday - Photo: Que Minh
HCMC – Saigon Hi-Tech Park (SHTP) Management Board on Tuesday awarded two investment certificates for building Research and Development (R&D) facilities to two local firms in the park in District 9.

TMA Solutions, a giant software outsourcing company, will open its ICT research and development center in the park. The center will be located in SHTP’s Science City, which is the functional zone exclusively reserved for high-tech research and development, training and incubation activities.

With the total investment of US$5 million, TMA’s project will be divided into three phases of development, with three research laboratories on Data Network and New Generation Network (NGN), Embedded System and other new technologies closely following the global development trend.

Besides in-house R&D projects, TMA plans to set up joint ventures with both local and foreign partners such as Novitell (Denmark), Exceed Global (Australia), Astonis (U.S.) and Viettel (Vietnam) to do the R&D of new products, according to the park in a statement.

Established in 1997, TMA is now the largest company in HCMC and the second in Vietnam in terms of software services and solutions, technical services and ICT training. The company has more than 900 engineers, six laboratories and five overseas offices, and has recorded an annual growth rate of 50% during the last 13 years.

The other R&D project licensed on Tuesday is invested by the Southern Construction Materials Institute under of the Ministry of Construction. The VND30 billion project will research and develop new materials for construction in HCMC and the southern area.

SHTP is now home to 44 local and foreign hi-tech companies, with a total investment commitment of more than US$1.84 billion, creating more than 10,000 skilled jobs, contributing nearly US$640 million in export revenue to the city.

SHTP expects foreign and domestic investment capital flow this year to hit US$150 million. The park is focusing on attracting high-technology projects in microelectronics, IT, telecoms, research and development, and the service sector.

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Sunday, January 16, 2011

Heritage site aims to lure investment from South Korea

Thua Thien-Hue province, where the Hue Imperial City is located, has been given a promise from South Korea Ambassador to encourage investors to come.

The Korean diplomat, Park Suk Hwan, told the provincial People’s Committee Chairman, Nguyen Van Cao, during their meeting in the central region province on Wednesday, that he would promote the province’s strengths and potential among Korea business circles, to encourage them to invest.

Thua Thien-Hue is home to Hue Imperial City which has been recognized as a world cultural heritage site by the UN Educational, Social and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

Cao reported that the province has granted 11 licenses for investment to businesses from the country, capitalized at some $560 million.

Most of their projects are in the hospitality industry, services, and construction and investment in technical infrastructure for industrial zones.

In addition to Foreign Direct Investment, the province has received the Korea’s aid in Official Development Assistance (ODA) for the construction of a 500-bed hospital, capitalized at $20 million.

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Friday, January 14, 2011

Heritage site aims to lure investment from RoK

Thua Thien-Hue province, where the Hue imperial city is located, has
been given a promise from the Republic of Korea (RoK) Ambassador
to encourage investors to come.


The RoK diplomat, Park Suk Hwan, told the provincial People’s Committee
Chairman, Nguyen Van Cao, during their meeting in the central region
province on October 6, that he would promote the province’s strengths
and potential among RoK business circles, to encourage them to invest.


Thua Thien-Hue is home to Hue Imperial City
which has been recognised as a world cultural heritage site by the UN
Educational, Social and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO).


Cao reported that the province has granted 11 licences for investment
to businesses from the RoK, capitalised at some 560 million USD.


Most of their projects are in the hospitality industry, services, and
construction and investment in technical infrastructure for industrial
zones.


In addition to Foreign Direct Investment,
the province has received the RoK’s aid in Official Development
Assistance (ODA) for the construction of a 500-bed hospital, capitalised
at 20 million USD./.

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

Overseas investment totals $730m in first nine months

Viettel advertises its Metfone service on the outskirts of Sihanuokville in Cambodia. Authorities licensed 90 overseas investment projects worth $637 million in the first nine months of this year. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

Viettel advertises its Metfone service on the outskirts of Sihanuokville in Cambodia. Authorities licensed 90 overseas investment projects worth $637 million in the first nine months of this year. — VNA/VNS Photo Ngoc Ha

HA NOI — In the first nine months of the year, the Foreign Investment Agency (FIA) licensed roughly 90 overseas investment projects totalling more than US$637 million and gave permission for 25 existing projects to raise their capital by $92 million, according to FIA statistics.

The FIA said besides the traditional markets of Laos and Cambodia, Vietnamese businesses this year also poured significant investment into Russia, Malaysia, Algeria, the US and Cuba.

Vietnamese businesses have so far invested more than $8 billion in more than 500 overseas projects.

Mining topped the list of Vietnamese foreign investment to date, totalling $3.58 billion. The service and agro-forestry-fishery industries followed with $1.12 billion and nearly $985 million, respectively.

Apart from big names such as the Hoang Anh Gia Lai Group, the Sai Gon Thuong Tin Joint Stock Commercial Bank (Sacombank), the Bank for Investment and Development of Viet Nam (BIDV) and the Army Telecoms Corporation (Viettel), several more enterprises have begun to invest overseas.

The Truong Thanh Furniture Corporation recently signed a MoU with a South African partner to build a $30 million processing plant in the city of Umshwathi.

It also plans to plant 10,000ha of trees in South Africa's Kwazulu Natal province.

"The important thing is not just quantity but the quality of projects and how effective they are, especially in helping local exporters," said deputy director of the FIA's Overseas Investment Division Vu Van Chung.

To facilitate overseas investment, the FIA is collecting feedback from businesses for the amendment of Decree 78/2006/ND-CP, which provides enterprises with guidelines on how to prepare an application to speed up investment registration procedures, Chung said. — VNS

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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Overseas investment totals $730 mln

In the first nine months of the year, the Foreign Investment Agency (FIA) licensed roughly 90 overseas investment projects totalling more than US$637 million and gave permission for 25 existing projects to raise their capital by $92 million, according to FIA statistics.

The FIA said besides the traditional markets of Laos and Cambodia, Vietnamese businesses this year also poured significant investment into Russia, Malaysia, Algeria, the US and Cuba.

Vietnamese businesses have so far invested more than $8 billion in more than 500 overseas projects.

Mining topped the list of Vietnamese foreign investment to date, totalling $3.58 billion. The service and agro-forestry-fishery industries followed with $1.12 billion and nearly $985 million, respectively.

Apart from big names such as the Hoang Anh Gia Lai Group, the Sai Gon Thuong Tin Joint Stock Commercial Bank (Sacombank), the Bank for Investment and Development of Viet Nam (BIDV) and the Army Telecoms Corporation (Viettel), several more enterprises have begun to invest overseas.

The Truong Thanh Furniture Corporation recently signed a MoU with a South African partner to build a $30 million processing plant in the city of Umshwathi.

It also plans to plant 10,000ha of trees in South Africa's Kwazulu Natal province.

"The important thing is not just quantity but the quality of projects and how effective they are, especially in helping local exporters," said deputy director of the FIA's Overseas Investment Division Vu Van Chung.

To facilitate overseas investment, the FIA is collecting feedback from businesses for the amendment of Decree 78/2006/ND-CP, which provides enterprises with guidelines on how to prepare an application to speed up investment registration procedures, Chung said.

 

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Saturday, January 8, 2011

Foreign firms look to raise city investment

Small- and medium-sized foreign firms in HCM City are looking to
increase their capital because they see potential for expansion and
growth.


The Dau Tu (Vietnam Investment Review) newspaper quotes the HCM City
Department of Planning and Investment as saying 65 FDI projects
operating in the City have raised their investment capital to 168.9
million USD in the first nine months of this year.


These projects are mainly in the manufacturing, industrial, service and retail sectors.


Fastfood chain Lotteria Vietnam Ltd Co has decided to invest an
additional 7 million USD to expand its chain, while sporting goods
manufacturer Adidas Vietnam has decided to raise its investment by a
million dollars to 3.9 million USD.


Retailer Giant
South Asia has poured an additional 15 million USD into its distribution
network and warehouses, raising its total investment capital to 20
million USD.


Lu Thanh Phong, DPI deputy director,
said FDI businesses in the city had, compared to previous years,
increased investments in manufacturing, processing and industrial
production over the last two years.


Nguyen Tan
Phuoc, deputy head of HCM City Export Processing and Industrial Park
Authority, said the capital increase showed trust in the market's
development potential and stability.


Yuki Vietnam
Ltd, a company that produces industrial sewing machinery, has invested
an additional 5 million USD this year, bringing its total investment
capital to 20 million USD. This is the third time it has increased its
capital investment in the city.


Tsunoda Shinji,
general director of the company, said the increase in capital aimed to
expand its domestic market share, instead of focusing on exports.
Currently, the company earns 16 million USD per year from the domestic
market, and it aims to increase this to 24-26 million USD a year in the
near future.


A representative of Australia 's RMIT
University said it had invested more than 15.1 million USD to build a
dormitory for its students in Vietnam .


Merilyn
Liddell, director of RMIT Vietnam, said the investment aimed to expand
the school area by 2013 to meet rising demand for international standard
education in Vietnam .


However, many FDI
businesses had also complained that they were hampered by the lack of
skilled workers, and were having to provide the needed training by
themselves, the newspaper reported./.

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Friday, January 7, 2011

Foreign firms look to raise City investment

HCM CITY — Small- and medium-sized foreign firms in HCM City are looking to increase their capital because they see potential for expansion and growth.

The Dau Tu (Viet Nam Investment Review) newspaper quotes the HCM City Department of Planning and Investment as saying 65 FDI projects operating in the City have raised their investment capital to US$168.9 million in the first nine months of this year.

These projects are mainly in the manufacturing, industrial, service and retail sectors.

Fastfood chain Lotteria Viet Nam Ltd Co has decided to invest an additional $7 million to expand its chain, while sporting goods manufacturer Adidas Viet Nam has decided to raise its investment by a million dollars to $3.9 million.

Retailer Giant South Asia has poured an additional $15 million into its distribution network and warehouses, raising its total investment capital to $20 million.

Lu Thanh Phong, DPI deputy director, said FDI businesses in the city had, compared to previous years, increased investments in manufacturing, processing and industrial production over the last two years.

Nguyen Tan Phuoc, deputy head of HCM City Export Processing and Industrial Park Authority, said the capital increase showed trust in the market's development potential and stability.

Yuki Viet Nam Ltd, a company that produces industrial sewing machinery, has invested an additional $5 million this year, bringing its total investment capital to $20 million. This is the third time it has increased its capital investment in the city.

Tsunoda Shinji, general director of the company, said the increase in capital aimed to expand its domestic market share, instead of focusing on exports. Currently, the company earns $16 million per year from the domestic market, and it aims to increase this to $24-26 million a year in the near future.

A representative of Australia's RMIT University said it had invested more than $15.1 million to build a dormitory for its students in Viet Nam.

Merilyn Liddell, director of RMIT Viet Nam, said the investment aimed to expand the school area by 2013 to meet rising demand for international standard education in Viet Nam.

However, many FDI businesses had also complained that they were hampered by the lack of skilled workers, and were having to provide the needed training by themselves, the newspaper reported. — VNS

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Binh Phuoc seeks investors

Southern Binh Phuoc Province is seeking investment for three industrial zones, which needs a least VND448 billion (US$24 million).

The province also wants investment in its water infrastructure in the zones along National Highway 13, Chon Thanh Town and Dong Phu District as well as Hoa Lu Border-gate Economic Zone.

The call for investment was made at an investment promotion conference held in Hanoi on Saturday.

Binh Phuoc People's Committee chairman Truong Tan Thieu told the potential investors that his province, located in the southern key economic zone, was advantageous for industrial development and investment.

The province was attempting to shift its economic structure toward industrialization, Thieu said, adding that it had set aside more than 5,200ha of land at 18 industrial zones for development.

Investors could also invest into the electronics, textile and garment sector.

The chairman assumed that local authorities would create the best conditions for investors by speeding up administrative procedure reforms and improving infrastructure facilities.

During the past five years, the province has achieved significant accomplishments in all fields. Its average GDP growth rate reached 13.2 percent and industrial production increased by 24 percent.

Currently, the province is home to 3,000 projects including 1,000 foreign-invested projects worth $1.57 billion.

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Sunday, December 26, 2010

Thai businesses keen on investing in Vietnam

Thai businesses keen on investing in Vietnam

Many Thai businesses have shown a keen interest in Vietnam’s
preferential investment policies, taxation, land leasing and ownership
as well as schools for learning Vietnamese.


At a
seminar on business and investment opportunities and challenges in
Vietnam in Thailand ’s north-eastern province of Khon Kaen on
September 29, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Thanh Bien
said that this is a practical way of implementing commitments to the
ASEAN Economic Community and expanding cooperation along the East-West
Economic Corridor to increase two-way trade.


Deputy
Minister Bien said that despite the impacts of the global financial
crisis, two-way trade recorded an average increase of 10.6 percent in
the 2007-09 period and a year-on-year rise of 25.1 percent to 4.25
billion USD in the first eight months of this year.


In August 2010, Thailand was ranked 10th out of the foreign
investors in Vietnam with 237 projects, totalling 5.7 billion USD,
he said.


Vietnam boasts political stability and
an improved legal system and infrastructure, he said, adding that the
nation will soon become an important gateway to other big markets in
Southeast Asia.


He said that Vietnam’s market
is developing stably and safely and the country is cutting tariffs under
the ASEAN Trade in Goods Agreement (ATIGA) while further integrating
into the global economy.


For his part, the acting
Mayor of Khon Kaen province Payat Chanparsert said that by being ASEAN
members, Thailand and Vietnam have made considerable progress,
especially the relationship between his province and regions of
Vietnam.


The participation of large numbers of
Thai representatives reflects their wishes to promote bilateral trade
and investment ties, he stressed./.

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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Vietnam, RoK step up investment cooperation

Vietnam wishes that businesses from the Republic of Korea (RoK) would increase their investment in the country, especially industries with high-added value and modern technology-intensive industries.

The statement was delivered by Deputy Minister of Planning and Investment Dang Huy Dong at a seminar, jointly held by his ministry, the RoK Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the RoK Business Association and the RoK Embassy, in Hanoi Wedenesday.

The seminar focused on policies and opportunities for infrastructure development investment within the public-private partnership (PPP) framework and policies to encourage foreign investment in industrial zones.

Deputy Minister Dong said the Vietnamese government applauded the RoK foreign direct investment (FDI) flow in Vietnam , which, he said, greatly contributes to the country’s socio-economic development.

The RoK Ambassador Park Seok Hoan expressed his belief on cooperative relations between the two countries’ businesses, saying with an open investment environment, Vietnam will become a more attractive destination for the RoK investors.

By the end of August this year, the RoK ranked 88 th among Vietnam’s FDI providers with 2,605 projects registered at US$23 billion, according to the Ministry of Planning and Investment.

The two governments have agreed to lift the biletaral relations to strategic partnership.

The RoK businesses have been involved in most of sectors in Vietnam , from infrastructure, telecommunications and mechanics to real estate, auto manufacturing, shipbuilding and restaurant services.

 

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Friday, December 24, 2010

Tourism vibrant

by Hoang Ha

Foreign tourists visit a forest in Buon Don District in the Central Highlands province of Dak Lak. Experts at the ASEAN Tourism Investment forum yesterday said Viet Nam could become one of the most-visited countries in Asia by 2020.—VNA/VNS Photo Hong Ky

Foreign tourists visit a forest in Buon Don District in the Central Highlands province of Dak Lak. Experts at the ASEAN Tourism Investment forum yesterday said Viet Nam could become one of the most-visited countries in Asia by 2020.—VNA/VNS Photo Hong Ky

HCM CITY — Viet Nam tourism has great potential for sustainable development, and the country could become one of the most-visited countries in Asia by 2020, according to experts who spoke at an ASEAN Tourism Investment Forum held yesterday in HCM City.

"The number of tourists to Viet Nam shows a consecutive increase with an average of 10.1 per cent a year for international tourists, and 4.8 per cent for domestic tourists," said Professor Pham Trung Luong, deputy director of Institute for Tourism Development Research.

The forum discussed tourism investment opportunities and investment in ASEAN-member countries

Last year, international tourists to Viet Nam decreased by 10 per cent year-on-year due to the economic crisis. However, the number of domestic tourists increased from 20 million of 2008 to 25 million.

The development of tourism had contributed positively to socio-economic development, Luong said.

Earnings from tourism increased from VND20.5 trillion (US$1.1 billion) in 2001 to VND70 trillion ($3.6 billion) in 2009, with an annual growth rate of 16.6 per cent.

According to the General Statistics Office, foreign currency earnings from tourism reached $4.02 billion in 2008, making tourism the fifth highest field in foreign currency earnings (following exports of crude oil, garments, shoes and aquatic products).

Tourism created 450,000 direct jobs and 1 million indirect jobs by 2009, contributing to poverty alleviation.

The development of tourism has played a part in the growth of other sectors, including airlines, construction and handicraft villages.

Total investment capital from the national budget in tourism was VND3.516 trillion ($1.8 billion) in the 2001-07 period. This was focused on provinces with national tourist areas, Luong said.

In addition, enterprises have invested an average of VND800 billion ($48 million) yearly into resorts and hotels.

Viet Nam has seen success in attracting foreign investment, especially FDI, based on the advantages of political and socio-economic stability and brisk and steady economic growth. Also, the country is a transport hub for Southeast Asia, and has membership in the World Trade Organisation, Asia-Pacific Economic Community (APEC), ASEAN and Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM).

In 2008, Viet Nam's FDI capital flow increased to $64 billion, three times higher than the 2007 investment pledge.

Tourism was ranked fourth in sectors that attract FDI investment in Viet Nam, Luong said.

Foreign investment in Viet Nam tourism began in 1988 with a $7.765 million project, he added.

There were 431 FDI projects totalling $18 billion in the period of 1988-2008.

These projects were in the fields of resorts and hotel construction, golf, entertainment, transportation, travel and tourism services.

The explosion of foreign investment into Viet Nam tourism can be seen clearly during the period of 2002-08, with 307 projects and total registered capital of $15.454 billion.

According to statistics, most of the FDI projects were resorts and hotels in all seven central coastal provinces and southern islands of the country.

"This trend is likely to continue," Luong said.

FDI projects in Viet Nam tourism all produced the desired effect, he added.

Annual turnover from FDI companies were around $800 million. Of the number, $100 million contributed to the national budget.

FDI companies also created 40,000 direct jobs and tens of thousands of indirect jobs.

Investment lure

Nguyen The Hung, acting director of the Southern Investment Promotion Centre under the Ministry of Planning and Investment, said the country should continue to review investment and business laws and policies to ease cumbersome procedures and attract more investors.

It should also maximise all resource mobilisation for infrastructure development, give priority to the water supply and drainage areas and to environmental protection.

Other areas that need more attention include roads, railways, bridges, power production, solar power, wind power and the information technology industry.

The country should create policies on promotion and FDI attraction, and set up investment promotion representatives in key markets abroad, Hung said.

In general, in order to foster the ASEAN Tourism Investment Environment, ASEAN needs to internalise economic returns through tourism cluster growth, according to Professor Dr Wong Kong Yew, director and tourism economist of Malaysian Tourism Research Institute for Policy Studies.

"In the medium term to long term, this strategy encourages physical infrastructure development and promotes connectivity of resources," he added.

Creating a business-friendly tourism investment environment would also increase growth.

Focusing on increasing opportunities to develop human capital would help develop the manpower to support that growth, he said.

He proposed the creation of the ASEAN Tourism Investment Fund and suggested that the Government encourage the participation of commercial banks and financial institutions in providing loans for tourism projects.

Last year, there were 65 million international tourists travelling to ASEAN countries, 1 per cent higher than the previous year, and 59.7 per cent higher than in 2000, in spite of the global economic crisis. — VNS

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Vietnam, RoK step up investment cooperation

Vietnam, RoK step up investment cooperation

Vietnam wishes that businesses from the Republic of Korea (RoK)
would increase their investment in the country, especially industries
with high-added value and modern technology-intensive industries.


The statement was delivered by Deputy Minister of Planning and
Investment Dang Huy Dong at a seminar, jointly held by his ministry, the
RoK Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the RoK Business Association and
the RoK Embassy, in Hanoi on September 29.


The
seminar focused on policies and opportunities for infrastructure
development investment within the public-private partnership (PPP)
framework and policies to encourage foreign investment in industrial
zones.


Deputy Minister Dong said the Vietnamese
government applauded the RoK foreign direct investment (FDI) flow in
Vietnam , which, he said, greatly contributes to the country’s
socio-economic development.


The RoK Ambassador Park
Seok Hoan expressed his belief on cooperative relations between the two
countries’ businesses, saying with an open investment environment,
Vietnam will become a more attractive destination for the RoK
investors.


By the end of August this year, the RoK
ranked 88 th among Vietnam ’s FDI providers with 2,605 projects
registered at 23 billion USD, according to the Ministry of Planning and
Investment.


The two governments have agreed to lift the biletaral relations to strategic partnership.


The RoK businesses have been involved in most of sectors in Vietnam
, from infrastructure, telecommunications and mechanics to real estate,
auto manufacturing, shipbuilding and restaurant services./.

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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

President expects more US investment in ASEAN

Vietnamese State President Nguyen Minh Triet said he expected US
businesses to continue to boost investment in ASEAN, a stable region
with high economic growth and a great potential for development.


Addressing a working session between ASEAN leaders and the US-ASEAN
Business Council in New York on Sept. 24, President Triet spoke
highly of US groups’ intention to pour more investment into ASEAN.


During the upcoming summit in Hanoi in October, ASEAN members will
discuss ways to strengthen the connectivity of large-scale projects to
move closer to the establishment of the ASEAN Economic Community by
2015, which is expected to offer more chances for US investors to boost
investment and increase trade in a large and promising market, he said.


In his speech, US Assistant Secretary of State for East
Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell reiterated the US policy of
expanding its ties with ASEAN.


Bilateral trade between ASEAN and the US has reached more than 200 billion USD a year.


ASEAN is now the US’s fifth largest trade partner and fourth largest export market./.

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FDI disbursement tops $8b first nine months

Vehicle parts production at the Taiwan-invested Viet Nam Precision Industrial No1 Co in northern Vinh Phuc Province. — VNA/VNS Photo Tran Viet

Vehicle parts production at the Taiwan-invested Viet Nam Precision Industrial No1 Co in northern Vinh Phuc Province. — VNA/VNS Photo Tran Viet

HA NOI — Disbursement of foreign investment during the first nine months of this year surpassed US$8 billion, an increase of 4.8 per cent year-on- year, according to the Foreign Investment Agency (FIA).

However, the disbursement which hit $800 million in September was $50 million lower than that of the previous month, and far behind the average disbursement rate of about $900 million for each month since the beginning of this year.

During the nine-month period, the nation attracted $12.19 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI), 87.3 per cent of the amount during the same period last year. Earlier, the country had set a target of drawing $22 to $25 billion in FDI this year.

Up to 720 new projects were licensed during the period, worth a combined $11.4 billion, an increase of 37.3 per cent over same period last year.

There was a decline in additional investment to existing projects, the FIA said, adding that 153 projects had registered to increase capital by a combined $783 million, only 13.8 per cent of the same period last year.

An FIA representative yesterday refused to make further comments on the drastic decrease.

Netherlands was the leading source of foreign investment in Viet Nam, investing $2.2 billion, followed by South Korea with $2 billion and the US with $1.87 billion.

The processing and manufacturing sector held the lion's share of FDI, gobbling up $3.65 billion, or 30.2 per cent of the registered total.

Business advantages were described as one of the main reasons for the large influx of FDI into the sector. The foreign-invested sector posted a nine-month export turnover of $27.4 billion, a year-on-year rise of 26.5 per cent or equivalent to 53 per cent of the country's total export value.

Meanwhile, FDI in the electric and gas production and distribution sector reached $2.94 billion, accounting for 24 per cent of all FDI.

With a high average investment capital of $150 million per project, the real estate sector ranked third in FDI attraction with $2.75 billion, making up 22.6 per cent of the total.

The southern province of Ba Ria-Vung Tau was the top destination for foreign investment, attracting $2.23 billion. It was followed by the northern province of Quang Ninh with $2.15 billion, HCM City with over $1.8 billion and central Nghe An Province with $1 billion. — VNS

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Sunday, December 5, 2010

Hurdles litter path, but Vietnam investment to rise

HANOI - Few investors disagree that Vietnam has huge potential. But until the country's opaque regulatory environment becomes more predictable, only the bravest firms will commit to making substantial direct investments there.

When Vietnam's government first opened up to foreign investment back in the 1990s, multinationals couldn't wait to break ground on factories and hire some of Asia's cheapest workers.

Foreign direct investment has since grown exponentially with the number leaping after Vietnam joined the World Trade Organization in 2007. Now, with the global economy recovering and Vietnam's regional comparative advantages rising, a new line of potential investors is forming at its gate.

Analysts say manufacturers are taking a good look at Vietnam partly because the Chinese yuan appears set for a long run of strengthening, and retailers are hoping to profit from a growing middle class in the country of 86 million.

Yet despite the country's draw, Vietnam is struggling to live up to its full potential, hindered by slow progress on a list of perennial barriers to investment and recent policymaking gaffes that have caused costly headaches for foreign businesses and scared off at least one multi-million dollar deal.

"I always say to the foreign investment authorities there are plenty of countries in Southeast Asia with a bright future behind them," said Fred Burke with the law firm Baker & McKenzie.

"They have to be careful not to take anything for granted. They're constantly tinkering with things and trying to work it out but there's a step backwards every time there's a step forwards."

Foreign direct investment inflows rose slowly from US$2.4 billion in 2000 to about $4 billion in 2006, then doubled in 2007. The following year inflows leapt to $11.5 billion before the global economic crisis clipped the figure back to $10 billion last year, government figures showed.

Awaiting clarity

Vietnam is on track in 2010 for investment as high as last year. In the first 8 months, FDI disbursements hit $7.25 billion.

"It's not all blue skies," said Alain Cany, head of the European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam. "We see very slow progress on many issues for investors ... and the government is moving really slowly to improve this business environment."

At least three recent measures appear to run counter to Hanoi's commitments to improve the business environment in the country of 86 million, business groups and consultants say. Two may violate Vietnam's World Trade Organization accession agreements.

The Finance Ministry decided in August to implement a rule on Oct. 1 that would compel companies to register price changes for products including cement, steel, infant milk, coal and animal feed, and could subject them to price controls.

State media reported ambassadors from the United States, EU, Australia, Canada and New Zealand said in a letter to the government in June the price control rule would "affect Vietnam's commitments as a WTO member" and could hinder foreign investment. A finance ministry official denied there was a WTO violation.

The chilling effect is harder to deny. Two sources said a foreign company that was considering a major investment in a cement project in central Vietnam recently shelved the plan after getting cold feet because of the price control measure.

With just days to go before it takes effect, those who are already committed are holding their breath.

"We are still waiting for clarity for how it will be implemented," said Enda Ryan, General Director baby formula maker Mead Johnson in Ho Chi Minh City.

Separately, in mid-July the trade ministry enacted new import licensing procedures that sparked complaints about delays to shipments. The European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam said the rules would increase costs, potentially deter investment and may be in breach of Vietnam's WTO obligations on import licensing.

The implementation of a third new rule, requiring raw animal products like fish and meat to be registered before importation, was delayed two months to Sept. 1 after foreign governments raised concerns. Uncertainty still hangs over its implementation.

Getting better

These new policies come atop a long list of perennial problems for businesses -- weak infrastructure, macroeconomic instability, legal uncertainty, poor intellectual property rights protection, mazes of red tape and corruption.

And yet, interest is steadily growing in Vietnam as its relative competitiveness improves.

"The mood has changed considerably from a year ago," said Orsolya Szotyory-Grove with the law firm Russin & Vecchi.

The country leapt 16 notches to number 59 on the 2010-2011 World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Index.

A United Nations survey ranked Vietnam eighth worldwide and third in Asia on a 2010-2012 list of the top host economies for FDI in terms of the number of mentions transnational corporations gave them as an FDI priority.

A new survey by UK Trade & Investment and the Economist Intelligence Unit said Vietnam was the top investment destination after the BRICs for the third year running.

Haagen Dazs, a unit of General Mills, started selling ice cream here at the end of August, and PepsiCo last month committed to invest $250 million in Vietnam. Others are said to be looking in areas including retail and telecoms.

But it won't all pan out. One Asian consultant estimated that less than 10 percent of firms looking here would actually invest.

Jacob Ramsay, who follows the country for the consultancy Control Risks, calls Vietnam a "boutique investment environment".

"Only companies that have had some previous exposure to similar sorts of difficulties are really looking," he said. "Or companies that have huge resources and plenty of time."

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

VN pushes for investment cooperation with China

A Vietnamese delegation led by Minister of Planning and Investment Vo
Hong Phuc paid a working visit to China at the invitation of the
Chinese National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) from Sept.
12-18.


The visit aims to discuss the development of
micro-economies, share experiences to surmount the adverse impacts of
the global financial crisis, promote investment and study development
plans in western China . It was also a chance for the two sides to
share information about their missions and support each other in
professional activities.


During its stay in China ,
the delegation held talks with NDRC’s Deputy Head Zhang Xiaoqiang on
Sept. 17 and made fact-finding tours of Gansu province to explore
the locality’s economic situation and visit several companies.


As of July 31 this year, China ranks 15 th out of 91 countries and
regions investing in Vietnam with 743 projects capitalised at 3.17
billion USD.


Also, Vietnam has carried out six
investment projects in China with a total registered capital of 9.7
million USD, mostly in the service area./.

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Friday, October 22, 2010

South Korean businesses focus on Vietnam

firm; biz
Photo: Reuters

Businesses from the South Korea see Vietnam as a promising market for their investments and intend to maintain their position as Vietnam’s number one foreign investor.

The Director of the ASEAN- Korea Center (AKC) for Planning and Development, Jae Hyun Cho stated this at a workshop on trade and investment between Vietnam-South Korea in Hanoi Wednesday.

Jae Hyun Cho is leading a delegation of 23 RoK leading enterprises that operate in agricultural machinery, forestry, seafood and foodstuffs, on a fact-finding tour of Vietnam from September 7-10 to seek out business and investment opportunities.

Investment and trade ties have developed steadily between Vietnam-RoK since Vietnam introduced the Law on Foreign Investment in 1988. The RoK has invested in nearly 2,600 projects, with a total registered capital of over US$23 billion in Vietnam.

The Deputy Trade and Industry Minister Le Duong Quang, said that businesses from the RoK, who are often amongst the top three foreign investors in Vietnam, have made their presence felt in property and infrastructure, ship building, electricity and electronics.

Despite the negative impacts of last year’s global economic crisis, bilateral trade between Vietnam and the RoK reached $9 billion in 2009 and is expected to climb to $20 billion in 2015.

At the workshop, the Director of the Foreign Investment Agency under the Planning and Investment Ministry, Do Nhat Hoang, pledged to continue supporting RoK investors to do business in Vietnam, to boost trade and investment between the two countries.

Hoang also called on RoK businesses to continue investing in Vietnam, especially in agriculture, agricultural machinery and forestry, in order to retain its position as one of Vietnam ’s leading investors.

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