Showing posts with label reach billion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label reach billion. Show all posts

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Dollar demand stable, though pressures remain

HANOI - Vietnamese banks have enough dollars to keep the dong from succumbing to immediate pressure from higher-than-expected inflation and a persistent trade deficit reflected in this month's data, traders said.

But economists warn that could worsen later in the year, putting the currency under renewed downward pressure.

On Monday the Ministry of Planning and Investment estimated the trade deficit hit an estimated $1.05 billion in September, sending the deficit for the first nine months of the year to $8.58 billion.

The government expects the full-year shortfall to reach about $14 billion.

Annual inflation this month accelerated for the first time since March, hitting 8.92 percent. September's consumer price index rose 1.31 percent from last month, the highest monthly rise since February, the government said last week.

Nevertheless, the dollar/dong exchange rate has been steady since the State Bank of Vietnam devalued the currency by 2 percent on Aug. 18.

"Banks now have ample dollar funds so they can deal with client borrowing and trading," said a foreign exchange manager at a Hanoi-based lender.

Official and unofficial exchange rates have been close to the VND19,500 trading band limit since the devaluation. On Monday there was a VND40, or 0.2 percent, difference between dollar/dong bid prices on interbank and unofficial markets.

The gap is sometimes seen as an indicator of pressure on the currency to depreciate.

Overnight dollar interest rates for loans on the interbank market have ranged between 0.41 percent and 0.46 percent, Reuters data showed.

Banks have benefited from dollar inflows at businesses that tend to receive payments from overseas during the later months of the year, traders said.

Still, Nguyen Minh Phong, an economist at the Hanoi Research Institute for Socioeconomic Development, said the widening trade deficit and modest foreign direct investment inflows would keep the dong under pressure.

"Vietnam's FDI disbursement has only started to pick up and cannot significantly support the exchange rate", Phong said.

Vietnam's total balance of payments deficit may reach $4 billion this year, it said.

Higher demand for dollars for import later in the year, combined with Vietnam's thin foreign exchange reserves, would contribute to the pressures, economists said.

Foreign investors disbursed an estimated $8 billion in Vietnam in the first nine months of this year, a rise of 4.8 percent from the same period last year. Meanwhile, Vietnam's economy expanded by an estimated 6.52 percent in the first nine months of 2010 from the same period a year earlier.

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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Plastics exports to reach 1 billion USD in 2010

The Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) forecasts that the turnover of
the country’s plastics exports may reach 1 billion USD this year as
Vietnam ’s plastic products have a firm foothold in the world.


According to the MoIT’s Industry and Trade Information Centre, the
export of plastic products in the first seven months of the year earnt
554 million USD. Amongst the 70 importers of Vietnamese plastic
products, Japan is the largest.


In the second
half of July only, Vietnam ’s exports of plastic products to Japan
reached over 11 billion USD, accounting for 26.5 percent of the
country’s total.


It was followed by the US
with an estimated turnover of 5.7 million USD. The US was the
largest importer of Vietnamese plastic products in 2009.


Besides their traditional markets, Vietnamese businesses have also
penetrated markets in new EU member countries like Lithuania , the
Czech Republic , Estonia , Hungary and Poland as well as
African and Middle Eastern countries, to maintain their export growth
and avoid risks when traditional markets fluctuate.


According to the MoIT, plastics is one of the fastest-growing
production sectors in Vietnam over the past ten years, with an
average growth rate of 15-20 percent per year. Plastic packaging earns
the most, accounting for 80 percent of the total value of plastic
exports.


However, the plastics sector still
relies heavily on imported materials and production is usually on a
small scale with no long-term investment strategies. At present, the
sector needs around 1.5 million tonnes of raw materials each year and
the domestic supply can only meet one fifth of this. Up to 90 percent of
the 2,000 domestic plastic producers are small and medium sized
businesses.


The Vietnam Plastics Association (VPA)
recommends that businesses should focus investment on groups of export
staples that have a competitive edge, develop hi-tech plastic products
and self-degrading wrappings and boost the production of domestic raw
materials. There should also be more emphasis on re-cycling.


At present, the plastics sector is focusing on building several
factories to produce polypropylene and polyethylene, which are due to
become operational later this year./.

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