Friday, November 5, 2010

Global fertiliser prices rise

HCM CITY — Fertiliser prices have increased following the appreciation of the US dollar against the Vietnamese dong as well as higher prices on the global market, spurred by high demand in many countries like India.

Le Quoc Phong, director of Binh Dien Fertiliser Company, said there were limited supplies and a shortage of reserves on the global market.

Viet Nam had had to import a large volume of fertiliser every year to satisfy local demand since its local production met only one-third of consumption, Phong said.

A kilo of DAP fertiliser has risen to VND11,200 (US$0.57), compared to VND11,000 earlier this month and VND10,600 in August.

Similarly, the price of a kilo of urea fertiliser increased from VND6,200 ($0.3) in August to VND6,250 in earlier this month to VND6,350 currently.

China is currently the biggest supplier of fertilisers to Viet Nam, accounting for nearly 45 per cent of the country's total imports, followed by Russia, South Korea and the Philippines.

In April, Chinese authorities raised the fertiliser export tariff from 35 per cent to 135 per cent.

The Vietnamese Government recently issued a circular calling for an increase of the fertiliser import duty from 5 per cent to 6.5 per cent. This pushed up prices of fertilisers, experts have said.

Most farmers are worried about the higher prices, which will add to their production costs.

More than 318,600ha under the autumn-winter rice crop in the Mekong Delta region are in the growing stage, which are in dire need of fertilisers.

To stabilise the fertiliser market and help farmers feel more secure about production, experts have urged the Government to adopt new policies.

Local fertiliser producers should restructure their distribution network and regularly check selling prices to prevent agents from raising prices freely.

Currently, the Government did not have incentive policies for enterprises to import fertiliser to keep in reserve. Fertiliser prices, thus, depended on the fluctuation on the world market, Phong said.

Fertiliser reserves were like a double-edged sword, he added. They worked well when prices increased, but when they dropped, businesses had to sell at market prices and losses were unavoidable.

The Government, he said, should create measures to ensure security for businesses and others who participate in price-stabilisation programmes. Soft loans and support when prices drop should be included, he said. — VNS

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Information management enhanced

HA NOI — Symantec Corp yesterday in Ha Noi announced the availability of Symantec Enterprise Vault 9.0 and Enterprises Vault Collector technology to help organisations store, manage and discover information across their enterprises.

Potential customers of those products were small and medium-sized enterprises who did not have the capital to develop private software for storing and managing information, Symantec's chief technology officer Mark Bregman said.

Enterprise Vault 9.0 and Enterprises Vault Collector would help enable enterprises to delete confidently and discover efficiently while protecting their information completely and reduplicating everywhere to eliminate redundant data.

Real estate expo planned for December

HCM CITY — Viet Nam International Real Estate Expo 2010 will be held at the Sai Gon Exhibition and Convention Center from December 9-12.

Vietreal 2010 is expected to attract 50 enterprises in real estate, building materials and architecture fields.

Steel price hits $805 per tonne

HCM CITY — The retail steel price rose to VND15.7 million ($805.12) per tonne, an increase of VND500,000 (US$25.6) per tonne over last week.

However, the Viet Nam Steel Association said about 200,000 tonnes of processed steel products and about 500,000 tonnes of pig iron are in stock at enterprises.

Pig iron prices in the international market have fallen to $600 per tonne.

Development bank signs credit contracts

HA NOI — Housing and Urban Development Group (HUD) and the Bank for Industry and Development of Viet Nam (BIDV) signed two credit contracts, including VND500 billion (US$25.6 million) of credit lines and VND200 billion ($10.3 million) of credit guarantees.

BIDV helped HUD to issue bonds, raising VND800 billion ($41million) for their projects. BIDV also loaned VND250 billion ($12.8 million) to HUD to accelerate certain construction projects.

Binh Minh leases pact with Regus business centre

HCM CITY — The Binh Minh Import Export Production and Trade Company (Bitexco) yesterday signed a leasing contract with Regus, a leading provider of workplace solutions.

Regus will rent the 16th floor of the 68-storey Bitexco Financial Tower, HCM City's highest building, that stands on the junction of Hai Trieu, Ngo Duc Ke and Ho Tung Mau streets in District 1. This will be its third business centre in HCM City.

Regus runs more than 1,100 business centres in 85 countries, including offices in the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur and the Chrysler Building in New York. — VNS

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Airports need to expand to ease congestion

vietnam airlines
Photo: AFP

Tan Son Nhat airport in Ho Chi Minh City is to be expanded to have space for ten extra airplanes and Hanoi's Noi Bai also has plans to add more parking space for aircraft to meet an explosive demand for air travel.

According to the Southern Airports Corporation, the agency has submitted their plans to increase the capacity of Tan Son Nhat Airport to the Civil Aviation Administration of Vietnam (CAAV).

Nguyen Nguyen Hung, the General Director of the Southern Airports Corporation, says that the current parking space for planes at Tan Son Nhat Airport is just enough to serve 20 million passengers a year, or 54,800 passengers a day. However during the traditional Tet holidays, Tan Son Nhat Airport has to receive up to and over 58,000 passengers a day.

Under the new plan, Tan Son Nhat’s present 42 parking bays will be increased to 52.

Meanwhile, Noi Bai airport now has 24 parking bays, receiving nearly 90 flights a day. Nevertheless, sometimes the airport becomes so overloaded that aircraft must queue up to take off or land, which leads to flight delays or even cancel.

However, those plans are only a temporary solution while waiting for the construction of Long Thanh Airport in the southern province of Dong Nai. The project is expected to begin in 2011 and its first phase is expected to be completed by 2015.

Over the next few years, the national flag carrier, Vietnam Airlines and Jetstar Pacific Airlines plan to increase their fleets to over 100 aircraft. These companies and hundreds of other overseas airlines face major problems with the country’s aviation sector.


Moreover, two private airlines, Air Mekong and Blue Sky, are also about to join the domestic air market.

In 2009, Vietnam’s airports handled over 26 million passengers and 445,800 tonnes of cargo, four times more than in 2000.

In the first seven months of this year, the number of passengers travelling by air was up by 33 percent over last year to 12 million, and the number of air passengers is forecast to increase by 35-40 percent this year alone.

Lai Xuan Thanh, the Deputy Head of CAAV said that his agency is working with carriers to formulate five- and ten-year development strategies to install extra aircraft bays.


Forty-five domestic and foreign airlines are currently operating up their 55 international air routes to and from Vietnam .

In the domestic market, Vietnam Airlines and Jetstar Pacific are servicing 40 routes in the country.

 

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IT firms fail to invest in R&D

firm; biz
Photo: Reuters

Most Vietnamese IT firms have failed to make adequate investment in research and development due to limited financial capacity and a lack of skilled personnel, said HCMC Computer Association chairman Chu Tien Dung.

In the past 10 years, firms focused on creating IT products to meet short-term market demands rather than properly investing in research and development (R&D), Dung said.

Domestic IT businesses that took on outsourcing work from foreign partners found it difficult to make sufficient investment in R&D because most of them were small and medium-sized, said Vietsoftware chairman of the board Tran Luong Son.

Some of the companies realised the importance of R&D but due to insufficient financial capacity, their R&D investment had yet to bring satisfactory results, he said.

While investing in R&D seems to be difficult for small IT firms, several larger enterprises have invested in R&D, resulting in new production technologies and unique products that have played a decisive factor in sharpening their competitiveness.

TMA Solutions, a large software outsourcing company, recently opened its first R&D centre in the Quang Trung Software Park in HCMC to expand its business in training, mobile service and business solutions.

Chairman of TMA Solutions Nguyen Huu Le said the company accepted outsourcing contracts from foreign companies over the past 12 years and also executed R&D projects under contracts with foreign partners.

"To date, TMA has accumulated good experience in innovation technologies from these projects and we can produce many items in Vietnam," he said.

Mobile provider Viettel also established an R&D centre to develop new telecommunication equipment. The company has developed a USB with integrated 3G, the VT1000-3G, and plans to put it on the market by the end of the year.

CMC Group has also announced that it will set aside US$2 million to research or acquire new technology.

Establishing R&D centres in Vietnam, however, still faced tax barriers and difficulties with equipment testing procedures, Le said, adding that it took his company three years to complete all relevant procedures.

Le suggested the Government should offer incentives for R&D projects.

Dung agreed. He said that Vietnamese ICT companies were seeing big opportunities in technology transfer from global IT companies as they move their R&D centres to Vietnam to cut costs.

Several local outsourcing companies have seen a chance to receive R&D centres from foreign partners. The centres brought comprehensive technology and increased profits for local outsourcing companies, he noted.

To encourage more enterprises to shift to R&D, Dung suggested the Government rethink its tax policy for ICT companies that invested in R&D projects or R&D labs.

 

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FDI poured into service more than production field

FDI poured into service more than production fieldA recent drop in the influx of foreign direct investment to Vietnam should not concern the country so much as where the money ends up, experts say.

Foreign direct investment (FDI) to Vietnam totaled US$11.57 billion in the first eight months of this year, down 12.3 percent from a year ago, according to the Ministry of Planning and Investment. Vietnam had hoped to attract between $22 million and $25 million of FDI in 2010.

Nguyen Mai, Chairman of the Vietnam Association of Foreign Invested Enterprises, said it is unnecessary to worry about a reduction in the flow of FDI. However, a large part of the FDI has not made it into building the nation’s production capacity, he said. Instead, much of the money has ended up in the real estate sector.

Goodbye industry, hello real estate

Industrial parks, which focus mainly on production fields, receive a small share of the FDI, Mai said.

According to the Ho Chi Minh City Export Processing and Industrial Zones Authority (HEPZA), the city’s industrial parks accounted for 13 out of the 165 FDI projects registered in the metropolitan area during the first seven months of this year. Capital for the industrial projects accounted for 4.57 percent of the total FDI allocated to HCMC.

The capital scale of the city’s industrial projects is also smaller, according to officials from HEPZA. Only four out of the 13 projects received capital investments totaling $10 million or more.

Foreign firms investing in the industrial and processing sectors now account for 20- 30 percent of the total FDI. Years ago, that figure was 70-80 percent, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen Thanh Bien said during a recent meeting.

Bien said his agency is working with the Ministry of Planning and Investment to offer preferential treatment for foreign firms that invest in industrial parks. The incentives, he said, are aimed at encouraging the industrial and processing sectors.

Carpetbagging

Meanwhile, the real estate sector has become an attractive area for foreign investment. Real estate ranked third in Vietnam’s FDI investments in the first eight months of 2010 and $2.39 billion was spent on such projects. The sum accounted for 20.7 percent of total FDI during this period, according to the Foreign Investment Agency.

Foreign investors often earn profits of 30- 40 percent in real estate projects as opposed to 17-18 percent profit margins gleaned from electronic or hotel ventures.

Real estate prices in Vietnam are rather high compared to other countries. A square meter of Keangnam, a residential development in Hanoi that was financially backed by a Korean firm, is priced at some $3,000.

FDI in the property field may not do much for the economy, some say.

Vietnamese people can build houses for themselves, Dr. Hansjorg Herr from the Berlin School of Economics and Law said at a recent conference.

Large foreign investment in the sector may create a real estate bubble that could destabilize the economy, Hansjorg said.

Nguyen Tran Bat, chairman and general director of HCMC-based legal consultancy Invest Consult Group, said some localities should be more careful in licensing foreign investment projects, as they seem eager to bring in FDI projects no matter what the cost.

“The assessment should also be done at many levels, from assessing partners to assessing technology and socioeconomic impacts,” he said.

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Vietnam gains big from free trade, report says

Vietnam makes short-term gains in regional trade deals and braces for the other shoe to fall



A farmer collects latex at a rubber plantation in Vietnam’s central highlands. Rubber is among key export products that have potential gains from trade liberation.

Vietnam’s economy has benefited greatly from the free trade agreements it has signed over the past 24 years, according to a report issued last week.

The nation has successfully pursued a policy of market price liberation, better exchange rate management, and private competition with state-owned enterprises, said a report authored by the Europe-Vietnam Mutrap III, a multinational trade assistance project. The authors also lauded Vietnam’s modernization of its financial system and implementation of tax reforms.

The report said that Vietnam has witnessed rapid economic growth, trade and investment expansion, and substantial poverty alleviation.

Manufacturers of footwear, leather, seafood, textiles, produce, rubber and coffee were optimistic about their potential gains from trade liberation, the authors reported after interviewing representatives from these various industries.

The report added that representatives from other domestic firms (i.e. auto, paper and pulp) were wary of the changes but resigned to facing increased competition from abroad.

Vietnam completed free trade agreements with its ASEAN partners in 2003 and with Japan in 2008. The country also signed ASEAN agreements with China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

ASEAN, as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations is often known, comprises ten countries: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

A shot in the arm

Le Quang Lan, deputy director general of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Multilateral Trade Policy Department, said local businesses have enjoyed immediate gains from the regional trade deals.

The South Korean and Japanese governments cut import tariffs for products imported from ASEAN right away. Since then, Lan said, Vietnamese businesses have paid tariffs of less than 5 percent on goods sold in those developed markets.

More than 70 percent of Vietnam’s export products have benefited from the low tariffs since 2007, boosting the country’s export to Korea. On average, about 50 percent of businesses in ASEAN countries enjoy the low tax in Korea, said Lan.

In the agreements between China and ASEAN, 25 percent of Vietnamese businesses benefited, he said.

Vo Tri Thanh, deputy director of the Central Institute for Economic Management, said the agreements have improved the competitiveness of local firms and attracted foreign investors.

He added that the agreements have also improved skills and salaries among the domestic workforce, especially in the management and engineering sectors.

According to Thanh, the average salary for a Vietnamese CEO working for a multinational firm is VND400 million per month while the salary for state-owned company heads topped out at VND50 million.

Last year, Vietnam’s total exports were valued at US$56.73 billion, a drop of 9.5 percent year-on-year due to the global economic downturn.

Its partners in the agreements contributed a majority to the country’s export value last year. For example, the ASEAN market imported $8.5 billion worth of Vietnamese products, compared to $6.2 billion in Japan, $4.8 billion in China, and $2.5 billion in Korea.

The partners were also suppliers of Vietnamese businesses, with China topping the list followed by ASEAN members, Japan and Korea.

You scratch my back...

Lan, from the Trade Policy Department, said that Vietnam will fulfill its commitments to cutting import tariffs on products from its Asian trade partners over the next decade.

Vietnam aims to shave 3 to 4 percent off the current 12 percent tariffs on consumer products, garments, wooden furniture and steel, said Lan.

The country continues to protect agricultural products like sugar, eggs and tobacco, and industries like petrol, rubber, automotive products, he said.

Businesses should prepare for the cuts, Lan said, adding they should also be aware of governments that cut back tariffs only to raise technical barriers and quality requirements on imports to their markets.

He claimed that Vietnamese trade negotiators did not pay enough attention to those barriers.

James Cassing, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh, said the effectiveness of the free trade agreements did not only depend on import tariff cuts.

If tough technical barriers are raised to protect domestic industries then the agreements mean nothing to partner businesses, he said.

The professor warned that the barriers will become increasingly common in export markets. Vietnam is in the process of negotiating agreements with the European Union and Chile.

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Thursday, November 4, 2010

Vietnam gains big from free trade, report says

Vietnam makes short-term gains in regional trade deals and braces for the other shoe to fall



A farmer collects latex at a rubber plantation in Vietnam’s central highlands. Rubber is among key export products that have potential gains from trade liberation.

Vietnam’s economy has benefited greatly from the free trade agreements it has signed over the past 24 years, according to a report issued last week.

The nation has successfully pursued a policy of market price liberation, better exchange rate management, and private competition with state-owned enterprises, said a report authored by the Europe-Vietnam Mutrap III, a multinational trade assistance project. The authors also lauded Vietnam’s modernization of its financial system and implementation of tax reforms.

The report said that Vietnam has witnessed rapid economic growth, trade and investment expansion, and substantial poverty alleviation.

Manufacturers of footwear, leather, seafood, textiles, produce, rubber and coffee were optimistic about their potential gains from trade liberation, the authors reported after interviewing representatives from these various industries.

The report added that representatives from other domestic firms (i.e. auto, paper and pulp) were wary of the changes but resigned to facing increased competition from abroad.

Vietnam completed free trade agreements with its ASEAN partners in 2003 and with Japan in 2008. The country also signed ASEAN agreements with China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.

ASEAN, as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations is often known, comprises ten countries: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

A shot in the arm

Le Quang Lan, deputy director general of the Ministry of Industry and Trade’s Multilateral Trade Policy Department, said local businesses have enjoyed immediate gains from the regional trade deals.

The South Korean and Japanese governments cut import tariffs for products imported from ASEAN right away. Since then, Lan said, Vietnamese businesses have paid tariffs of less than 5 percent on goods sold in those developed markets.

More than 70 percent of Vietnam’s export products have benefited from the low tariffs since 2007, boosting the country’s export to Korea. On average, about 50 percent of businesses in ASEAN countries enjoy the low tax in Korea, said Lan.

In the agreements between China and ASEAN, 25 percent of Vietnamese businesses benefited, he said.

Vo Tri Thanh, deputy director of the Central Institute for Economic Management, said the agreements have improved the competitiveness of local firms and attracted foreign investors.

He added that the agreements have also improved skills and salaries among the domestic workforce, especially in the management and engineering sectors.

According to Thanh, the average salary for a Vietnamese CEO working for a multinational firm is VND400 million per month while the salary for state-owned company heads topped out at VND50 million.

Last year, Vietnam’s total exports were valued at US$56.73 billion, a drop of 9.5 percent year-on-year due to the global economic downturn.

Its partners in the agreements contributed a majority to the country’s export value last year. For example, the ASEAN market imported $8.5 billion worth of Vietnamese products, compared to $6.2 billion in Japan, $4.8 billion in China, and $2.5 billion in Korea.

The partners were also suppliers of Vietnamese businesses, with China topping the list followed by ASEAN members, Japan and Korea.

You scratch my back...

Lan, from the Trade Policy Department, said that Vietnam will fulfill its commitments to cutting import tariffs on products from its Asian trade partners over the next decade.

Vietnam aims to shave 3 to 4 percent off the current 12 percent tariffs on consumer products, garments, wooden furniture and steel, said Lan.

The country continues to protect agricultural products like sugar, eggs and tobacco, and industries like petrol, rubber, automotive products, he said.

Businesses should prepare for the cuts, Lan said, adding they should also be aware of governments that cut back tariffs only to raise technical barriers and quality requirements on imports to their markets.

He claimed that Vietnamese trade negotiators did not pay enough attention to those barriers.

James Cassing, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh, said the effectiveness of the free trade agreements did not only depend on import tariff cuts.

If tough technical barriers are raised to protect domestic industries then the agreements mean nothing to partner businesses, he said.

The professor warned that the barriers will become increasingly common in export markets. Vietnam is in the process of negotiating agreements with the European Union and Chile.

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