Sunday, January 2, 2011

Footwear sector plans to develop supporting industry

The Vietnam Leather and Footwear Association (Lefaso) has submitted to the government a strategy to develop the sector from now till 2025, focusing on the supporting and material industry.

According to Lefaso President Nguyen Duc Thuan, the strategy aims at ending the sector’s dependence on foreign materials and technologies and shifting from sub-contracting.

Under the strategy, the sector will need VND18.8 trillion (US$989 million) to produce shoetrees and models and expand production of materials including leather and leatherette.

The plan is expected to help the sector to earn $8.5 billion from exports by 2015 and $11 billion by 2020 with the localization rate of 65-75 percent from 50 percent at present.

Thuan explained that the strategy was prompted by the fact that the sector has been suffering from a serious shortage of materials for many years, due to a lack of supporting industry.

At present, the country has only 30 enterprises, including five with foreign investment capital, producing tanned leather, the main material for the footwear sector. Those enterprises can meet only 30 percent of the demands for materials of domestic footwear enterprises.

The Lefaso leader further said that the sector has also to cope with the EU’s anti-dumping tax on Vietnam’s footwear products.

In an effort to boost exports, Lefaso has carried out many promotion activities, including hosting the 29th international conference of the Asian footwear sector and the international fair of footwear materials and machines.

At present, Vietnamese shoe makers have got orders for exports to fill until the first quarter of 2011, as customers are shifting their attention from China to Vietnam.

In the first nine months of the year, the sector earned over $3.6 billion from exports, a year-on-year increase of 23 percent. The figure is expected to hit over $5 billion by the end of the year.

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Footwear sector plans to develop supporting industry

The Vietnam Leather and Footwear Association (Lefaso) has submitted to the government a strategy to develop the sector from now till 2025, focusing on the supporting and material industry.

According to Lefaso President Nguyen Duc Thuan, the strategy aims at ending the sector’s dependence on foreign materials and technologies and shifting from sub-contracting.

Under the strategy, the sector will need VND18.8 trillion (US$989 million) to produce shoetrees and models and expand production of materials including leather and leatherette.

The plan is expected to help the sector to earn $8.5 billion from exports by 2015 and $11 billion by 2020 with the localization rate of 65-75 percent from 50 percent at present.

Thuan explained that the strategy was prompted by the fact that the sector has been suffering from a serious shortage of materials for many years, due to a lack of supporting industry.

At present, the country has only 30 enterprises, including five with foreign investment capital, producing tanned leather, the main material for the footwear sector. Those enterprises can meet only 30 percent of the demands for materials of domestic footwear enterprises.

The Lefaso leader further said that the sector has also to cope with the EU’s anti-dumping tax on Vietnam’s footwear products.

In an effort to boost exports, Lefaso has carried out many promotion activities, including hosting the 29th international conference of the Asian footwear sector and the international fair of footwear materials and machines.

At present, Vietnamese shoe makers have got orders for exports to fill until the first quarter of 2011, as customers are shifting their attention from China to Vietnam.

In the first nine months of the year, the sector earned over $3.6 billion from exports, a year-on-year increase of 23 percent. The figure is expected to hit over $5 billion by the end of the year.

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Saturday, January 1, 2011

Workshop increases Vietnam-India strategic partnership

Vietnam and India have a great potential for cooperation in services, pharmaceuticals, oil refinery, transport, agriculture, information technology, tourism, education and production of fine art articles, said a recent workshop in New Delhi.

Trade and economic ties between India and Vietnam have seen a rapid growth in recent years with two-way trade rising from US$489.2 million in 2003 to over $2 billion in 2009, participants stressed at the workshop entitled India-Vietnam strategic partnership: tapping potential for expanding cooperation.

The two countries expect to bring the bilateral trade to $2.55 billion this year. Vietnam’s exports to India are mainly tea, coffee, rubber, coal, computer hardware and electronic appliances, while its imports from India steel, livestock feeding, pharmaceuticals, machinery equipment, cotton, leather and textile products and pesticide.

However, participants stressed Vietnam and India have yet to fully tap their potential in trade and economic ties, urging the two countries to overcome existing difficulties, such as tax levels, customs procedure and transport.

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Workshop increases Vietnam-India strategic partnership

Vietnam and India have a great potential for cooperation in services, pharmaceuticals, oil refinery, transport, agriculture, information technology, tourism, education and production of fine art articles, said a recent workshop in New Delhi.

Trade and economic ties between India and Vietnam have seen a rapid growth in recent years with two-way trade rising from US$489.2 million in 2003 to over $2 billion in 2009, participants stressed at the workshop entitled India-Vietnam strategic partnership: tapping potential for expanding cooperation.

The two countries expect to bring the bilateral trade to $2.55 billion this year. Vietnam’s exports to India are mainly tea, coffee, rubber, coal, computer hardware and electronic appliances, while its imports from India steel, livestock feeding, pharmaceuticals, machinery equipment, cotton, leather and textile products and pesticide.

However, participants stressed Vietnam and India have yet to fully tap their potential in trade and economic ties, urging the two countries to overcome existing difficulties, such as tax levels, customs procedure and transport.

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iPhone 4 flies off shelf on first sales day in Vietnam

iPhone 4 flies off shelf on first sales day in VietnamApple’s latest iPhone completely sold out by Thursday morning when it was officially distributed in Vietnam for the first time.

Local telecom giants Vinaphone and Viettel said they imported only 500 phones each and this first batch was sold out completely after just a few hours, according to a report posted on the news website VnExpress

Long lines of people waiting to buy the phone gathered in front of Vinaphone and Viettel stores in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City at around 7 a.m. As there were not enough phones to sell, many customers went home empty-handed and angry, VnExpress said.

Pham Ngoc Tu, Vinaphone marketing manager, said that demand was much higher than expected. He said his company will import another 300 phones next week.

The iPhone 4 was launched in the US in June. Although the smartphone has been available at phone shops around the country for months, it was only distributed officially in Vietnam via Vinaphone and Viettel for the first time this week.

Official prices are set at VND13.4 million for the 16 gigabyte version and VND15.6 million for the 32 GB model. Prices at these official outlets are VND2-3 million lower than prices at small-scale phone shops.

Vinaphone and Viettel began selling the previous versions 3G and 3GS of the iPhone in March.

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iPhone 4 flies off shelf on first sales day in Vietnam

iPhone 4 flies off shelf on first sales day in VietnamApple’s latest iPhone completely sold out by Thursday morning when it was officially distributed in Vietnam for the first time.

Local telecom giants Vinaphone and Viettel said they imported only 500 phones each and this first batch was sold out completely after just a few hours, according to a report posted on the news website VnExpress

Long lines of people waiting to buy the phone gathered in front of Vinaphone and Viettel stores in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City at around 7 a.m. As there were not enough phones to sell, many customers went home empty-handed and angry, VnExpress said.

Pham Ngoc Tu, Vinaphone marketing manager, said that demand was much higher than expected. He said his company will import another 300 phones next week.

The iPhone 4 was launched in the US in June. Although the smartphone has been available at phone shops around the country for months, it was only distributed officially in Vietnam via Vinaphone and Viettel for the first time this week.

Official prices are set at VND13.4 million for the 16 gigabyte version and VND15.6 million for the 32 GB model. Prices at these official outlets are VND2-3 million lower than prices at small-scale phone shops.

Vinaphone and Viettel began selling the previous versions 3G and 3GS of the iPhone in March.

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Business briefs

• Pledged foreign direct investment into property projects in Vietnam dropped by 12.7 percent in the first nine months from a year earlier, according to figures from the Foreign Investment Agency. Of the total US$12.2 billion committed foreign investment in the first nine months of this year, $8.05 billion has been disbursed.

• Banks have been slow in lowering interest rates because they are investing more in government bonds, said Nguyen Van Giau, the central bank’s governor. Banks can make profits from high yields on government bonds, he said. About VND48 trillion ($2.46 billion) of bonds have been issued so far this year, five to six times the usual amount over the same period in previous years.

• The Asian Development Bank said it has approved a $630 million loan to help reform Vietnam’s state-owned enterprises (SOEs). The multi-tranche facility aims to improve the efficiency of SOEs and enhance corporate governance to spur Vietnam’s economic growth, the Manila-based bank said in a statement.

• Loans in Vietnam by the end of September were estimated to rise 19.5 percent from the end of 2009, in line with an annual target of 25 percent credit growth. The projection was based on expansion of 19.27 percent as of September 27, State Bank of Vietnam Governor Nguyen Van Giau said. “Compared with the 25-percent target for 2010, (such growth) is not low,” he said.

• TNK-BP, BP Plc’s venture with a group of Russian billionaires, will make a proposal to buy BP’s share in an offshore natural gas project in Vietnam. BP, Europe’s largest oil producer by volume, plans to sell $30 billion of assets in 18 months to cover costs linked to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, the worst in US history. BP said in July it plans to sell interests in the Nam Con Son gas project in Vietnam.

• The State Bank of Vietnam said on Wednesday it would relax compulsory reserve requirements for banks that made significant loans for agriculture or rural development as a way to mobilize funding for the countryside. Banks with loans for the agricultural sector or rural development totaling 70 percent or more of outstanding loans would only be required to hold 5 percent of normal reserve levels, which depend on deposit terms, it said in a statement.

• Commercial banks will reduce deposit rates to as low as 11 percent by October 15 from the current 11.2 percent after the central bank’s recent easing of lending rules, Duong Thu Huong, chairwoman of the Vietnam Banks Association. Banks will have greater scope to lend after the central bank said it would allow them to use 25 percent of non-term deposits made by businesses for loans.

• Vietnam will start planting crops for genetically modified food between 2011 and 2015 with the goal of increasing the planting area of crops like genetically modified corn, cotton and soybeans to 30 to 50 percent of the country’s total by 2020, based on a government directive in 2006.

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