Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Int’l research firm sees potential in VN’s solid waste market

Int’l research firm sees potential in VN’s solid waste market

Research and Markets company has affirmed that solid waste management
industry in Vietnam was potential and the industrial solid waste
management market would continue to grow fast.


In a
summary report posted onto http://www.researchandmarkets.com, the
leading supplier of international market research and market data wrote:
"Vietnam is currently one of the fastest growing and untapped solid
waste management markets in the Asia-Pacific region" and "The share of
urban population further increased which infused municipal solid waste
generation growth to reach new height."


The report
showed that fast industrialization and urbanization has been promoted in
Vietnam with urban population rising to 31.7 million and accounting for
37 percent of the national population in the first half of 2009. This
trend has intensified in 2010.


It added that among
the sectors, industrial solid waste is growing at the fastest rate in
the country. Sectors including, food and beverages, wearing apparel,
tanning and dressing of leather, wood and products of wood, fabricated
metal products are the backbone of Vietnams industrial sector and
together represent 65 percent of all industrial employment and 57
percent of all industrial firms in the country. Amid the fast
developments in industrial production, the industrial solid waste
generation has reached an estimated 5.7 million tonnes in 2010 and has
been anticipated to post phenomenal growth at 19 percent during
2011-2014.


It wrote: "The government has approved
the waste management strategy outlining specific plans to 2025. The plan
states that any organization or individual releasing waste that causes
pollution must pay for damages. By 2025, the government aims for
developments of solid waste recycling plant in all cities for households
to dispose and treat their waste. In addition, to control pollution,
100 percent of solid waste from urban areas and toxic and non-toxic
industrial solid waste will be collected and treated. Besides, 90
percent of construction solid waste and rural residential solid waste
also aimed to be collected and treated."


According
to the Research and Markets company, the business and social environment
in Vietnam has become favourable for foreign investments owing to the
WTO accession and relaxed regulatory policies./.

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Steel sales slip in September

Steel sales in September surprised experts by dropping 41 percent over August to 283,000 tonnes.


"September's decline was not expected. We forecast that the price of
steel ingots would go through the 600 USD per tonne mark but instead it
dropped to 580 USD," said the Vietnam Steel Association's Deputy
Chairman Nguyen Tien Nghi.


Nghi added that due to
the low price of pig iron on the world market, Vietnamese consumers are
still waiting for further reductions.


Because of this, the decline has continued into the first few days of this month.


Meanwhile, he added, traders have been selling off their steel stocks.


Due to the situation, many companies and agencies have cut prices by
roughly 300,000 VND (15 USD) per tonne to stimulate the market.


According to a report by the association, the price, excluding
value-added tax, is now standing at about 13.6 million VND (697 USD) per
tonne.


The association said the situation would
steady itself in the second half of October, as the rainy season ends
and demand for construction steel picks up.


"In
addition, when steel stocks are sold out, traders will be forced to
renew their supplies and consumption will increase," Nghi said.


He added that demand on the world market is also increasing which would help push the price back up.


Talking about sales for the whole year, Nghi optimistically said that they would increase by 15 percent over last year.


"Because of high consumption in previous months, the dip in September
will not affect sales for the whole year," he explained.


Last year, the country consumed nearly 4.2 million tonnes of steel./.

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Stock indices continue to decline

Blue chips tumbled on Oct. 12 on the HCM Stock Exchange, despite a rise
overnight in the US stock market, dragging the VN-Index down 1.09
percent to close at 454.32.


The volume rose 28.5
percent over the previous day to 28.3 million shares while the value
increased by 22 percent against Oct. 11 to 683.8 billion VND (35.1
million USD).


Decliners outnumbered advancers by
185-30, with nine out of the 10 largest capitalised shares declined.
Only insurer Bao Viet Holdings (BVH) remained unchanged.


The vast majority of the gainers were mid-cap and penny stocks,
including Ben Tre Aquaproduct Import and Export (ABT), Cuu Long Fish
(ACL), Godaco Seafood (AGD), Agribank Securities (AGR), logistics
Gemadept (GMD), HCM City Metal (HMC) and Tay Bac Minerals Investment
(KTB).


Ocean Group (OGC) reclaimed the position of
most active stock with 1.46 million shares changing hands, but it slid
nearly 2 percent to close at 29,500 VND (1.51 USD) per share.


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index fell by 1.2 percent to close at 119.81, a fourth successive day of loss.


Market volume advanced by 25 percent over Oct. 11 to 23.1 million
shares worth 526.1 billion VND (27 million USD), but losers still
largely outnumbered gainers by 238-51.


Blue-chips tumbled and of the 10 leading shares by capitalisation, only Asia Commercial Bank (ACB) closed unchanged.


PetroVietnam Construction (PVX) was still the most active with 2.4
million shares changing hands, closing down 1.35 percent to an average
of 21,900 VND (1.12 USD) per share.


Foreign investors picked up a net buy of 35 billion VND (1.8 million USD) worth of shares on Oct. 12 on both exchanges./.

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Top mining company to de-list shares

Sai Gon Quy Nhon Mining Co (SQC) will seek shareholder approval to
suspend its listing on the Hanoi Stock Exchange due to unfavourable
business conditions.


The company's general director,
Tran Trieu Thanh, told a press conference on Oct. 11 that production
at the plant has been suspended due to the imposition of high export
taxes.


The company operates the Sai Gon Quy Nhon
titanium slag plant, the first plant in Vietnam to produce titanium
slag at a purity of 93 percent.


The export tax
levied on titanium slag is currently 15 percent – down from an earlier
18 percent but still too high for the company's exports to remain
competitive.


To cope with the high tarriff and
attempt to cut its losses, Sai Gon Quy Nhon Mining Co began reducing
capacity at the plant in July this year, Thanh said.


Suspending the loss-making slag production operations entirely actually
would improve the company's bottom line, Thanh said, hinting that
production could resume in the first quarter of 2011, when tarriff
changes could be possible.


Meanwhile, the suspended
operations are having a negative impact on share value, prompting the
management's decision to de-list, pending shareholder approval.


The company's leading shareholder, Dang Thanh Tam, said the blue-chip
shares had a large impact on movements of the HNX-Index.


In response to the concerns of small shareholders, Tam said, the
company's management board plans to buy back shares from any investors
that no longer wish to invest in the company.


Changes in tarriff policies would be decisive as to how long the listing would be suspended, Thanh said.


"I believe the State will soon realise our difficulties and make proper changes to support our production," he added./.

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Japan questions South Korea G20 leadership over FX

TOKYO - Japan called into question on Wednesday South Korea's leadership of the Group of 20 forum because of Seoul's interventions to stem the won's rise and insisted its own currency action was qualitatively different.

The remarks by Japan's finance minister underscored deep divisions over currency policies, an issue that will dominate G20 meetings in South Korea this month and next after a weekend International Monetary Fund meeting failed to make headway.

"As chair of the G20, South Korea's role will be seriously questioned," Yoshihiko Noda told a parliamentary panel when asked about South Korea's currency interventions.

Record low interest rates in rich countries have pushed global investors into emerging markets in search of higher yields, driving up their currencies.

In response, several governments have stepped into foreign exchange markets or tried to curb capital inflows, raising fears of a currency "race to the bottom" that may trigger protectionism and hobble global growth.

Japan itself intervened in the currency market last month for the first time in more than six years to try to stem a rise in the yen that threatens its fragile economic recovery.

Noda drew a distinction between that action and more frequent intervention by South Korea and China.

"In South Korea, intervention happens regularly, and in China, the pace of yuan reform has been slow," Noda said.

"Our message is that we have confirmed at the Group of Seven that emerging market countries with current account surpluses should allow their currencies to be more flexible."

South Korea did not immediately comment on the remarks.

No consensus

Pressure on China to allow its currency to rise faster is likely to intensify but hopes for a G20 consensus look slim.

German Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle was quoted as saying Beijing should make concessions to avoid foreign exchange tensions turning into a trade war.

"China bears a lot of the responsibility for avoiding an escalation," Bruederle told Handelsblatt newspaper.

China's insistence that the yuan's rise must be gradual is a huge obstacle to the appreciation in Asian exchange rates policymakers say is needed to reduce global imbalances.

It, and other countries, counter that the prospect of the Federal Reserve printing money again will flood the world economy with more liquidity, weaken the dollar and push emerging currencies yet higher.

"It'll be impossible for the G20 to reach a consensus on currencies. Many emerging economies feel that they are being forced to intervene because of a weak dollar," said Etsuko Yamashita, chief economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp.

"China will not succumb to outside pressure."

Minutes of the Fed's last policy meeting showed its policymakers thought easier policy may be needed "before long" to bolster a struggling recovery.

China's chief G20 currency negotiator Cui Tiankai said Beijing was trying to avoid a currency stand-off but that no specific currency should be on the G20 agenda.

"We are doing our best to avoid that," Cui, a foreign vice-minister, said on the sidelines of a conference in Seoul. "But it requires efforts of all the G20 members, not China alone."

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said he saw no risk of a global currency war but on the need for a stronger yuan, he added: "We just want to make sure it's happening at a gradual but still significant rate."

The major world currency not being talked down is the euro, which rose again on Wednesday, as the European Central Bank ponders a reversal of ultra-loose policy while the Fed is poised to ease further and Japan has already cut rates to zero.

"In the G4 space, the ECB is the only central bank that is talking of an exit policy and that is helping the euro," said Ankita Dudani, G-10 currency strategist at RBS.

Analysts said Tokyo's criticism of Seoul stemmed from its worries about competitiveness. The yen is up about 13 percent against the dollar this year, the won only about 4 percent.

"Japan feels it has been under pressure not to intervene because of G7 (Group of Seven) rules but people outside (of G7) seem to be playing by different rules," said Robert Feldman, chief economist at Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities in Tokyo.

Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan urged Seoul and Beijing to act responsibly but acknowledged Tokyo's delicate position.

"I want South Korea and China to take responsible actions within common rules, though how to say this is difficult because Japan has also intervened," he told lawmakers.

Japan sold 2.1 trillion yen ($26 billion) last month to curb the yen's strength versus the dollar. South Korea has intervened to the tune of about $13 billion since late September but analysts said it has acted more aggressively in relative terms.

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HK chief moves to curb Chinese property investors

HONG KONG - Hong Kong's leader outlined new steps Wednesday to cool the world's hottest real estate market, including a halt to automatic residency for wealthy Chinese buyers, depressing property shares.

Chief Executive Donald Tsang said he was responding to "public concern" about a residential housing shortage and sky-rocketing prices, at a rowdy legislative assembly session in which one legislator was escorted from the chamber.

Residential property prices have risen 20 percent in the last year, he noted.

"Housing is currently the greatest concern of our people," said Tsang. "Over the past few years, private housing supply has been relatively low. We should address the fundamentals by increasing land supply in response to market demand."

Among measures he unveiled was a temporary amendment to the territory's Capital Investment Scheme, which is intended to encourage investment in the territory.

The amendment will prevent investors from gaining residency in Hong Kong through property purchases from October 14, Tsang said.

Investors from the mainland have long been lured by the prospect of residency in Hong Kong, a financial centre and gateway to China that is run under a different legal system and boasts higher living standards.

The announcement sent share prices in property developers plunging: SHK Properties was down 3.6 percent, New World Development lost 3.5 percent and Sino Land was down 2.6 percent.

To help ease the housing shortage, Tsang also announced plans to build residential property on the city's old airport, Kai Tak, which was closed down in favor of a new more spacious sight away from residential areas in 1998.

On Tuesday angry protesters interrupted an auction of an upmarket residential site in the Kowloon area that fetched 1.63 billion Hong Kong dollars (US$210 million).

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Vietnam’s only refinery to auction oil

Oil produced at the Dung Quat refinery will be auctioned out to reputed buyers, an official told Tuoi Tre Monday, adding that necessary paperwork is being done for it.

Nguyen Hoai Giang, general director of the Binh Son Oil Refining and Petrochemical Company Limited, which operates the refinery, said it should not be difficult to restrict the auction to reputed distributors.

Binh Son’s state-run holding company PetroVietnam (PVN) has held a similar auction for one of its subsidiaries, he said.

Last week a top PVN executive said poor forecast of supply and demand had left Vietnam’s sole oil refinery saddled with huge volumes of unsold products.

Domestic demand was 10 percent lower than forecast and the plant’s output was 25 percent higher, he said.

One wholesaler said Dung Quat’s products cost more than imported fuel but are still preferable because of the exchange rate risks involved in importing.

Three state-owned companies have the right to distribute Dung Quat products -- PV Oil, Petec, and Petrolimex.

Petrolimex was added to the list after it complained that it was unfair to allow just two of PVN’s affiliates to buy directly from the refinery.

Petrolimex is set to finalize a deal to buy 140,000 cubic meters of A92 and A95 gasoline and diesel oil with Binh Son this month.

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