Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Vietnam coffee exporters seek funds for new crop

HANOI - Coffee exporters in Vietnam, the world's second largest producer of the commodity, are trying to raise funds via stock listings or share auctions ahead of a major robusta crop as banks tighten lending to avoid bad debt.

Coffee output from the 2010/2011 harvest due to start late this month could rise 2.3 percent to 19.77 million bags, or 1.19 million tons, a Reuters poll showed on Tuesday.

Exporters and domestic processors would need $1.76 billion to buy all the beans from the harvest, based on Thursday's domestic market price of 28.9 million dong a ton.

Bankers and coffee exporters say corporate demand for cash for bean purchases often stays high in the fourth quarter, especially in November or December, when the harvest peaks.

Daklak Investment Export-Import Corp, or Inexim Daklak, one of the country's top coffee exporters, hoped to raise at least $1.2 million by auctioning 1.65 million shares early next month on the Hanoi stock market, the exchange said on Thursday.

Harvest starts next month

The company is based in Daklak, Vietnam's largest coffee growing province, where the harvest will start next month. Inexim often buys half of its annual coffee exports in December.

Another arabica exporter, Thai Hoa Vietnam Group Co, planned a listing on the Hanoi stock market to raise funds for expansion after arabica prices hit a 13-year high recently, its chairman and chief executive Nguyen Van An said.

Share auctions and listing on the stock market are separate processes in Vietnam and many companies often choose to sell shares via auction before making their debut on the exchange.

"Banks have limits this year in using short-term deposits for medium- and long-term loans, meaning investment in agricultural businesses is limited, so we have to look for another way to get funds," An told Reuters.

From Jan. 1, 2010, the central bank cut the ratio of short-term deposits banks could use for medium- and long-term loans to 30 percent from 40 percent.

Exporters in the red

Banks have also become more cautious after many Vietnamese coffee firms made losses in the first quarter of 2010, as they signed export contracts late last year with forward shipments, then failed to buy beans locally after prices rose.

"Lending now has to be selective as banks want to avoid bad debt and risks," said a bank executive in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's largest coffee trading market.

Several major banks which announced lending packages for coffee business last year have yet to renew their offers, even though the new coffee crop year has begun this month, she noted.

Only a small lender, Ho Chi Minh City-based HD Bank, said it would extend credit worth 2 trillion dong from next month to coffee companies and farmers.

In February the central bank told Agribank, Vietnam's largest lender dealing mostly in agriculture, to slow lending this year to a rate of at least 20 percent, after its loans jumped 24.4 percent in 2009, as the country tried to rein in inflation.

Vietnam, the world's second largest coffee producer after Brazil, has nearly 150 companies that export coffee, but 80 percent of shipments are handled by 20 companies, led by Vinacafe, Intimex, Thai Hoa Vietnam, Simexco and Inexim Daklak.

In the 2009/2010 season, its coffee export rose 5.3 percent from the previous year to an estimated 1.19 million tons, or 19.87 million 60-kg bags, government data showed.

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Vietnam coffee exporters seek funds for new crop

HANOI - Coffee exporters in Vietnam, the world's second largest producer of the commodity, are trying to raise funds via stock listings or share auctions ahead of a major robusta crop as banks tighten lending to avoid bad debt.

Coffee output from the 2010/2011 harvest due to start late this month could rise 2.3 percent to 19.77 million bags, or 1.19 million tons, a Reuters poll showed on Tuesday.

Exporters and domestic processors would need $1.76 billion to buy all the beans from the harvest, based on Thursday's domestic market price of 28.9 million dong a ton.

Bankers and coffee exporters say corporate demand for cash for bean purchases often stays high in the fourth quarter, especially in November or December, when the harvest peaks.

Daklak Investment Export-Import Corp, or Inexim Daklak, one of the country's top coffee exporters, hoped to raise at least $1.2 million by auctioning 1.65 million shares early next month on the Hanoi stock market, the exchange said on Thursday.

Harvest starts next month

The company is based in Daklak, Vietnam's largest coffee growing province, where the harvest will start next month. Inexim often buys half of its annual coffee exports in December.

Another arabica exporter, Thai Hoa Vietnam Group Co, planned a listing on the Hanoi stock market to raise funds for expansion after arabica prices hit a 13-year high recently, its chairman and chief executive Nguyen Van An said.

Share auctions and listing on the stock market are separate processes in Vietnam and many companies often choose to sell shares via auction before making their debut on the exchange.

"Banks have limits this year in using short-term deposits for medium- and long-term loans, meaning investment in agricultural businesses is limited, so we have to look for another way to get funds," An told Reuters.

From Jan. 1, 2010, the central bank cut the ratio of short-term deposits banks could use for medium- and long-term loans to 30 percent from 40 percent.

Exporters in the red

Banks have also become more cautious after many Vietnamese coffee firms made losses in the first quarter of 2010, as they signed export contracts late last year with forward shipments, then failed to buy beans locally after prices rose.

"Lending now has to be selective as banks want to avoid bad debt and risks," said a bank executive in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's largest coffee trading market.

Several major banks which announced lending packages for coffee business last year have yet to renew their offers, even though the new coffee crop year has begun this month, she noted.

Only a small lender, Ho Chi Minh City-based HD Bank, said it would extend credit worth 2 trillion dong from next month to coffee companies and farmers.

In February the central bank told Agribank, Vietnam's largest lender dealing mostly in agriculture, to slow lending this year to a rate of at least 20 percent, after its loans jumped 24.4 percent in 2009, as the country tried to rein in inflation.

Vietnam, the world's second largest coffee producer after Brazil, has nearly 150 companies that export coffee, but 80 percent of shipments are handled by 20 companies, led by Vinacafe, Intimex, Thai Hoa Vietnam, Simexco and Inexim Daklak.

In the 2009/2010 season, its coffee export rose 5.3 percent from the previous year to an estimated 1.19 million tons, or 19.87 million 60-kg bags, government data showed.

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Central region’s airport to receive Russian flights

Vladivostok Air will launch two new air routes from the Russian cities of Khabarovsk and Vladivostok to Cam Ranh International Airport in the central coastal city of Nha Trang by the year-end.

The Russian carrier Wednesday met with the local authorities to discuss the ongoing preparations for the routes’ inauguration.

Fourteen flights, using TU420 aircraft with 140 seats, are scheduled on these routes in mid-December-March, with two flights every two weeks to the central coastal city, according to a Vladivostok Air spokesperson.

At the meeting, Cam Ranh Airport’s authorities pledged to halve the cost of landing charges and services and stated that the airport has all the facilities, equipment and staff to cater for international flights, according to Vietnam News Agency.

Ten four and five star hotels and resorts in the city have also agreed to reduce their charges for Russian tourists flying to Nha Trang on the new routes by between 20-50 percent, VNA reported.

Cam Ranh Airport became an international airport in December 2009 and has recorded an average annual growth rate in passenger numbers of 21 percent, the highest rate in Vietnam, but had not yet introduced any international routes.

Last July and August, it handled 14 direct flights from Incheon in South Korea.

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PM issues call to protect hydro-electric power plants

HA NOI — Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has told authorities in charge of reservoirs in the same river basins to co-ordinate their operations in accordance with procedures developed by the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment.

The procedures aim to ensure the absolute safety and effectiveness of hydro-electric plants along the rivers and reduce flood water.

In all, 61 reservoirs in 11 river basins across the country should co-ordinate their operations, including the Hong (Red) River basin in the northern delta, Quang Ngai Province's Tra Khuc River, Quang Nam Province's Vu Gia-Thu Bon River system, Thua Thien-Hue Province's Huong (Perfume) River, Thanh Hoa Province's Ma River, Phu Yen Province's Ba River and Dong Nai Province's namesake river, among others.

With 13, the Dong Nai River basin has the highest concentration of reservoirs in the country.

The Prime Minister also issued procedures for co-ordination between the A Vuong, Dac Mi 4 and Song Tranh 2 reservoirs in the Vu Gia-Thu Bon River system basin.

The river system supplies water to 58 hydro-electric projects which are either completed or under construction in the basin.

Last November, the A Vuong Reservoir was blamed for exacerbating downstream flooding by releasing more flow to avoid the break of its embankments.

As a result, Quang Nam Province People's Committee asked the Ministry of Industry and Trade to develop more suitable procedures for the operation of reservoirs in the basin with a view to increasing the volume of water stored in rainy seasons.

In another development, a spell of cold weather is forecast to arrive in the north today, causing torrential rain in central provinces from Nghe An to Ha Tinh, according to the National Hydro-meteorological Centre.

The National Committee for Flood Prevention and Control yesterday sent an urgent message to its branches and search and rescue groups in coastal provinces from Nghe An to Quang Ngai to carefully monitor changes in the weather.

The provinces were also instructed to watch over households in low lying areas and in areas prone to flash floods and landslides. They were told to prepare to evacuate if necessary and to have food, water and necessities ready to cope with heavy rains forecast to hit the provinces today.

They were also asked to check reservoir levels and any possible problems resulting from rising waters, and to prepare facilities to cope with bad situations.

The message was also sent to committees of provinces from Binh Dinh to Kien Giang, asking them to follow the development of the tropical front, and manage ships and vessels accordingly.

The Ministry of Industry and Trade was requested to ask Electricity of Viet Nam to ensure its reservoirs are fully operational in the event of flooding.

At 1pm yesterday, the tropical pressure was located at 10.5-12.5 degrees north latitude and 110-112 degrees east longtitude, on the waters north of Truong Sa (Spratly) Archipelago, causing strong winds at speed of 49-61 kmph. — VNS

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Competition deemed fair

Passengers exit a plane at Tan Son Nhat Airport. Aviation is among 10 business sectors which have relatively fair competition, according to a ministry study. — VNA/VNS Photo Dinh Hue

Passengers exit a plane at Tan Son Nhat Airport. Aviation is among 10 business sectors which have relatively fair competition, according to a ministry study. — VNA/VNS Photo Dinh Hue

HA NOI — Competition among the cement, steel, chemical fertiliser, animal feed, dairy and service sectors, such as aviation, banking, insurance, petroleum distribution and telecommunications is relatively fair and free of dirty tricks campaigns.

The announcement was made yesterday at a seminar to assess competition in 10 economic sectors held by the Ministry of Industry and Trade's Department of Competition Administration.

However, Le Minh Ha, a department consultant, said that some products like imported powdered milk, construction steel and fertilisers were still being falsely portrayed in advertisements.

Ha went on to say that acts of unfair competition were concentrated mainly in the service sector, with advertisements and promotions designed to discredit competitors and gain market share.

The announcement not only confirmed the effective role of Competition Law but also provided valuable information to businesses regarding which direction they should follow in the future.

Dinh Thi My Loan, general secretary of the Viet Nam Retail Association, said that details of the 10 selected areas gave good indications of price fluctuations and covered consumer interests in those sectors.

However, Loan said that the contents of the assessment remained "gentle and plump", and did not include urgent consumer matters.

She said that sugar was a prime example, where businesses and consumers had suffered exorbitant prices while sugar stocks remained abundant.

She said the reason for this was that distributors were unable to buy supplies directly from the factories, and had to go through intermediaries who charged a higher price.

Sharing her view, economist Le Dang Doanh said apart from measures to stabilise the market price, more focus was needed on retail distribution.

Doanh said the role of competition management authorities needed to be enhanced along with the awareness of enterprises about the Competition Law. — 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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Anti-fraud council set up in Ha Noi

HA NOI — A council responsible for warning and preventing trade fraud, especially in the area of certificates of origin (C/O), made its debut yesterday in Ha Noi.

The past few years had seen an increasing amount of C/O fraud, especially in products which have been subject to anti-dumping tariffs, said the council chairwoman Tran Thi Thu Huong.

The council, under the Viet Nam of Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI), would issue early warnings about suspected C/O fraud, Huong said.

It would work with companies via industry associations, she said, adding that updated information about current trade fraud cases and consultation for specific sectors and export markets as well as training courses would also be provided.

Enterprises should take caution when signing commercial and investment co-operation contracts with partners for products likely to be subject to anti-dumping tariffs, said VCCI vice chairman Pham Gia Tuc.

Council members included representatives from the VCCI, the Ministry of Industry and Trade's Competition Administration Department, the Ministry of Planning and Investment and the General Department of Customs.

More than 11,000 incidents of fake and smuggled goods as well as trade fraud were detected in the capital in the first half of this year, according to the municipal Anti-Smuggling Steering Committee 127.

The completed prosecution of about 5,500 offences resulted in fines totalling VND531 billion (US$28 million). — VNS

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