Thursday, February 10, 2011

Largest auto show set for late Oct in Hanoi

The unveiling of the Mercedes SLK200K at the Vietnam Motor Show 2009 in HCMC attracts a large pool of journalists - Photo: Quoc Hung
HCMC – Vietnam Motor Show 2010 in Hanoi, the industry’s largest exhibition in the country, will feature key automakers from October 29 to November 2.

Up to 15,000 square meters at the Vietnam Exhibition & Fair Centre (VEFAC), 248 Giang Vo Street, Ba Dinh District will be used to display the latest vehicle models of 11 members of the Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (VAMA).

The exhibiting firms will be Toyota Motor Vietnam, Mercedes-Benz Vietnam, Ford Vietnam, Honda Vietnam, Suzuki Vietnam, GM-Daewoo, Vinastar, Mekong, Samco, Hino and Vinaxuki.

The 6th edition of the Vietnam Motor Show, which is being organized by VAMA, will also be attended by more than 100 local and foreign suppliers of spare parts, supporting products, interior furnishings, sound systems, and banking and insurance services.

Going with the theme of “Become Better”, the event will provide automobile manufacturers with the opportunity to reach out to customers.

A feature of the forthcoming exhibition will be to introduce green auto making technologies, according to VAMA.

Though the event is taking place at a time when the economy is not yet out of the woods, with automakers facing a host of challenges, it is expected to draw over 120,000 visitors.

Through the exhibition, VAMA expects to help warm up the market and draw the attention of consumers.

September sales of locally assembled automobiles fell 17% year-on-year to more than 9,140 units, according to VAMA. This was the third consecutive monthly decline in sales.

VAMA members sold nearly 78,180 units in January-September, down 3% year-on-year. The SUV/MPV vehicle segment was hardest hit with sales plunging a hefty 14% to 16,280 units. Toyota alone sold more than 21,600 units in the first nine months.

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Commercial pilots to be trained in Vietnam

Commercial pilots to be trained in Vietnam

The Vietnam Airlines Corp. and the Bay Viet (Viet Flight) Flight
Training Joint Stock Company have made a deal to train 60 pilots in
Vietnam during the 2010-2012 period.


Under the contract, signed in Ho Chi Minh City on October 14, every
72-week training course will be held in Vietnam and France, each
with 20 trainees. The training courses will be completed by the end of
2012.


Vietnam Airlines estimates it will need at
least 636 pilots by 2010, 60 percent of them Vietnamese. To raise the
rate of Vietnamese pilots to 75 percent by 2015, the carrier plans to
recruit at least 100 extra pilots a year to raise the number of pilots
by 10 percent during 2011-2020.


The Chairman of
Vietnam Airlines Corp Nguyen Sy Hung said that the contract with Bay
Viet, the first pilot training centre in Vietnam to have an Air
Transport Pilots Licence (ATPL), will help the airline to take the
initiative and train its own pilots, cutting costs and raising
efficiency.


The deal also proves the airline’s
commitment to its domestic partners to implement its strategy on
personnel development to ensure sustainable growth and fulfill its plans
to develop the country’s aviation industry.


Bay
Viet’s General Director Nguyen Nam Lien, said the company will start
four other pilots courses for other airlines in Vietnam and around
the region in 2010 and 2011.


In the first phase,
Bay Viet will work with Vietnam ’s Aviation Academy and provide
flight training at Cam Ranh Airport in Nha Trang.


These are the first important steps in the setting up of a pilots
training centre to ensure the aviation industry’s development in the
future./.

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First wind energy turbine factory opens

First wind energy turbine factory opens

Vietnam ’s first wind power turbine production factory was
inaugurated at the Nomura industrial zone in the northern port city of
Hai Phong on October 15.


The 61 million USD project, invested by the US-based GE group, rolled
out over 200 turbines for export in the past five months of test run.


In the first stage the factory will produce 1.5 MW turbines for
export and is scheduled to mass produce some 10,000 parts and assorted
turbines annually. Its products will be forwarded to GE production
facilities worldwide to be assembled into end products.


The factory now provides stable jobs for over 250 local workers and
contributes to domestic production and daily life as well as for export.


John Krenicki, Vice President of the GE Group and
President cum General Manager of GE Energy operations in Vietnam ,
hailed Vietnam as an ideal destination for investment and expansion
of production capacity thanks to its skilled workforce and the bright
prospects of the regional energy industry.


The
US giant unveiled a plan to upgrade and expand the factory into a
complex specialising in power equipment for clean energy production to
meet national and global demand./.

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Retaliation in reserve as China faces yuan tensions

BEIJING - Expect harsh words but no concrete retaliation from Beijing if the US labels China a currency manipulator in a report due later on Friday.

China is focused on trying to defuse tensions with the US by yielding some ground in a mini-burst of yuan appreciation and hopes that these efforts will still pay off, even if Washington brands it a manipulator.

But should the US ratchet up the pressure yet further by passing into law a bill that could penalize China, Beijing will not be so docile, Chinese analysts say.

"China is telling the US that it is willing to help to resolve the problems. Things have not gotten out of hand yet and both sides still have some room to maneuver," said Zhao Xijun, an economist at Renmin University in Beijing.

President Barack Obama's administration faces a deadline on Friday to decide whether to formally label China as a currency manipulator.

A desire to look tough on "unfair" trade practices ahead of US congressional elections on Nov. 2, in which Obama's fellow Democrats are battling to retain control of Congress, could tempt the administration to cite China for the first time in 16 years.

The Chinese commerce ministry made its feelings clear on Friday, warning the US not to make a scapegoat of the yuan. Rhetoric aside, though, Beijing knows that the currency manipulator designation carries no specific consequences, apart from forcing Obama to seek consultations with China.

Preparing for the worst

A different calculus would apply if the Senate approved a bill already passed by the House of Representatives that would allow the US to slap duties on countries with undervalued currencies.

"It will be a very serious issue if the US legislation is approved by the Senate and signed by the president," said Li Wei, a researcher under the commerce ministry.

For starters, China would challenge the US law at the World Trade Organization -- a case that some trade experts think China would be able to win.

Analysts say Beijing is also bracing for the law by considering possible retaliation, from imposing curbs on US businesses in China to the so-called nuclear option of dumping its holdings of US Treasuries.

But Beijing is not going to jump the gun. It is first taking what it sees as pre-emptive steps to keep US anger from boiling over -- and to keep the legislation from becoming law.

"If China doesn't let the yuan appreciate a little bit, foreign criticism will be stronger. China wants to avoid a trade war with the US," said Guo Tianyong, an economist at the Central University of Finance Economics in Beijing.

To that end, Beijing has allowed the yuan to gain 2.6 percent since it scrapped a 23-month dollar-peg on June 19, quickening the appreciation in recent weeks as pressure mounted.

On their own terms

Ever sensitive to appearing weak domestically, Chinese leaders have insisted that the yuan's rise is not a response to US pressure but part of a broader reform agenda to spur domestic consumption.

They have also said that currency reforms will be done on China's own gradual terms.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan told International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington that demands on China to let the yuan rise rapidly are akin to seeking a magic cure to a problem that requires a slow-working, herbal remedy.

Foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu tried to inject some levity into the dispute on Thursday: "If appreciation of a currency could solve all of the world's economic problems, then what use would economists be?"

But it will be no laughing matter if the US follows up the currency manipulator report with real punitive measures.

Although retaliation by China would likely hurt its own interests, rising nationalistic sentiment on the currency issue might force the government to take a tough stance, analysts say.

"China wants to use diplomacy before a confrontation. It will have no choice but to engage in a trade war if all courteous means fail," Guo, of the Central University of Finance Economics, said.

Related Articles

Retaliation in reserve as China faces yuan tensions

BEIJING - Expect harsh words but no concrete retaliation from Beijing if the US labels China a currency manipulator in a report due later on Friday.

China is focused on trying to defuse tensions with the US by yielding some ground in a mini-burst of yuan appreciation and hopes that these efforts will still pay off, even if Washington brands it a manipulator.

But should the US ratchet up the pressure yet further by passing into law a bill that could penalize China, Beijing will not be so docile, Chinese analysts say.

"China is telling the US that it is willing to help to resolve the problems. Things have not gotten out of hand yet and both sides still have some room to maneuver," said Zhao Xijun, an economist at Renmin University in Beijing.

President Barack Obama's administration faces a deadline on Friday to decide whether to formally label China as a currency manipulator.

A desire to look tough on "unfair" trade practices ahead of US congressional elections on Nov. 2, in which Obama's fellow Democrats are battling to retain control of Congress, could tempt the administration to cite China for the first time in 16 years.

The Chinese commerce ministry made its feelings clear on Friday, warning the US not to make a scapegoat of the yuan. Rhetoric aside, though, Beijing knows that the currency manipulator designation carries no specific consequences, apart from forcing Obama to seek consultations with China.

Preparing for the worst

A different calculus would apply if the Senate approved a bill already passed by the House of Representatives that would allow the US to slap duties on countries with undervalued currencies.

"It will be a very serious issue if the US legislation is approved by the Senate and signed by the president," said Li Wei, a researcher under the commerce ministry.

For starters, China would challenge the US law at the World Trade Organization -- a case that some trade experts think China would be able to win.

Analysts say Beijing is also bracing for the law by considering possible retaliation, from imposing curbs on US businesses in China to the so-called nuclear option of dumping its holdings of US Treasuries.

But Beijing is not going to jump the gun. It is first taking what it sees as pre-emptive steps to keep US anger from boiling over -- and to keep the legislation from becoming law.

"If China doesn't let the yuan appreciate a little bit, foreign criticism will be stronger. China wants to avoid a trade war with the US," said Guo Tianyong, an economist at the Central University of Finance Economics in Beijing.

To that end, Beijing has allowed the yuan to gain 2.6 percent since it scrapped a 23-month dollar-peg on June 19, quickening the appreciation in recent weeks as pressure mounted.

On their own terms

Ever sensitive to appearing weak domestically, Chinese leaders have insisted that the yuan's rise is not a response to US pressure but part of a broader reform agenda to spur domestic consumption.

They have also said that currency reforms will be done on China's own gradual terms.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan told International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington that demands on China to let the yuan rise rapidly are akin to seeking a magic cure to a problem that requires a slow-working, herbal remedy.

Foreign ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu tried to inject some levity into the dispute on Thursday: "If appreciation of a currency could solve all of the world's economic problems, then what use would economists be?"

But it will be no laughing matter if the US follows up the currency manipulator report with real punitive measures.

Although retaliation by China would likely hurt its own interests, rising nationalistic sentiment on the currency issue might force the government to take a tough stance, analysts say.

"China wants to use diplomacy before a confrontation. It will have no choice but to engage in a trade war if all courteous means fail," Guo, of the Central University of Finance Economics, said.

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Vietnam GDP growth seen at 6.7 pct in 2010

HANOI - Vietnam's ruling party estimated on Thursday gross domestic product growth this year would reach 6.7 percent, exceeding the government's official target of 6.5 percent.

Next year's economic growth target would be 7-7.5 percent while exports would be targeted to expand 10 percent, said a report issued after a meeting of the party's ruling Central Committee.

"The economy has recovered quickly. The pace of growth has become more and more stable closer to the end of the year, and GDP for the whole year is estimated to reach 6.7 percent," said the report on the government website, www.chinhphu.vn.

Economic growth accelerated to an annual rate of 7.16 percent in the third quarter from 6.4 percent in the second, the government statistics office said late last month. The economy grew 6.52 percent in the first nine months from a year ago.

Vietnam has been among the fastest growing economies in Asia, and last month the Party forecast GDP growth to average between 7.5 percent and 8 percent for the next five years.

It also forecast exports to rise an average 12 percent annually between 2011 and 2015.

Thursday's report said consumer price inflation would be 7-8 percent this year. The official target is for inflation not to exceed 8 percent, although a Reuters poll of economists put the figure at 8.5 percent.

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Vietnamese companies penetrate Cambodian market

A trade fair showcasing Vietnamese and Cambodian industrial products
will take place in the Cambodian capital city of Phnom Penh from
December 15-18.


When addressing a press briefing
on October 15, Vice Chairman of the HCM City Mechanical Engineering
Association, Pham Ngoc Tuan, said that the event will help Vietnamese
businesses to promote their products and seek out new markets in
Cambodia .


With almost 350 stands, the fair is
divided into two themes, one of which is being run by the Cambodian
Ministry of Commerce, focusing on exports from Cambodian provinces.


The other will introduce international industrial products, not only
from Vietnam and Cambodia but also from other countries such as
Japan , Singapore , China and Thailand . The area will be
administered by the HCM City Mechanical Engineering Association and the
Dang Khoa Trade, Investment and Services Promotions Company.


At the event, Vietnamese products will be showcased in 100 stands,
including mechanical engineering, information technology,
transportation, construction and the biochemical’s industry.


According to the organising committee, the Vietnamese and Cambodian
governments have signed a number of economic agreements, which have
created the best possible conditions for Vietnamese businesses to expand
their operations in the Cambodian market.


Market
surveys in Cambodia showed Vietnamese products account for a
substantial amount of the country’s market share. However the
availability of industrial machinery and equipment is still limited./.

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