Wednesday, February 16, 2011

VNA joins efforts to develop national brand

VNA joins efforts to develop national brand

The Vietnam Trade Promotion Agency under the Ministry of Industry and
Trade, Secretariat of the National Brand programme and Vietnam News
Agency (VNA)’s daily Tin Tuc (News) signed a cooperation agreement in
Hanoi on October 18.


Speaking at the ceremony, Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Nguyen
Thanh Bien said that the agreement would improve business awareness of
building and developing brand names, protecting Vietnamese brand names
at home and abroad and help the public better understand the necessity
of the programme.


Under the agreement, the daily Tin
Tuc and Secretariat of the programme would open a column in the
newspaper and hold at least two relevant seminars or events per year.


VNA’s Deputy General Director Ha Minh Hue stressed
that as the sole national news agency and a reliable strategic
information channel of the State and Party, VNA had advantages as a
bridge to bring information about businesses and products to consumers
at home and abroad.


The programme aims to build
Vietnam’s image as a country of prestige, showcase its diversity in
high-quality goods and raise the competitiveness of Vietnamese brand
names in domestic and international markets./.

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FDI disbursement accelerates in HCM City

The Ho Chi Minh City Planning and Investment Department reported the
city’s nine-month FDI disbursement hit 900 million USD, almost matching
the amount for the whole of 2009, but still only a small amount
compared with total FDI flow.


The yearly target of
1.43 billion USD is clearly within reach, however total FDI disbursed is
only 11.9 billion USD out of the total registered FDI of 28.4 billion
USD.


Projects operating in the HCMC City Export
Processing and Industrial Zone Authority (HEPZA) recorded the highest
FDI disbursement speed. HEPZA’s 479 valid projects have disbursed 82
percent of the total 2.8 billion USD registered, according to Nguyen Tan
Phuoc, Vice Head of the HEPZA authority.


In the new
Thu Thiem Urban Zone, three out of four licensed projects have been
kick-started, including a 120 million USD project to build 2,220
apartments in Binh Khanh ward, District 2.


The
Planning and Investment Department’s Deputy Director Lu Thanh Phong said
that slow disbursement is usually seen in large-scale real estate
projects that face obstacles in ground clearance and administrative
procedures.


The department and relevant authorities
have been adjusting and removing unnecessary procedures in order to
facilitate investment projects.


The city has also been
assessing large-scale real estate projects to find out reasons for
delay and is determined to withdraw licences from projects that cannot
provide sound reasons for long delays.


Recently, the Ministry of Planning and Investment decided to stop 34 projects in HCMC due to their slow progress./.

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2010 VIETSTOCK Expo to open in November

2010 VIETSTOCK Expo to open in November

Vietnam’s premier international expo for the feed, livestock and meat
processing industry (Vietstock 2010) is scheduled to be held in Ho Chi
Minh City from November 10-12.


Vietstock 2010 Expo
is expected to attract various leading Vietnamese specialists,
livestock farmers, meat processors, suppliers and retailers. Around 200
companies from 30 nations world-wide will also have their services and
products on display at the exhibition.


Hoang Kim
Giao, head of the Livestock Production Department under the Ministry of
Agriculture and Rural Development said those attending will have the
chance to discover the latest technologies used in animal husbandry and
enterprises will have the opportunity to seek out new business partners
as well as find out about the latest breeding techniques as well as food
safety standards.


Vietstock Expo 2010 is also an
opportunity for technologies to be transferred between Vietnam and the
international community, which plays an important role in the growth and
expansion of Vietnam’s livestock sector, he said.


During the exhibition, many seminars will also be held on aquatic
products, pig and poultry breeding and a conference on science and
technology in 2010./.

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Honda recalls scooters with faulty gas tank bolts

Honda recalls scooters with faulty gas tank boltsHonda this week recalled 2,154 Lead scooters in Vietnam, saying they had faulty bolts in their gas tanks that needed to be replaced.

The Japanese manufacturer said in a statement on Friday that the bolts do not affect the motorcycles' safety. Honda Vietnam decided to replace them in order to ensure “the best possible operation” of the scooters.

Honda also said only one batch of Lead scooters had this problem (series RLHJF240 AY from 038651 to 041170, and from 715610 to 716800). The company will have its sales agents contact affected customers and replace the bolts for free.

Before the annoucement was made, there was speculation that Honda was secretly recalling the scooters without publicly annoucing the move.

Local news website VTC News said in a report on Saturday that a number of Lead owners had already been notified of the problem by Honda Vietnam sales agents. But when the website contacted the company, its public relations manager denied knowledge of a recall.

Honda Vietnam began selling Lead scooters in December 2008, labelling it a high-end model.

In other news, a Honda Air Blade scooter suddenly burst into flames on a street in Hanoi on Tuesday. Investigation into the incident is ongoing. 

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Milk prices increased 16 times in three years

Milk prices increased 16 times in three yearsMilk prices in Vietnam have been adjusted upward 16 times over the past three years, causing difficulties for a lot of consumers, news website VietNamNet reported Sunday.

It quoted the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) as saying dairy companies had hiked their prices by 3-10 percent every two to three months.

Regular reasons cited by dairy firms included new package designs, higher input costs and increases in foreign exchange rates.

Milk prices have been raised by 4-10 percent this year by major brands including Abbott, Mead Johnson, Friesland Campina Vietnam, XO, Dumex, Meiji, VCCI said.

According to a recent report by the Vietnam Competition Administration Department, up to 80 percent of milk powder products in Vietnam are imported.

This means the local milk market is closely connected to the world market, but the problem is that domestic prices have continued to surge irrespective of global price trends.

The department said although it could not find evidence showing that dairy firms in Vietnam colluded with each other to hike prices, there was still a chance that such a ploy was used.

While milk prices keep surging, dairy farmers are struggling nationwide.

Nguyen Dang Vang, vice chairman of the National Assembly’s Science, Technology and Environment Committee, told Thanh Nien that dairy firms only pay local farmers around VND7,000 per liter of milk.

At this price, farmers suffer losses and find it too difficult to expand production, he said, noting that the country’s dairy cow population only grew 4.9 percent in recent years.

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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Milk prices increased 16 times in three years

Milk prices increased 16 times in three yearsMilk prices in Vietnam have been adjusted upward 16 times over the past three years, causing difficulties for a lot of consumers, news website VietNamNet reported Sunday.

It quoted the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) as saying dairy companies had hiked their prices by 3-10 percent every two to three months.

Regular reasons cited by dairy firms included new package designs, higher input costs and increases in foreign exchange rates.

Milk prices have been raised by 4-10 percent this year by major brands including Abbott, Mead Johnson, Friesland Campina Vietnam, XO, Dumex, Meiji, VCCI said.

According to a recent report by the Vietnam Competition Administration Department, up to 80 percent of milk powder products in Vietnam are imported.

This means the local milk market is closely connected to the world market, but the problem is that domestic prices have continued to surge irrespective of global price trends.

The department said although it could not find evidence showing that dairy firms in Vietnam colluded with each other to hike prices, there was still a chance that such a ploy was used.

While milk prices keep surging, dairy farmers are struggling nationwide.

Nguyen Dang Vang, vice chairman of the National Assembly’s Science, Technology and Environment Committee, told Thanh Nien that dairy firms only pay local farmers around VND7,000 per liter of milk.

At this price, farmers suffer losses and find it too difficult to expand production, he said, noting that the country’s dairy cow population only grew 4.9 percent in recent years.

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Asian markets slip as Bernanke fails to lift sentiment

HONG KONG - Asian stocks fell Monday as traders were underwhelmed by the US Federal Reserve's strongest indication yet that it will inject cash into the economy.

The dollar edged down towards last week's 15-year low on the expected US pump-priming measures, while dealers also looked ahead to a meeting of G20 finance ministers to be held in South Korea at the weekend.

Hong Kong lost 1.21 percent, or 288.25 points, to end at 23,469.38 and Sydney ended down 0.79 percent, or 37.1 points, at 4,651.9.

Tokyo closed 1.76 points lower at 9,498.49 and Seoul slipped 1.41 percent, or 26.87 points, to 1,875.42.

Shanghai gave up 0.54 percent, or 15.93 points, to finish at 2,955.23.

Markets got an anemic lead from Wall Street, where the Dow edged down 0.29 percent on Friday despite Fed chairman Ben Bernanke saying the central bank was ready to take steps to boost the economy.

Bernanke said the current inflation rate was too low and raised the specter of deflation, which would send prices and wages spiraling downwards and force firms to the wall. Unemployment is already sky-high in the United States, with one in 10 people out of work.

"The risk of deflation is higher than desirable," he said.

The Fed was "prepared to provide additional accommodation if needed to support the economic recovery and to return inflation over time to levels consistent with our mandate".

Bernanke's comments raised already elevated expectations that the Fed is ready to pump billions into the financial system, in what is known as quantitative easing, effectively printing money.

However, IG Markets strategist Ben Potter said: "US leads were fairly mixed in terms of economic data and Bernanke didn't shed too much light."

"He sounded a bit cautious, so the market's thinking perhaps he will do any quantitative easing in smaller chunks," he told Dow Jones Newswires.

The dollar edged down in Tokyo trade. It was quoted at 81.15 yen, slipping from 81.44 yen in New York late Friday and heading towards last week's 15-year-low of 80.88 yen.

The Australian dollar was sitting at 98.33 US cents in European trade after it reached parity for the first time last week.

Profit-taking saw the Aussie dip back Monday after it peaked at $1.003 late Friday, the first time it has reached US parity since it was floated in December 1983.

The euro bought $1.3883 in Tokyo afternoon trade, down from $1.3973 dollars in New York late Friday. The European single currency briefly shot up to $1.4159, its highest since January 26, in New York.

The yen's gains have been capped by Japanese authorities' threats to intervene in the currency markets for a second time in just over a month.

Tokyo stepped into the markets for the first time in six years on September 15, selling the yen in a bid to shore up the country's key export sector.

"The dollar is drawing buy-backs against the euro and Australian dollar," said Tsunemasa Tsukada, chief manager at the currency sales desk of Mitsubishi UFJ Trust and Banking.

"I believe the longer-term trend is a weak dollar but some adjustment moves (on the dollar's recent plunge) are going on," Tsukada said.

The possibility of intervention comes amid growing fears of a currency war in which nations weaken their units to bolster their exporters and in turn give a much-needed boost to their economies.

The International Monetary Fund was holding a meeting with central bank officials from around the world to discuss the issue and try to plot a course for sustainable global recovery.

The meeting, hosted by the People's Bank of China in Shanghai, comes ahead of this week's Group of 20 meeting in South Korea, where currency reform is expected to dominate talks.

On oil markets New York's main contract, light sweet crude for November delivery eased 51 cents to $80.74 a barrel and Brent North Sea crude for December was 60 cents lower at $81.85 a barrel.

Gold closed at $1,356.00-$1,357.00 an ounce in Hong Kong, down from Friday's close of $1,378.50-$1,379.50.

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