Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Volumes up on uncertain start

Following Sept. 17 strong rally on the HCM City Stock Exchange, the
VN-Index opened high at over 462 points but ended session essentially
unchanged at 457.87 on Sept. 20.


The volume of
trades, however, rose by 10 percent over the previous session level to
over 53.8 million shares, with a combined value of 1.46 trillion VND
(74.9 million USD).


Advancers outnumbered decliners
during the session by 116-93, with five of the ten leading shares by
capitalisation posting gains, including Eximbank (EIB), Sacombank (STB),
Vincom (VIC), Bao Viet Holdings (BVH) and Phu My Fertilisers (DPM).


Ocean Group (OGC), the most-active share on the southern bourse with
3.4 million traded, lost nearly 2.2 percent of its value.


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index closed up by 0.35 percent
to 133.31 points. Volume reached 52.5 million shares, worth 1.28
trillion VND (65.6 million USD), while advancers narrowly outnumbered
decliners by 137-123.


PetroVietnam Construction
(PVX) continued to be the most heavily-traded share nationwide, with a
volume of over 7.6 million shares. However, Kim Long Securities Co (KLS)
saw a notable increase in volume, with over 7.2 million shares traded.


Foreign investors continued to demonstrate faith in
the market, however. They picked up a net of nearly 4 million shares on
both exchanges, worth a net of 131 billion VND (6.7 million USD). Ocean
Group (OGC) was their most heavily-favoured share, with over 1.5 million
bought./.

Related Articles

Foreign funds pour into coffee processing

The entry of a few major investors in instant coffee processing has
stirred up this market segment in Vietnam, the Dau Tu (Vietnam
Investment Review) newspaper reports.


Early this
month, an affiliate of the CCL Products Group, one of India 's leading
coffee processors and exporters, Ngon Coffee Company Limited, started
construction of its plant in Cu Kuin district in the Central Highland
province of Dak Lak , the premier coffee growing region in the
country.


It is the first foreign invested instant coffee processing project in the province.


Huynh Thi Chien Hoa, deputy director of Dak Lak province's Department
of Planning and Investment, said Ngon Coffee Company Limited's 18
million USD project covers 24ha and will source all raw materials from
the province.


The factory, which will churn out
10,000 tonnes of high-quality instant coffee per year, is expected to
come online next July, she said.


The Vietnam Coffee
and Cacao Association (Vicofa) quoted Alan Kaiser, director of the US
National Coffee Association's External Relations and Communications, as
saying American coffee giants like Starbucks, Dunkin' Donuts and Kraft
Foods had shown keen interest in Vietnamese coffee during meetings with
local exporters held this June in New York .


In
April, Bloomberg News quoted Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz as saying the
company expected to have "thousands of stores" in China and to enter
Vietnam and India in the coming time.


Also in
April, Singapore-based Olam International, a global supply chain player
in agricultural products, opened its 50 million USD instant coffee
processing plant in Long An province's Nhut Chanh Industrial Park
after two years of construction.


The 5.3ha plant with 500 local workers is run by Olam's subsidiary Cafe Outspan Vietnam Company Limited.


Olam's representative Raz Kuma said the plant will annually produce
4,000 tonnes, and double output by 2012 based on a further investment of
20 million USD.


Its products will be exported to Europe, Russia , Japan and the Middle East , he added.


Olam operates six coffee and spice processing factories in Vietnam .


Vietnam was the world's largest producer of robusta coffee, the
main ingredient for soluble coffee. Moreover, the Vietnamese Government
allows the import of coffee beans from other countries, Kuma added.


"The country is also the most cost-competitive producer," he said.

In January, Japan-based Mizuho Corporate Bank signed an agreement to
provide credit to Vietnam 's leading coffee exporter, Vinacafe
affiliate Tay Nguyen Coffee Import-Export and Investment Joint Stock
Company, to help finance further expansion of its trademark in the
Japanese market through Japanese importer Marubeni.


According to Vicofa, five of 10 biggest enterprises trading in coffee
beans worldwide are now present in Vietnam either independently or
as joint ventures.


These enterprises are reported to purchase around 30 per cent of Vietnam 's annual coffee production./.

Related Articles

IATA sees sharp rebound by global airlines this year

SINGAPORE - Global airlines are likely to post sharply higher profit in 2010 than previously forecast as the industry rebounds from economic recession, the International Air Travel Association said on Tuesday.

IATA sees the industry posting a combined net profit of US$8.9 billion, more than three times the previous forecast of $2.5 billion made in June, and compared to an estimate of nearly $10 billion losses in 2009.

"It is a significant improvement, much stronger than forecast," IATA chief executive Giovanni Bisignani told reporters in Singapore. "But I would say it is not time for big celebration, let's just do a nice party."

The trade body warned that increasing capacity due to new aircraft deliveries in 2011 will lead to slower growth for the industry and put pressure on yields and load factors, resulting in a lower net profit of $5.3 billion globally next year.

"The cyclical upturn in traffic and yields has been faster than expected, reflecting the post-recession rebound and tight capacity. However, the durability of this upturn is in increasing doubt in North America and Europe," IATA said in a statement.

IATA said Asia-Pacific airlines were the biggest beneficiaries of a sharp rebound in cargo revenues and it has revised up the profit forecast in this region to $5.2 billion from $2.2 billion.

In contrast, IATA said European airlines are expected to remain in the red although the agency lowered its loss forecast to $1.3 billion from a $2.8 billion loss in the previous estimate.

It was the second revision for global profit by the trade body, which predicted six months ago that the industry would lose $2.8 billion in 2010.

The global economic recession had sent the airline industry into its worst downturn in history, forcing airlines to cut capacity and lay off staff and sent Japan Airlines, Asia's biggest airline by revenue, into bankruptcy protection.

A number of major airlines in Asia, including Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific, have however expressed optimism on the outlook of the sector this year.

Related Articles

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

China Strategic ends AIG Taiwan unit buy, shares slump

TAIPEI - Shares in China Strategic Holdings Ltd fell more than 6 percent on Tuesday after the battery maker said it had formally ended a US$2.2 billion bid to buy insurer American International Group Inc's Taiwan unit after regulators rejected the deal.

Hong Kong-listed China Strategic said in a statement late on Monday that it and partner Primus Financial Holdings had agreed with AIG to terminate the deal to buy Nan Shan Life effective Monday.

Last month, Taiwan's regulators blocked the bid for Nan Shan from China Strategic and Hong Kong investment fund Primus, saying the two did not have experience in the insurance industry and lacked the ability to raise capital for future operations.

The buyers had the option of appealing, but China Strategic said earlier this month that AIG was leaning towards a new sale.

AIG's Taipei-based media relations company said on Tuesday that the insurer was "evaluating its options with respect to its ownership of Nan Shan".

Primus Financial declined to comment.

China Strategic shares were 6.5 percent lower at HK$0.29 while the Hang Seng Index was up 0.3 percent.

It was the second failed attempt in Asia by AIG to sell assets to repay billions of US taxpayer dollars used to bail out the company. In May, the $35.5 billion sale of its American International Assurance unit to Britain's Prudential Plc fell through.

AIG plans to list AIA in Hong Kong on Oct. 29 in a $15 billion float, the biggest ever in Hong Kong and also the biggest ever insurance float.

Analysts say AIG is likely to put Nan Shan back on the market, although an IPO is an outside possibility.

Taiwan banks Fubon Financial Holding Co Ltd and Chinatrust Financial Holding Co Ltd have expressed interest in buying Nan Shan, while analysts have said Cathay Financial Holding Co Ltd may also be interested.

A source with direct knowledge of the sale process told Reuters earlier this month that regulators were unlikely to take issue with bids from Fubon or Cathay, either alone or with partners such as private equity companies, but they would be wary of a Chinatrust bid, because the firm, Taiwan's biggest credit card issuer, is heavily leveraged.

All three were losing bidders in the original sale of Nan Shan last October.

Nan Shan is Taiwan's No.3 life insurer by market share. Its policyholders make up almost a sixth of the island's population.

Related Articles

Viet Nam cements ranking as ideal investment location

LONDON — In a new global survey of 523 companies representing all major industries, Viet Nam has emerged for the third consecutive year as the top investment target outside of the so-called BRIC countries of Brazil, Russia, India and China.

Viet Nam has continued to benefit as companies have sought new sources of growth beyond BRIC, according to a report accompanying the survey, entitled "Great Expectations: Doing Business in Emerging Markets".

"Viet Nam has been on the radar of manufacturers looking to move beyond China for some time," said the report. "With its large, well-educated workforce, the country has good prospects for moving up the value chain."

The survey, conducted by UK Trade & Investment in cooperation with the Economist Intelligence Unit, aimed to explore the changing outlook for businesses already operating in emerging markets or planning to expand into these markets, both in terms of perceived opportunities and the primary rationale for investing in these countries.

About 71 per cent of respondents agreed that emerging markets beyond BRIC collectively offered an opportunity too great to ignore, with 19 per cent choosing Viet Nam as an investment destination.

The Economist Intelligence Unit said Viet Nam headed a second tier of target countries it called the CIVETS, encompassing Colombia, Indonesia, Viet Nam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa.

Like BRIC, this group was geographically dispersed and contained obvious variations – but there were also important similarities. All had sizeable and young populations, diversified economies not excessively reliant on commodities, and reasonably sophisticated financial systems .

Collectively, CIVETS were forecast to account for up to 20 per cent of the G7's total GDP, making them a significant global market in their own right, the report said. — VNS

CIVIETS: A promising outlook

Population

GDP per head

Consumer Price Inflation

Public debt

Average annual real %

(million)

(US$, PPP)

(percent, average)

(per cent of GDP)

GDP growth 2010-20

Columbia

46.9

8,920

2.6

47.3

3.6

Indonesia

243

4,230

5.1

27

5.6

Viet Nam

87.8

3,150

9.3

52

5.9

Egypt

84.7

5,910

11.8

80.3

5.6

Turkey

73.3

12,740

8.7

48.7

3.9

South Africa

49.1

10,730

5.8

33.3

3.3

Forecasts for 2010 unless otherwise indicated.
Source: Economist Intelligence Unit, Country Data.

Related Articles

Mutual trade with Myanmar up 58%

HA NOI — Two-way trade revenue between Viet Nam and Myanmar increased by more than 58 per cent year-on-year to US$73 million in the first eight months of the year, according to statistics from the Myanmar Customs Office.

Viet Nam's exports to Myanmar accounted for roughly $23 million, up 67.1 per cent over the same period last year. Main export staples included steel, accessories used in garment and textile manufacturing, medicine and healthcare equipment, vehicle tyres, construction materials and fertiliser.

Meanwhile, the country spent roughly $50 million on mainly timber, rubber latex, agricultural products and raw seafood.

Viet Nam is currently the 14th largest exporter to Myanmar. However, the Vietnamese ambassador to Myanmar Chu Cong Phung said there was a golden opportunity for domestic enterprises to increase their market share given the offers and favourable conditions the Myanmar Government has made for foreign traders and investors.

The Myanmar Government has recently promulgated numerous policies to encourage foreign trade and investment, including mandates for establishing wholly foreign-invested companies and streamlining application procedures for business visas.

Phung said that as just 20 per cent of domestic demand of the 58 million-strong market was met by domestic production, Myanmar left significant room for imports.

Vietnamese products such as electric lamps, medicines and aluminium products have so far taken a firm foothold in the Myanmar market. Dien Quang brand, for example, has become the second-best seller of electric lamps, earning up to $1.5 million in monthly export revenue.

Though the price of Vietnamese goods in Myanmar may be higher than that of Chinese because Vietnamese businesses have to pay more shipping costs, Phung said that this could be dealt with, given the success of two consecutive trade fairs held by Viet Nam in Myanmar. — VNS

Related Articles

Foreign funds pour into coffee processing

HCM CITY — The entry of a few major investors in instant coffee processing has stirred up this market segment in Viet Nam, the Dau Tu (Vietnam Investment Review) newspaper reports.

Early this month, an affiliate of the CCL Products Group, one of India's leading coffee processors and exporters, Ngon Coffee Company Limited, started construction of its plant in Cu Kuin District in the Central Highland province of Dak Lak, the premier coffee growing region in the country.

It is the first foreign invested instant coffee processing project in the province.

Huynh Thi Chien Hoa, deputy director of Dak Lak Province's Department of Planning and Investment, said Ngon Coffee Company Limited's US$18 million project covered 24ha and would source all raw materials from the province.

The factory, which would churn out 10,000 tonnes of high-quality instant coffee per year, was expected to come online next July, she said.

The company's general director Challa Srishant said the plant's products would be locally consumed and exported.

It was projected that the plant would generate revenues of $27 million in the first year of operation and increase this to $40.5 million by 2014, Srishant said.

The Viet Nam Coffee and Cacao Association (Vicofa) quoted Alan Kaiser, director of the US National Coffee Association's External Relations and Communications, as saying American coffee giants like Starbucks, Dunkin' Donuts and Kraft Foods had shown keen interest in Vietnamese coffee during meetings with local exporters held this June in New York.

In April, Bloomberg News quoted Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz as saying the company expected to have "thousands of stores" in China and to enter Viet Nam and India in the coming time.

Starbucks reported $9.7 billion in 2009 sales.

Also in April, Singapore-based Olam International, a global supply chain player in agricultural products, opened its $50 million instant coffee processing plant in Long An Province's Nhut Chanh Industrial Park after two years of construction.

The 5.3ha plant with 500 local workers is run by Olam's subsidiary Cafe Outspan Viet Nam Company Limited.

Olam's representative Raz Kuma said the plant would annually produce 4,000 tonnes, and double output by 2012 based on a further investment of $20 million.

Its products would be exported to Europe, Russia, Japan and the Middle East, he added.

Olam operates six coffee and spice processing factories in Viet Nam.

Viet Nam was the world's largest producer of robusta coffee, the main ingredient for soluble coffee. Moreover, the Vietnamese Government allowed the import of coffee beans from other countries, Kuma added.

"The country is also the most cost-competitive producer," he said.
In January, Japan-based Mizuho Corporate Bank signed an agreement to provide credit to Viet Nam's leading coffee exporter, Vinacafe affiliate Tay Nguyen Coffee Import-Export and Investment Joint Stock Company, to help finance further expansion of its trademark in the Japanese market through Japanese importer Marubeni.

According to Vicofa, five of 10 biggest enterprises trading in coffee beans worldwide are now present in Viet Nam either independently or as joint ventures.

These enterprises are reported to purchase around 30 per cent of Viet Nam's annual coffee production. — VNS

Related Articles