Sunday, December 5, 2010

EU sees Vietnam as a market economy by 2018

A senior EU trade official says that Vietnam will meet all the five
criteria for the world’s largest trading bloc to recognise the country
as having a market economy by 2018.


Stefan
Depypere, Director of Trade Defence under the European Commission
Directorate-General for Trade, stated this at a press briefing in Hanoi
on September 24 at the end of his visit to Vietnam .


He said he saw the progress made by Vietnam ’s ministries and industries on the criteria for a market economy.


The EC trade representative also made public the positive outcomes of
the ninth round of negotiations and said that Vietnam and the EU
would sign a new partnership and cooperation agreement during a summit
of the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) due to take place in Belgium , in
October.


In regard to the EU’s anti-dumping
tariffs on Vietnam ’s leather shoes, which will expire in March, 2011,
Depypere said that the EU’s next decision will largely depend on
developments and the health of the footwear manufacturing industry in
Europe .


He added however, that he felt positive after Vietnam ’s bicycles can now be exported to Europe once more.


During his stay in Vietnam , Depypere met with the Ministry of
Industry and Trade, the State Bank of Vietnam and the Ministry of
Finance, where both parties focused on research on the current
accounting system in three major fields, from macro-economic policy to
legal frameworks and progress in implementation by businesses.


EU and Vietnamese agencies have reached a consensus on conducting
joint research with independent experts, to consider and scrutinise the
Vietnamese economy to try and establish the country’s market economy
status, said Depypere.


They will compare the
outcomes of research with statistics released by prestigious
international economic and financial institutions such as the World Bank
and the International Monetary Fund before reaching a final conclusion,
which should be an advantage for the Vietnamese economy, concluded the
EU expert.


In February, 2010, the EC recognised
Vietnam ’s achievements in meeting the first of five criteria needed to
be recognised as a market economy, namely the Government’s allocation
of human resources and business decisions, both direct or indirect./.

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Hurdles litter path, but Vietnam investment to rise

HANOI - Few investors disagree that Vietnam has huge potential. But until the country's opaque regulatory environment becomes more predictable, only the bravest firms will commit to making substantial direct investments there.

When Vietnam's government first opened up to foreign investment back in the 1990s, multinationals couldn't wait to break ground on factories and hire some of Asia's cheapest workers.

Foreign direct investment has since grown exponentially with the number leaping after Vietnam joined the World Trade Organization in 2007. Now, with the global economy recovering and Vietnam's regional comparative advantages rising, a new line of potential investors is forming at its gate.

Analysts say manufacturers are taking a good look at Vietnam partly because the Chinese yuan appears set for a long run of strengthening, and retailers are hoping to profit from a growing middle class in the country of 86 million.

Yet despite the country's draw, Vietnam is struggling to live up to its full potential, hindered by slow progress on a list of perennial barriers to investment and recent policymaking gaffes that have caused costly headaches for foreign businesses and scared off at least one multi-million dollar deal.

"I always say to the foreign investment authorities there are plenty of countries in Southeast Asia with a bright future behind them," said Fred Burke with the law firm Baker & McKenzie.

"They have to be careful not to take anything for granted. They're constantly tinkering with things and trying to work it out but there's a step backwards every time there's a step forwards."

Foreign direct investment inflows rose slowly from US$2.4 billion in 2000 to about $4 billion in 2006, then doubled in 2007. The following year inflows leapt to $11.5 billion before the global economic crisis clipped the figure back to $10 billion last year, government figures showed.

Awaiting clarity

Vietnam is on track in 2010 for investment as high as last year. In the first 8 months, FDI disbursements hit $7.25 billion.

"It's not all blue skies," said Alain Cany, head of the European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam. "We see very slow progress on many issues for investors ... and the government is moving really slowly to improve this business environment."

At least three recent measures appear to run counter to Hanoi's commitments to improve the business environment in the country of 86 million, business groups and consultants say. Two may violate Vietnam's World Trade Organization accession agreements.

The Finance Ministry decided in August to implement a rule on Oct. 1 that would compel companies to register price changes for products including cement, steel, infant milk, coal and animal feed, and could subject them to price controls.

State media reported ambassadors from the United States, EU, Australia, Canada and New Zealand said in a letter to the government in June the price control rule would "affect Vietnam's commitments as a WTO member" and could hinder foreign investment. A finance ministry official denied there was a WTO violation.

The chilling effect is harder to deny. Two sources said a foreign company that was considering a major investment in a cement project in central Vietnam recently shelved the plan after getting cold feet because of the price control measure.

With just days to go before it takes effect, those who are already committed are holding their breath.

"We are still waiting for clarity for how it will be implemented," said Enda Ryan, General Director baby formula maker Mead Johnson in Ho Chi Minh City.

Separately, in mid-July the trade ministry enacted new import licensing procedures that sparked complaints about delays to shipments. The European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam said the rules would increase costs, potentially deter investment and may be in breach of Vietnam's WTO obligations on import licensing.

The implementation of a third new rule, requiring raw animal products like fish and meat to be registered before importation, was delayed two months to Sept. 1 after foreign governments raised concerns. Uncertainty still hangs over its implementation.

Getting better

These new policies come atop a long list of perennial problems for businesses -- weak infrastructure, macroeconomic instability, legal uncertainty, poor intellectual property rights protection, mazes of red tape and corruption.

And yet, interest is steadily growing in Vietnam as its relative competitiveness improves.

"The mood has changed considerably from a year ago," said Orsolya Szotyory-Grove with the law firm Russin & Vecchi.

The country leapt 16 notches to number 59 on the 2010-2011 World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Index.

A United Nations survey ranked Vietnam eighth worldwide and third in Asia on a 2010-2012 list of the top host economies for FDI in terms of the number of mentions transnational corporations gave them as an FDI priority.

A new survey by UK Trade & Investment and the Economist Intelligence Unit said Vietnam was the top investment destination after the BRICs for the third year running.

Haagen Dazs, a unit of General Mills, started selling ice cream here at the end of August, and PepsiCo last month committed to invest $250 million in Vietnam. Others are said to be looking in areas including retail and telecoms.

But it won't all pan out. One Asian consultant estimated that less than 10 percent of firms looking here would actually invest.

Jacob Ramsay, who follows the country for the consultancy Control Risks, calls Vietnam a "boutique investment environment".

"Only companies that have had some previous exposure to similar sorts of difficulties are really looking," he said. "Or companies that have huge resources and plenty of time."

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Experience shared to make IPOs less exclusive

Issuing shares in Vietnam differed from procedures in other countries
as Vietnamese companies offered shares exclusively to existing
shareholders rather than seeking new ones, said deputy director of the
State Securities Commission Bui Hoang Hai at the "Steps preparing for a
successful IPO of enterprises" conference in Hanoi on Sept. 23.


The SSC drew attention to this distinction at the conference jointly
held by itself, the business and financial news Bloomberg and
Singapore 's Mileage Communications Group.


When
collecting opinions of existing shareholders, almost all investors
volunteered to buy additional shares, which led to successes for the
majority of share issuers, Hai said. "This can be considered a method to
force existing shareholders to buy additional shares," he added.


In other nations, shares are usually auctioned off to new
shareholders, the public or strategic investors. To ensure success,
issuers must then be transparent with all financial information and
reports to demonstrate their potential and improve their image in the
eyes of investors, Hai said.


Vietnamese enterprises
actually did not pay much attention to how best to attract investors so
as to make IPO successfully, he said.


To prepare for
IPO, most companies only submit a prospectus and documents to meet the
minimum requirements. "To make a successful IPO, companies need to map
out long-term strategies," Hai said.


Nguyen Ngoc
Canh, director of SSC's international co-operation department, said in
the context of the slowed local stock market, firms were faced with many
difficulties for their IPO despite profitable company performance.


Canh emphasised the crucial role professional consultants and
securities firms play in helping issuers create transparent and
comprehensive documents and financial reports as well as advising better
management and business strategies.


"Issuers could
publicise information in a timely manner and investors could understand
more about their businesses, as a result they could auction shares or
make IPO effectively," Canh said.


Yah Boh Tiong,
chairman of Mileage Communications Group, advised firms to faciliate
strong communication with shareholders, raise investor awareness of
company profiles and business performance.


Strategies to improve companies' images should be undertaken carefully
throughout three phases, including before IPO, leading up to IPO and
post-IPO, Tiong said.


Chairman of the Singapore
Securities Investors Association David Gerald said that it was essential
to create knowledgeable investors through education and information,
promote corporate transparency and corporate governance and safeguard
investors' rights.


"Good corporate governance practices translate into good corporate performance," he said.


According to the SSC, the aggregate value of all shares issued to the
public, employees, strategic partners and those auctioned at stock
exchanges by companies in the first half of this year reached about
74.96 trillion VND (3.84 billion USD).


The conference drew about 100 businessmen, security companies, as well as local and international experts./.

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Plan to sell goods in rural areas succeeds

A Government programme to distribute domestically made goods in rural
areas had benefited both companies and rural consumers, delegates told a
meeting in HCM City on Sept. 23.


Initiated in
March last year by the Ministry of Industry and Trade and the HCM
City-based Business Study and Assistance Centre, it sought to help
domestic producers understand rural customers, creating links between
producers, distributors and retailers, and educating rural consumers,
said Vu Kim Hanh, the centre's director.


The first
phase of the programme, which was reviewed at the meeting, saw 50 trade
fairs held in 18 provinces and sales of more than 30.4 billion VND (1.55
million USD), she said.


Around 649,300 people
visited the fairs while 132 firms were involved in the programme. More
than 2,000 small traders benefited from training courses held to improve
their sales skills.


The programme has enabled many
rural people to buy quality products at reasonable prices. For a long
time they have been accustomed to buying shoddy goods without clear
origins.


Tang Quang Trong of My Hao Cosmetic Company
said: "Through the trade fairs, rural customers know more about many of
our products. We also learnt to tailor our product models, prices,
quality and distribution system to suit consumers."


Do Hoang Nam of Namilux Company said the rural market was very promising
for gas stove makers since many people there still used coal or
firewood for cooking.


"By introducing Namilux gas
stoves in rural areas, our company has achieved strong growth in terms
of market share, especially for mini gas stoves," he said.


Hanh said the early results proved that rural areas were markets of
great potential that have never received the attention they deserve.


"Sales have been so high that even some companies have been surprised," she said.


The second phase of the programme, which opened this month, would see
the distribution of goods in more provinces and districts and
organisation of more training courses for traders, Hanh said.


She urged the ministry to encourage enterprises taking part in the programme for the first time./.

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Refinery lands 1b USD loan package

PetroVietnam has obtained 1 billion USD in financing for the Dung Quat
Oil Refinery, the Ministry of Finance announced on Sept. 23.


The Vietnam Development Bank will co-ordinate the financing package,
which includes 700 million USD from Government bond proceeds and the
remainder from French bank BNP Paribas, which is extending credit for
the deal through 2020 at an annual interest rate of 3.3 percent,
following a four-year grace period.


PetroVietnam
will borrow the bond proceeds for a 16-year term at a fixed interest
rate of 3.6 percent, following four year's grace.


The ministry has authorised Citibank's Trust Agency in New York to
collect interest on the 700 million USD loan made from Government bond
proceeds, while the Ministry of Finance will make interest payments
directly to BNP Paribas.


The financing will be
allocated to the Dung Quat Oil Refinery Plant No 1, which began
operating at 100 percent production capacity last month. The plant has
imported 5.7 million tonnes of crude oil and processed nearly 5 million
tonnes so far, delivering over 4.7 million tonnes of refined products to
market.


In order to ensure repayment, Circular No
114/2010/TT-BTC issued by the ministry late Sept. 23 requires
PetroVietnam to give highest priority to servicing the loans under this
package. If it falls past due, the Ministry of Finance will require
other lenders to freeze existing and further credit to the oil giant.


The ministry is preparing further risk-provision plans
to ensure repayment of the 1 billion USD debt at maturity and is
guaranteeing ultimate repayment from the State budget.


However, following the recent troubles of debt-laden shipbuilder
Vinashin, PetroVietnam was expected to set an example as the best
economic group in Vietnam.


Last week, the
Government instructed the Ministry of Finance to consider Vinashin's
request for 300 million USD in Government bond proceeds to service its
debt to French bank Natixis.


If this proposal is
approved, the 1 billion USD in capital raised by Vietnam's second
overseas sale of Government bonds – offering higher yields than the
lower-rated Philippines and Indonesia – would go to Vinashin and
PetroVietnam.


The bonds were expected to offer a yield of 6.95 percent and a nominal interest rate of 6.75 percent.


The bond sale was originally conceived to provide capital for energy
and infrastructure projects that would support growth in an economy
suffering from a shortage of foreign exchange./.

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Blue chips stave off market dive

A rebound in blue chips in the final minutes of Sept. 23's session on
the HCM Stock Exchange helped saved the market from a steeper decline
and allowed the VN-Index to close off just 0.69 percent to 450.77 points
– after falling to as low as 447 earlier in the day.


Transactions were sluggish throughout most of the session, while decliners outnumbered advancers overall by 184-36.


Ocean Group (OGC) was again the most-active share, with almost 4
million sold. However, the shares plunged by 4.46 percent to end the day
at a price of 34,200 VND (1.75 USD) per share.


On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index declined by a more dramatic 1.29 percent Sept. 23, closing at 129.83 points.


However, volume rose by 41 percent over the previous day's session to
36.7 million shares, worth 879.6 billion VND (45.1 million USD).


PetroVietnam Construction (PVX) continued to be the most
heavily-traded share nationwide, with almost 4.4 million changing hands,
but PVX closed off by over 2.9 percent to a price of 23,200 VND (1.19
USD) per share.


HCM City Securities Co analysts on
Sept. 23 wrote that investors were still awaiting September inflations
figures as well as the results of the State Bank of Vietnam 's
review of its Circular No 13, which would impose stricter risk
management requirements on commercial banks.


Until investors received more data, they suggested, the market would continue to tread water.


Vu Thanh Tung, who represents an investment fund from the Republic
of Korea in Hanoi , agreed that investors were looking for clearer
signs of economic trends in the final quarter of the year,
particularly regarding inflation, interest rates and foreign exchange
rates, before making investment decisions./.

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Saturday, December 4, 2010

Banks to push sustainable projects

Financial institutions must play a more active role in promoting
sustainable hydropower development in the lower Mekong river basin,
the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has said.


Leading
US, European and Asian financial institutions on Sept. 24 attended a
conference co-convened by WWF and other development partners in Bangkok
to highlight the financial, social and environmental risks and
responsibilities of hydropower development on the lower Mekong river.


The meeting will also explore ways to understand and mitigate these risks.


"It is a missed opportunity," said Marc Goichot, sustainable infrastructure senior advisor for WWF Greater Mekong.


" Lower Mekong dam sites were selected in the 1960s and there has not
been a process to review them with the benefit of today's science and
technology."


Currently, there are 11 hydropower dams
proposed for the lower Mekong river, which runs through Laos,
Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam.


If one of these
dams is built, it will break the lower Mekong's ecosystem
connectivity, which can have a cascade of negative effects.


"Putting a dam on the lower Mekong River will block fish migration
to spawning grounds, collapsing fish stocks," said Michael Simon, head
of the People Infrastructure and Environment Programme of Oxfam
Australia .


"Do lenders want to be associated with
putting the food security of 60 million people in some of the world's
poorest countries at risk?" he added.


Forecasts show the
productivity of lower Mekong fisheries, which is valued up to 7 billion
USD annually, would drop by up to 70 percent by lower Mekong
mainstream dams.


In addition, iconic species such as the
Mekong giant catfish and Mekong dolphin would face likely extinction
if the proposed dams go ahead.


"Hydropower projects can
limit their impact to ecosystem connectivity. For example, a large dam
can be built in the floodplain beside a river channel rather than across
it, or a hydropower project can have no dam at all," said Goichot.


In southern Laos , there is such an alternative being proposed by
the Lao Department of Electricity and semi-state owned French company
CNR (Compagnie Nationale du Rhone)./.

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