Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Russia to provide ESPO crude oil for Vietnam

Russia ’s TNK-BP Oil Group will provide the first shipment of 100
tonnes of crude oil for the PetroVietnam Oil Corporation (PV Oil) via
the Eastern Siberia-Pacific Ocean (ESPO) in November this year.


To this effect, a contract was signed between PV Oil General Director
Nguyen Xuan Son and Deputy Chairman of TNK-BP’s Management Board Maksim
Barskiy in Moscow on September 29 at the presence of Vietnamese
Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai.


Speaking
after the signing ceremony, Deputy PM Hai expressed his hope that the
partnership between PV Oil and TNK-BP will further develop and harvest
more results in the future.


He stressed that the
signing of the ESPO crude oil contract will be the foundation for the
two sides to expand cooperation, including the exchange of experiences
in crude oil trading and processing.


The Deputy PM
declared that the Vietnamese government supports the cooperation
between PetroVietnam and TNK-BP in exploring and exploiting oil and gas
in the two countries’ territories and in third countries.


PV Oil General Director Nguyen Xuan Son said he hoped that after the
signing, TNK-BP will continue to participate in oil processing, refinery
and distribution in Vietnam .


The contract was
an initial step for the two companies to sign other agreements in order
to boost cooperation and mutual investment, he added.


According to PetroVietnam General Director Phung Dinh Thuc,
PetroVietnam considers Russia a strategic area and with the
contract, TNK-BP has become the third biggest partner of PetroVietnam
and PV Oil, after Zarubezhneft and Gazprom.


He
informed that the first oil stream resulting from the cooperation
between PetroVietnam and Zarubezhneft will run in the next several days.


PetroVietnam has so far signed 20 oil and gas contracts with foreign companies, he added./.

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Vietnam, RoK step up investment cooperation

Vietnam, RoK step up investment cooperation

Vietnam wishes that businesses from the Republic of Korea (RoK)
would increase their investment in the country, especially industries
with high-added value and modern technology-intensive industries.


The statement was delivered by Deputy Minister of Planning and
Investment Dang Huy Dong at a seminar, jointly held by his ministry, the
RoK Chamber of Commerce and Industry, the RoK Business Association and
the RoK Embassy, in Hanoi on September 29.


The
seminar focused on policies and opportunities for infrastructure
development investment within the public-private partnership (PPP)
framework and policies to encourage foreign investment in industrial
zones.


Deputy Minister Dong said the Vietnamese
government applauded the RoK foreign direct investment (FDI) flow in
Vietnam , which, he said, greatly contributes to the country’s
socio-economic development.


The RoK Ambassador Park
Seok Hoan expressed his belief on cooperative relations between the two
countries’ businesses, saying with an open investment environment,
Vietnam will become a more attractive destination for the RoK
investors.


By the end of August this year, the RoK
ranked 88 th among Vietnam ’s FDI providers with 2,605 projects
registered at 23 billion USD, according to the Ministry of Planning and
Investment.


The two governments have agreed to lift the biletaral relations to strategic partnership.


The RoK businesses have been involved in most of sectors in Vietnam
, from infrastructure, telecommunications and mechanics to real estate,
auto manufacturing, shipbuilding and restaurant services./.

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TNK-BP eyes BP's Vietnam gas assets

MOSCOW - Russia's No. 3 oil firm TNK-BP would like to buy a 35 percent stake in a BP gas deposit in Vietnam known as Block 06-1, TNK-BP CEO Maxim Barsky said on Wednesday.

"Yes, we have a proposal from BP about block 06-1. I hope that at the next board meeting we will make a proposal," he told reporters at a ceremony for the signing of an oil contract with PetroVietnam.

He also said PetroVietnam had offered TNK-BP a 50 percent share in an oil refinery with a capacity of 6 million tons a year. In exchange, the Vietnamese firm could enter an oil producing asset in Russia, he added, without giving details.

"We are interested in this," Barsky said.

TNK-BP shifted its strategy following the 2008 departure of then chief executive Robert Dudley by focusing on both the Russian and foreign markets, after previously operating mainly in Russia under BP's aegis.

The company is already developing its own joint-venture project in Venezuela, and a company spokesman in July said TNK-BP was considering buying BP's assets there.

BP has invested US$1.3 billion in the Nam Con Son offshore project, but it is looking to sell a range of assets to raise funds in order to pay off costs associated with the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

Barsky also said that TNK-BP hopes to sign a preliminary agreement with PetroVietnam on the refinery stake at the end of next month when Russian President Dmitry Medvedev visits the Southeast Asian nation.

TNK-BP vice president Jonathan Kollek also reiterated that his company will provide 100,000 tons of ESPO crude to Vietnam per month during 12 months.

The executive also said the shipments, which will begin in November, "might be a bit more" than the contracted volume without providing further details.

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Japan business confidence rises, but doubts remain

TOKYO - Japanese business confidence has improved for a sixth straight quarter but companies are expecting a gloomy end of the year amid increased global economic uncertainty, the Bank of Japan said Wednesday.

Sentiment among major manufacturers rose to a higher-than-expected reading of 8 in September from 1 in June, according to the central bank's closely watched Tankan survey of more than 11,000 firms.

The latest figure shows that optimists still outweigh pessimists among major manufacturers in terms of their view of Japan's economic climate, in only the second positive reading since June 2008.

But the forecast for the December survey is for a reading of minus 1, suggesting that companies expect conditions to sharply worsen in the months ahead as Japan remains beset by deflation and the effects of a strong yen.

"Companies are very cautious about the economy towards the year-end," noted Naoki Murakami, chief economist at Monex Securities.

In particular there was "increasing uncertainty about the world economy and the (Japanese) government's dull responses to the chain reaction of the yen's rise and stock price falls."

The strong yen has hurt exporters, making their goods more expensive and eroding companies' overseas profits when repatriated. Videogame giant Nintendo on Wednesday more than halved earlier profit forecasts, citing yen strength.

Exports, a crucial driver for Japan's growth, expanded at their slowest pace this year in August, as the impact of the yen's strength and softening overseas demand illustrated the risks threatening a fragile recovery.

A strong domestic currency also makes imports cheaper, helping prolong a damaging deflationary cycle where consumers hold off on purchases in the hope of further price drops, clouding future corporate investment.

The reading was made with companies expecting an exchange rate of 89.44 yen to the dollar, higher than in the previous survey but much lower than current levels, which if sustained will further erode confidence.

Japan stepped into the currency markets in September for the first time since 2004 in a bid to stem the yen's strength after it hit a 15-year high against the dollar, and has repeatedly warned it is ready to do so again.

"Many (negative) factors are piling up," said Takeshi Minami, economist at Norinchukin Research Institute. "Considering exports and consumer spending are unlikely to be a strong driving force, the economy will be at a standstill."

Japan's economy expanded by an annualized 1.5 percent in the April-June period, sharply lower than the previous quarter's 5.0 percent.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan Monday ordered a supplementary budget for fresh stimulus measures be put together to shore up the flagging economy, after he recently announced 915 billion yen package to add jobs and boost growth.

The Tankan figures are looked at closely by the central bank when formulating monetary policy, and it has come under heavy government pressure recently to do more to help boost the economy.

"The outcome of the latest Tankan will prompt the BoJ to go for additional monetary easing," said Murakami.

The upbeat September reading among big firms was helped by higher automobile demand ahead of the expiration of government stimulus incentives for green car purchases, said Minami.

But including all industries such as medium and small-sized manufacturers and non-manufacturers, the outlook was gloomy at a reading of minus 10.

The index, which measures the percentage of firms that think business conditions are good minus those that believe they are bad, hit a record low of minus 58 in March 2009.

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Dollar weak, gold peaks as Fed, BOJ action eyed

HONG KONG - The dollar hit an eight-month low, driving gold to a record high, on rising expectations the Federal Reserve will act again to help the struggling economy while new evidence of China's robust health lifted European stocks.

Europe's major equity markets rose on Wednesday, with the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index of top shares up 0.6 percent in early trade, making up for Tuesday's decline, spurred by news of a dip in US consumer confidence.

Gold rose as the Fed and Bank of Japan look to pump more funds into markets via bond purchases and other measures to help their struggling economies.

"The backdrop for the dollar continues to deteriorate," JPMorgan said, advising clients to seize any bounce in the dollar as a chance to sell.

"The increased focus on QE and the break of several key dollar support levels maintained the overall bearish bias."

Japanese government bond futures hit a seven-year high while US Treasury yield curve moved on Tuesday to its flattest since early September over expectations of further monetary easing by both central banks.

Such expectations were reinforced by a fall in US consumer confidence to its lowest since February and a worsening outlook in Bank of Japan's quarterly tankan survey of major companies.

Stock markets, however, found support in a rise in HSBC's China Purchasing Managers' index to a five-month high in September, which pointed to renewed, though moderate, momentum in China's vast industrial sector.

Asian stocks outside Japan rose 0.6 percent, poised for their biggest monthly gain since July 2009, up 11.8 percent, in what is historically one of the worst months for stocks.

Japan's Nikkei closed up 0.7 percent, helped by quarter-end window dressing and expectations that the BOJ will respond to the worsened outlook from Japanese manufacturers by further easing its policy when it meets on Oct. 4-5.

The closely watched tankan survey showed confidence improved for a sixth straight quarter but firms turned negative on the outlook, possibly a sign of growing concerns that a strong yen could derail the fragile economic recovery.

Waiting for the Fed

The dollar index dipped to as low as 78.856, the lowest since early February, hurt by recent speculation that the US Federal Reserve may embark on a second round of quantitative easing later this year.

The weak dollar pushed gold to an all-time high and silver to a 30-year high as ETF holdings hit another record.

Gold rose to $1,310.10 an ounce -- its eighth record-high session this month.

US consumer confidence fell to its lowest level in seven months, the latest in a series in data that give a mixed signal on the economy, with unemployment levels at 26-year highs and access to credit still tight.

The Federal Reserve said last week it was prepared to put more money into the economy, if needed, to stimulate the recovery and avoid deflation.

The Fed is probably preparing a fresh round of quantitative easing measures to announce at the end of its Nov. 2-3 meeting, hedge fund adviser Medley Global Advisors said in a report on Tuesday, a market source told Reuters.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the Fed is also weighing a more open-ended, smaller-scale bond buying program.

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Dollar weak, gold peaks as Fed, BOJ action eyed

HONG KONG - The dollar hit an eight-month low, driving gold to a record high, on rising expectations the Federal Reserve will act again to help the struggling economy while new evidence of China's robust health lifted European stocks.

Europe's major equity markets rose on Wednesday, with the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index of top shares up 0.6 percent in early trade, making up for Tuesday's decline, spurred by news of a dip in US consumer confidence.

Gold rose as the Fed and Bank of Japan look to pump more funds into markets via bond purchases and other measures to help their struggling economies.

"The backdrop for the dollar continues to deteriorate," JPMorgan said, advising clients to seize any bounce in the dollar as a chance to sell.

"The increased focus on QE and the break of several key dollar support levels maintained the overall bearish bias."

Japanese government bond futures hit a seven-year high while US Treasury yield curve moved on Tuesday to its flattest since early September over expectations of further monetary easing by both central banks.

Such expectations were reinforced by a fall in US consumer confidence to its lowest since February and a worsening outlook in Bank of Japan's quarterly tankan survey of major companies.

Stock markets, however, found support in a rise in HSBC's China Purchasing Managers' index to a five-month high in September, which pointed to renewed, though moderate, momentum in China's vast industrial sector.

Asian stocks outside Japan rose 0.6 percent, poised for their biggest monthly gain since July 2009, up 11.8 percent, in what is historically one of the worst months for stocks.

Japan's Nikkei closed up 0.7 percent, helped by quarter-end window dressing and expectations that the BOJ will respond to the worsened outlook from Japanese manufacturers by further easing its policy when it meets on Oct. 4-5.

The closely watched tankan survey showed confidence improved for a sixth straight quarter but firms turned negative on the outlook, possibly a sign of growing concerns that a strong yen could derail the fragile economic recovery.

Waiting for the Fed

The dollar index dipped to as low as 78.856, the lowest since early February, hurt by recent speculation that the US Federal Reserve may embark on a second round of quantitative easing later this year.

The weak dollar pushed gold to an all-time high and silver to a 30-year high as ETF holdings hit another record.

Gold rose to $1,310.10 an ounce -- its eighth record-high session this month.

US consumer confidence fell to its lowest level in seven months, the latest in a series in data that give a mixed signal on the economy, with unemployment levels at 26-year highs and access to credit still tight.

The Federal Reserve said last week it was prepared to put more money into the economy, if needed, to stimulate the recovery and avoid deflation.

The Fed is probably preparing a fresh round of quantitative easing measures to announce at the end of its Nov. 2-3 meeting, hedge fund adviser Medley Global Advisors said in a report on Tuesday, a market source told Reuters.

The Wall Street Journal reported that the Fed is also weighing a more open-ended, smaller-scale bond buying program.

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Monday, December 20, 2010

VN welcomes 3.7 mln foreign visitors in nine months

The number of foreign visitors to Vietnam in the first nine months of
this year reached over 3.7 million, up 34.2 percent over the same period
of last year, according to the General Statistics Office.


Of the total, the number of leisure visitors for reached over
2.3 million, up 43.3 percent, that of business visitors was over
757,000, up 39.8 percent and the number of arrivals who visited
relatives increased by 2 percent to 425,000.


Cambodia registered the highest growth in the number of visitors to
Vietnam, up over 92 percent. It was followed by China, Thailand, the
Republic of Korea and Australia with a growth of 89 percent, 35 percent,
29 percent and 27 percent, respectively.


Experts
forecast that the number of foreign visitors to Vietnam would continue
to increase as a series of major domestic and international events will
be held in the country between now and the end of this year, especially
activities to celebrate the 1,000 th anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi
from October 1-10.


The tourism sector is expected to welcome 4.2 million international tourists this year./.

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