Sunday, December 26, 2010

JICA to increase aid to Vietnam

The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) in Vietnam has said
it wants to increase the amount of aid it provides to Vietnam in the
future.


JICA’s chief representative in Vietnam
Tsuno Motonori said that JICA had come to the decision because Vietnam
has joined the group of average income nations which shows that
Vietnam now has a higher economic capacity and uses capital more
effectively.


He said that future JICA assistance
will be based on the Vietnamese Government’s requirements and the agency
will help to upgrade the nation’s transport and electricity
infrastructure. It will also help Vietnam to improve personnel
training and policy mechanisms.


Out of all the
countries that have received JICA aid, Vietnam has been the most
successful in disbursing the funding, he noted.


In
the early 1990s, Japan’s official development assistance (ODA) was
used to build road networks in the northern region, including highways
5, 10 and 18, the Bai Chay Bridge in the northern province of
Quang Ninh and the Binh Bridge in the northern city of Hai Phong .
The traffic system has considerably improved transportation in the
northern region as well as people’s standards of living.


However, in an interview with the Banking Times on September 29,
Motonori said that Vietnam should focus on improving its
infrastructure, human resources and institutions to increase the
competitiveness of its national economy.


Vietnam needs to mobilise more private capital through public private partnerships, he added./.

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Financial firms jostle for slice of credit pie

Personal credit is no longer a “big earner” for the banks only, as
financial companies are rushing to cash in on this market, say industry
insiders.


Statistics show that Vietnam is now
home to 17 financial companies, which have been established by domestic
and foreign-invested groups and corporations. These financial companies
provide loans enabling consumers to buy cars and houses, similar to
services provided by the banks.


To improve their
competitiveness, financial firms have continuously released new products
onto the market, based on the business advantages of their parent
companies, expanded their limits on loans, adjusted deadlines for
payments and linked up with the suppliers of consumer goods to serve
their clients better.


For this reason, a large
number of consumers prefer the products provided by financial companies,
although their interest rates are 1.2-1.7 percent higher than those
offered by the banks.


The Prudential Finance
Company, an arm of the Prudential Insurance Group, is well known for its
loans without collateral, based on valid insurance policies. The limit
and duration of the loans are directly proportional to the value and
period of the insurance policies. The company also provides its product
online and by telephone to save time and transaction costs for clients.


Credit for house buyers provided by the PetroVietnam
Finance Corporation (PVFC) is seen as safer than similar products
provided by the banks. When clients sign a loan contract, they also sign
an insurance policy with the life insurance company ACE Life, to keep
ownership of the mortgaged assets. If there are defaults, ACE Life will
pay the remainder of the loan to PVFC.


For the
Hadico Financial Company, under the Hanoi Housing Development and
Investment Corporation, a repayment period of up to 30 years is an
advantage for its loans for house purchases.


Foreign-invested financial firms are also emerging as big rivals to the
banks. Boasting global networks, these companies have teamed up with
major producers to offer consumers non-profit loans to boost
consumption.


Many major banks, including the Asian
Commercial Bank (ACB), the Sai Gon Thuong Tin Commercial Bank
(Sacombank) and the Dong A Bank (DongABank) plan to set up financial
companies to tap into the personal credit market, but none of them have
begun to operate yet.


A number of other banks have
also unveiled their plans to put capital into multinational financial
firms to improve their competitiveness in the personal credit market./.

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Seminar highlights safety in oil & gas industry

Enhancing safety during offshore oil and gas exploration and production
was the main topic of a seminar, hosted by the Vietnam National Oil and
Gas Group (PetroVietnam) in Ho Chi Minh City on Sept. 30.


PetroVietnam’s Deputy General Director Do Van Hau recalled the
Deepwater Horizon explosion which occurred in the Gulf of Mexico on
April 20, 2010, killing 11 people and triggering the largest-ever oil
spill in the history of oil and gas exploration.


The
incident set off alarm bells throughout the industry and reminded
management agencies and the oil and gas industry to re-examine safety in
the sector, he said.


Hau said that over the past 30
years, PetroVietnam and international contractors have spared no effort
in ensuring the safety of their staff and the environment, stressing
that there have been no serious accidents so far.


However, following the Deepwater Horizon incident, safety in offshore
oil and gas production has become a special concern for the State and a
priority task for the Vietnamese oil and gas industry.


The delegates, including managers and representatives from oil and gas
joint ventures and services companies from Vietnam and overseas,
reviewed and recommended various measures to ensure safety in the
industry.


They also discussed the lessons learnt
from the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico as well as its impacts on the
international insurance market and the risk management measures and
insurance policies used by oil and gas companies./.

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Surge in foreign arrivals puts target within reach

The target of 4 million international arrivals this year seems well within reach since the number has already reached 3.83 million, a third higher than last year at this stage, according to the General Statistics Office.

Several major events scheduled during the remaining months, like the upcoming 1000th anniversary of Hanoi and the International Yacht Festival in Mui Ne, are expected to attract flocks of visitors.

Most visitors so far this year – around 3 million -- have arrived by air, while 703,600 came by road, and 37,500 by sea.

The number of people visiting for tourism is up 44.3 percent year on year at 2.35 million.

China remained the leading market with 676,000 Chinese visitors arriving in the first nine months, a 89 percent increase.

It was followed by Korea, the US, and Japan with 364,400, 324,900, and 317,700 visitors, or increases of 29.4 percent, 2.4 percent, and 18.7 percent.

The tourism sector, which has earned revenues of around VND70 trillion (US$3.6 billion) so far, has also reported 23 million domestic tourists.

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Vietnam Jan-Sept credit expected to rise 19.5 pct

HANOI - Loans in Vietnam by the end of this month are estimated to rise 19.5 percent from the end of 2009, the central bank said on Thursday, on course to reach an annual target of 25 percent credit growth.

The projection was based on expansion of 19.27 percent as of Monday, State Bank of Vietnam Governor Nguyen Van Giau said in a statement on the central bank's website.

"The credit growth target of 25 percent for the whole of the year will be attained," Giau said in the statement.

The government has supported credit expansion to facilitate economic growth, which accelerated to an annual rate of 7.16 percent in the third quarter.

Credit jumped 37.7 percent last year from 2008, speeding from an annual rise of 23.58 percent the previous year, the central bank has said.

Loans for securities investment of 15 trillion dong (US$769.6 million) had the highest rise of 19.8 percent, consumer loans jumped 19.7 percent to 151 trillion dong while non-production loans rose 18.2 percent to 385 trillion dong, Giau was quoted by Thursday's Thanh Nien newspaper as saying.

He gave no value estimates for Vietnam's total credit at the end of September.

He said lending interest rates dropped very slowly in September, edging down just 0.01 percentage point from August. Lending rates in Vietnam now range at between 13-15.5 percent.

The central bank will work with commercial banks to further cut interest rates, Giau said in the newspaper report.

The central bank said on Wednesday it would relax compulsory reserve requirements for banks that made significant loans for agriculture or rural development as a way to mobilize funding for the countryside.

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China warns US bill on yuan could hurt trade ties

BEIJING - China on Thursday rejected US legislation seeking to punish Beijing for allegedly manipulating its currency, warning that pressure on the yuan issue could "severely damage" trade ties.

Beijing also said the bill -- overwhelmingly approved by the US House of Representatives on Wednesday -- violates World Trade Organization rules, and insisted it has not deliberately undervalued its currency.

Angry US lawmakers, who accuse Beijing of keeping the value of the yuan artificially low to give its exporters an unfair competitive edge, blamed the weak yuan for the loss of US jobs, just weeks ahead of key midterm elections.

"We firmly oppose the US Congress approving these bills," Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu told reporters.

"Exercising protectionism against China under the excuse of the renminbi exchange rate will only severely damage China-US trade and economic ties and have a negative impact on the two countries' economies and the world economy."

The legislation was passed even as the United States announced a resumption of military ties with China after a 10-month break, saying the two powers both wanted to avoid miscalculations in an increasingly tense region.

In Beijing, commerce ministry spokesman Yao Jian said the US bill was "inconsistent with relevant rules of the World Trade Organization to conduct an anti-subsidy investigation based on exchange rate reasons".

"China has never undervalued its currency in order to gain a competitive advantage. The US cannot use its trade deficit with China as an excuse to adopt trade protectionist measures," Yao said, state media reported.

The House bill calls on the US government to consider Beijing's currency policy as an improper trade subsidy, and expands the powers of the Commerce Department by allowing it to slap retaliatory tariffs on Chinese goods.

The chamber passed the bill by a 348-79 margin, one of its strongest showings against China in years, fuelled by voter anger at the struggling economy and joblessness near 10 percent ahead of November 2 elections.

Some critics say the yuan could be undervalued by as much as 40 percent.

"The US-China relationship is an important one in every way -- culturally, politically, diplomatically, economically, commercially -- but we need to have them play by the rules," said Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The US Senate has signaled it will take up a companion bill after the elections, but the legislation's fate is unclear and President Barack Obama has not formally taken a position on whether he supports it.

Ahead of the vote, Obama said at a campaign-style event in Iowa that the yuan was "undervalued" and was "a contributing factor" to the yawning US trade deficit with China -- the world's second biggest economy.

"People generally think that they are managing their currency in ways that make our goods more expensive to sell and their goods cheaper to sell here," he said.

China pledged in June to loosen its grip on the yuan, which had been effectively pegged at about 6.8 to the dollar since mid-2008. Since then, the currency has gained less than two percent against the greenback.

The central bank on Thursday set the central parity rate -- the middle of the allowed trading band for the currency -- at 6.7011 to the dollar. The yuan can move up or down 0.5 percent from that rate during the trading day.

That was weaker than the 6.6936 rate set Wednesday, which was the strongest against the greenback since June's pledge.

Last week, before meeting Obama, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao rejected a drastic appreciation of the yuan, warning that it would cause Chinese companies to go bankrupt and workers to lose their jobs.

Ahead of the House vote, China's central bank issued a statement pledging to increase the flexibility of the yuan and "gradually improve the exchange rate setting mechanism" -- near-identical to the wording it used in June.

A group representing US businesses in China criticized the bill, saying it puts thousands of American jobs in export-related industries at risk and would not spur growth in the world's biggest economy.

"Blaming China won't help the US economy but this legislation may cost American jobs," John Watkins, chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, said in a statement.

"We call on the US Senate to thoroughly review the proposed legislation and we hope it does not move forward in the legislative process."

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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Investors remain skittish about economy

Stock indices fell on both of the nation’s stock exchanges on Wednesday despite the State Bank of Vietnam’s announcement this week resolving investor uncertainty about Circular No 13, as well as economic growth announced by the General Statistics Office (GSO) at a healthy 6.52 percent in the first nine months of the year.

On the HCM Stock Exchange, the VN-Index closed down 0.48 percent to 452.94 points, despite rising throughout most of Sept. 29’s session. Over 33 million shares were exchanged, worth VND896.1 billion (US$46 million) – a decline of 15 percent in volume and 10 percent in value.

Decliners outnumbered advancers by 173-42.

Ocean Group continued as the most-active share on the southern bourse on a volume of just around a million shares, closing unchanged at VND32,200 ($1.65).

Of the 10 leading shares by capitalization, insurer Bao Viet Holdings (BVH), Eximbank (EIB) and real estate developer Vincom (VIC) posted gains, while software giant FPT (FPT), Sacombank (STB), and developers Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAG) and Masan Group (MSN) declined.

On the Hanoi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index fell by an even more substantial 2.12 percent to close the day at just 127.41 points. Market value declined by 14 percent to VND842.7 billion ($43.2 million) on a volume of 33.54 million shares, while losers outnumbered gainers by an overwhelming 264-38.

PetroVietnam Construction (PVX) resumed its role as the most-active share nationwide with 2.57 million shares traded, but the shares closed down 2.9 percent to VND23,300 ($1.95).

VNDirect Securities Co analyst Pham Vu Dong on Wednesday told financial information website cafef.vn that, excluding growth, all other economic indicators were unfavorable. He noted high inflation in September and a trade deficit that could reach $13.5 billion by year’s end, along with sluggish credit growth.

“The domestic economy is unlikely to undergo a sudden turnaround in the remaining months of the year,” Dong said.

Gold prices continued to lure investors away from stocks, as well, with domestic gold prices hitting another record high on the same day at over VND31 million ($1,590) per tael. A tael is equal to 1.2 troy ounces.

ACB Securities Co analysts also noted that Circular No 19, which supplements Circular No 13, retained the risk coefficient ratio for securities at 250 percent, a level unlikely to encourage banks to loan further funds for securities investment.

Foreign investors continued as net buyers on both exchanges on the same day, picking up VND38.5 billion ($2 million) worth of shares.

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