Long haul flights to shift from Tan Son Nhat to Long Thanh airport

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When operational, the Long Thanh International Airport will receive planes flying 1,000 kilometers and more.
The move is planned to reduce the burden on the heavily overloaded Tan Son Nhat International Airport, currently the biggest in the country.

In the future, the Tan Son Nhat Airport in Ho Chi Minh City will receive narrow-bodied jets like Airbus A321 and Boeing 737 used for routes under 1,000 kilometers, the Ministry of Transport said in the feasibility report it submitted to the government in late July for the new Long Thanh International Airport.

Long Thanh airport, to be built in the southern province of Dong Nai, will have four stories, with the ground floor for welcoming passengers, first floor for arrivals, transit and baggage claim, second floor for shopping and restaurants and third floor for departures and customs, the report said.

Do Tat Binh, deputy director of the Airports Corporation of Vietnam (ACV), which partnered with a French-Japanese-Vietnamese consortium to produce the feasibility report, said that the airport will have large spaces for trees and a waterfall. Natural light will be utilized to the maximum, he added.

The report, which is scheduled to be presented to the National Assembly in October, proposes three funding options for the airport: from official development assistance (ODA), appointing ACV as the main investor, or inviting bids from interested investors.

It highly recommends the option, to have state-owned ACV, which runs 22 airports in the country, be the main investor. The corporation has experience building runways, parking bays and terminals for the biggest airports in Vietnam, the report noted.

The Long Thanh International Airport, to be built in three phases over three decades, is set to become Vietnam’s largest airport.

The first phase is scheduled for completion in 2025, when the new airport will be able to handle 25 million passengers a year. The next two phases will run from 2030 to 2035 and from 2040 to 2050.

The three phases are estimated to cost $5.4 billion now, but experts have warned this could double if the project is delayed by five years.

Lying 40 kilometers east of HCMC, the airport is expected to take up the overflow from the largest existing airport in the country, the Tan Son Nhat International Airport.

Once completed, Long Thanh International Airport will have an annual capacity of 100 million passengers and five million tons of cargo.

Tan Son Nhat served 38 million passengers last year, up 6.4 percent from 2017, way above its designed capacity of 25 million passengers.

Vietnamese airports served 103.5 million passengers last year, up 11 percent from 2017, according to ACV.

Source: Vnexpress

Saigon campaign against foreigners violating traffic laws underway

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The Ho Chi Minh City police are set to crack down on violations of traffic laws by foreigners in a campaign starting August 16.
For two weeks before the start of the two-month campaign officers will apprise foreign tourists and expats about traffic rules. Foreigners will be let off with warnings for violations during the two-week period.

Lieutenant Colonel Nguyen Van Binh of the Road-Railway Traffic Police Division said officers fluent in foreign languages would be deployed.

At a street corner in Ho Chi Minh City’s central District 1 on Monday, police stopped three foreign motorbike drivers for paper check, but only two of them possessed a driving license. They were let go with a warning.

Last month the city police began a month-long campaign against DUI (driving under the influence), speeding, failure to wear crash helmets, street racing, and other violations in all 24 districts.

By the end of July they had dealt with more than 10,000 violations and slapped fines of nearly VND4 billion ($172,000).

The city received more than 4.2 million foreign tourists in the first half of this year, a 10 percent jump year-on-year. It expects 8.5 million to visit this year.

Data from the Ministry of Labour, Invalids, and Social Affairs shows the number of foreign employees in Vietnam increased from 63,557 in 2011 to 83,046 in 2016.

They were mostly from Asian countries like China, South Korea and Japan (73 percent), followed by Europe (21.6 percent) and North America (2.4 percent).

Around 80,000 foreigners had work permits as of last February, the ministry said.

Road crashes are a leading cause of death in Vietnam, killing almost one person every hour. More than 18,720 accidents occurred last year, killing 8,244 people and injuring nearly 14,800, according to the National Traffic Safety Committee.

Many bike rental services require foreign customers to only furnish their passports and not driving licenses.

Last February a foreign couple was filmed driving a motorbike at 100 kilometers per hour in the emergency lane meant for four-wheel vehicles on the Long Thanh-Dau Giay Expressway between HCMC and Dong Nai Province.

Source: Vnexpress

Hanoi names and shames tax avoiding firms

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The Hanoi Department of Taxation has released a list of companies owing VND528 billion (USD22.9 million) in taxes.

The list includes several major real estate enterprises. Among those, Song Da 9.06 Joint Stock Company owed VND40 billion (USD1.73 million) by late Many. It is followed by Bac Ha Urban Construction Investment Joint Stock Company, Hoang Gia Invest, Viglacera Consulting Company and Architecture and Construction Company 1 with the debts of VND17 billion, VND2.9 billion and VND1.8 billion respectively.

Hanoi People’s Committee has set up a task force to recover the debts related to taxes and land rental.

Nguyen Doan Toan, vice chairman of the committee, and Mai Son, head of the Hanoi Taxation Department will participate in the taskforce.

Source: Dtinews

Five dead, dozen missing as flood hit northern region

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At least five people have been killed and 13 others remained missing in the flooding triggered by Storm Wipha in some northern provinces, according to local authorities.

The figures was announced in a report released Sunday evening by the Central Steering Committee for Natural Disasters Prevention which also said 284 houses had been damaged in Thanh Hoa, Lang Son, Dien Bien and Bac Kan provinces.

A road is damaged by the flood in Thanh Hoa Province

According to the committee, heavy rains triggered by Storm Wipha has been going on since August 2, causing flooding and landslides in many areas in Quang Ninh, Vinh Phuc, Lang Son, and Thanh Hoa provinces. Muong Lat and Quan Son districts in Thanh Hoa Province has been isolated by the flood. Local authorities are still trying to look for 12 missing people.

Rains are forecasted to continue in the northern region on August 5.

Source: Dtinews

 

 

 

How to Treat Bleeding Gums During Traveling?

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Gums are the sensitive part of your teeth that not only holds your teeth but provides them complete support in eating and drinking. One has to take care of teeth all the time because teeth help in smiling and eating, so it is better to keep teeth strong.

At home, one can clean teeth easily but during traveling, it’s like a challenge to take care of teeth especially when gums bleed. No doubt home remedies for bleeding gums are available that can be well utilized by a user, but one should take care of things during traveling. How one is supposed to follow home remedies to stop gum bleeding?

What are the best bleeding gums home remedies available for traveling? No doubt traveling is a part of the entertainment that can become a troubling experience, when someone faces severe pain in teeth and gum. What should be done to stop gums to bleed? Of course, one should follow home remedies for bleeding gums. It is not necessary that home remedies are available at only one place, in fact, the process of natural remedies for bleeding gums are available during the traveling period. If you happen to visit gotoothache.com, you will come across so many remedies for bleeding gums that you can follow at home and during traveling.

The choice is yours!
Stop Bleeding Gums with Simple Home Remedies

Whenever you travel with family or alone, you keep a handbag where you keep all the accessories that you need during traveling. Don’t forget to keep your toothbrush and toothpaste in the bag because you need to clean up your teeth during your stay. Further, if you are used to of using natural remedies for bleeding gums at home, then you have better to keep that stuff in your bag. What sort of stuff is needed to clean teeth especially for reducing gum bleeding? First of all, bring your toothpaste, if you use some medicated toothpaste or the one that you have made at home would be great.

Also, you can keep the items you use at home for cleaning teeth. Even all the necessary items that you use for gum bleeding can be packed up in your bag. The important item includes baking soda, salt, fruits, and vegetables. Lemon might be the best product used for cleaning teeth during traveling. If you feel pain in guns, just use baking soda along with lemon drops. Rinse your mouth with this effective remedy to get rid of bleeding. Also, you can rely on other home remedies for bleeding gums. What are other remedies?

You can also drink lemon juice during traveling and that’s the smart solution to avoid gum pain. Lemon fights against bacterial infections, so it can be tried during traveling. Keep flossing your teeth once you have done eating during traveling. Never let food particles stay in your teeth as they cause bacteria and that’s really bad. There are so many remedies for bleeding gums, but flossing and using fruits are the best ones. Are you ready to follow the mentioned tips during traveling?

More Luxury Buyers Emerge As Vietnam’s Economy is booming

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Wealthy Vietnamese are looking in Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and as far away as Europe and the U.S.

Over the past decade, Ho Chi Minh City’s skyline has been redefined by increasingly flashy towers of glass and steel, bold symbols of the country’s economic advancement and growing luxury property market. While foreign investment in the Vietnamese city has played a significant role in transforming the fast modernizing metropolis, so too have affluent Vietnamese buyers, whose personal wealth has increased in step with their nation’s financial growth. MERCEDES HUTTON reports on Mansion Global.

“Across Vietnam, and particularly in Ho Chi Minh City, high-end real estate has spurred a wave of local and overseas interest and investment,” said Dung Duong, senior director, national head of professional services at CBRE Vietnam.

The luxury property market first took hold in the country’s biggest and busiest city before spreading to the capital, Hanoi, and elsewhere. Now, interest in high-end real estate is expanding beyond Vietnam’s borders as an increasing number of individuals find themselves with the means to invest internationally.

Since opening up to foreign investment and joining the World Trade Organization, Vietnam is enjoying an assurgent trajectory. Last year, Bloomberg reported that the Southeast Asian nation, once one of the poorest countries in the world, recorded 7.1% economic growth, making it one of the best performers globally.

According to the recent Economic Insight: South East Asia report, compiled by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, the Communist nation’s economy is expected to grow 6.7% this year, the fastest rate in Southeast Asia.

The country’s emergence as a global manufacturing and export powerhouse has also seen personal wealth explode. According to The Wealth Report 2019, published by British real estate consultancy Knight Frank, the number of millionaires in Vietnam is expected to grow from 12,327 last year to 15,776 by 2023, a healthy increase of 28%.

As such, affluent Vietnamese are investing beyond the country’s borders, although, according to Troy Griffiths, deputy managing director at Savills Vietnam, “due to outward currency restrictions, it’s done a little more quietly than other countries.”

That doesn’t mean it isn’t done, though.

“There are more and more Vietnamese investing in overseas property,” Ms. Duong said. “Ten years ago, only those who had relatives would buy properties overseas, so that they could live close to their parents or siblings. But these days, there is an increasing trend of wealthy parents sending their children to study internationally, and these parents are also investing in overseas property for their kids.”

Where They Buy and What They Buy

One reason for international property purchases is immigration, where buyers invest in citizenship via investment programs, such as the United States’s EB-5 visa program, which allows immigrant investors to become permanent residents by investing at least US$500,000. (That figure will rise to US$900,000 after Nov. 21.)

According to Ms. Duong, English-speaking countries such as the U.S., Canada, Australia and the U.K. are most popular among ultra high-net-worth Vietnamese because they are seen to offer the best educational opportunities and investment potential, although the high threshold of investment makes those countries out of reach for all but the wealthiest buyers.

“In recent years, we have seen more investment into European countries, where it is easier to gain citizenship, including Cyprus, Malta, Portugal, Hungary and some of the Eastern European countries,” Ms. Duong said. Properties bought in these countries will often become permanent residences for some, if not all, family members.

Ben Thanh Market, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Mr. Griffiths noted that property in Europe is preferred by Hanoi residents, while English-speaking markets are more popular with Ho Chi Minh City residents. This follows the economic divide that exists between the country’s capital and its biggest, more dynamic city in the south and supports Ms. Duong’s observation that only the most affluent can afford to invest in the U.S., the U.K., Australia and Canada. Because the EB-5 program places no restrictions on where investors can buy property, many are drawn to states with an existing Vietnamese community, such as California, New York and Washington, D.C.

In terms of the types of property sought after by Vietnamese buyers, townhouses or villas are the most frequently invested in at all locations outside of the U.S., according to Ms. Duong. “However, in the U.S., Vietnamese buyers will invest in under-construction projects, most of which are condominium developments.”

Buying Closer to Home

But, of course, wealthy Vietnamese are also investing in high-end real estate in their own country, too.
“The residential market in Vietnam has seen a very strong recovery over the last four years,” Ms. Duong said. “Probably 95% of our buyers are local ones.” This is echoed by Mr Griffiths, who said: “Vietnamese purchasers dominate by a long way.

In 2015, Vietnam changed its laws to allow foreign property investors, who are now joining wealthy Vietnamese in buying high-end luxury homes. The move came as the rest of Southeast Asia was enjoying a property boom, and the Vietnamese market was quick to reap the benefits associated with increased interest from overseas buyers, too. However, as Mr. Griffiths pointed out, there are regulations regarding the ways that buyers from overseas can invest, limiting them to a owning a maximum of 30% of the apartments in a condominium or 250 dwellings per ward. “HIgher-end apartments in Ho Chi Minh City have been filling up their foreigner data quickly,” said Mr. Griffiths.

The major southern city’s District 1, considered the financial center of the country, where the Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange and the Vietnamese headquarters of international banks are located, ultra high-end developments like The Marq and Vinhomes Golden River dominate.

“Due to the very high land prices, there are only a few residential developments here” and they’re all luxury, Ms. Duong said. “We have some very wealthy investors looking at the luxury market in District 1. However, most are looking for capital gain rather than rental yield, because the rental yield of this segment in this area is only probably 4% or 5%.”

However, the majority of investors in Ho Chi Minh City who buy outside of District 1 are buy-to-let investors who hope to capitalize on growing expat demand, according to Ms. Duong. “Most of the big international companies in Vietnam have offices and branches in Ho Chi Minh City… so the leasing demand for expats is huge in Ho Chi Minh City and it is increasing everyday,” she said. Ms. Duong explains that despite profits being compressed recently due to supply outpacing demand, the average rental yield in Ho Chi Minh City outside of District 1 remains between 6% and 7% compared with 4% to 5% in Hanoi.

A plan is in place to create a “New Urban Area” on the east back of the Saigon River, opposite the existing Central Business District, that will ease congestion and lessen environmental pressures currently faced by the city.

“The first metro line in Ho Chi Minh City will be developed in this area, connecting District 1, District 2 and District 9,” Ms. Duong said. “Even though it will take another two to three years for the line to be completed, buyers are speculatively investing. And because a lot of land was made available in these areas for developers, buyers can still choose from a diverse portfolio of products in this area.”

Beyond Ho Chi Minh City, affluent investors—both local and foreign—are also looking to other destinations across the country. Last year, Hanoi overtook its southern counterpart as the main recipient of foreign direct investment in Vietnam.

For the moment, investors look for “landed property” in Hanoi, meaning detached houses, terraced houses and semi-detached houses, rather than condominiums. “The land price has seen a much higher growth rate in Hanoi than in Ho Chi Minh City, so for those investing in landed property, they make higher profits in the capital,” Ms. Duong said.

And real estate market growth is not limited to top tier cities. Pritesh Samuel, senior editor for Asia briefing at professional services firm Dezan Shira & Associates, also points to coastal cities Da Nang, Nha Trang and Phu Quoc, which are benefitting from the nation’s fast-growing tourism industry. He notes that numerous hospitality and residential projects are currently under construction, aimed not only at international arrivals but Vietnam’s growing middle class for whom a vacation property is now within reach, too.

Typhoon Wipha kills 1, 15 missing in Vietnam

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Typhoon Wipha, the third tropical storm to strike Vietnam so far this year, has left one person dead and 15 others missing according to state media.

In northern Thanh Hoa province, a rockslide, whirlwinds and floods sparked by the typhoon killed a 33-year-old man, injured three people, left 15 others missing, and damaged 183 houses, four schools, and 17 hectares of forest , causing $43,500 in property losses, the agency said citing local authorities.

Wipha made landfall in northern Quang Ninh province on Friday night and then weakened to a tropical depression, causing heavy rain and strong gusts in the northern provinces of Quang Ninh, Lang Son and Thanh Hoa. While a fishing boat sunk in Quang Ninh on Friday, no human casualties were reported in the incident.

Hanoi reported rainfall of 66 mm in four hours on Saturday morning. Strong winds have uprooted dozens of trees in the capital.

Typhoon Wipha causes flooding in Hanoi | Credit: VNExpress

In the first seven months of this year, natural disasters in Vietnam left 34 people dead or missing, destroyed 156 houses, damaged over 3,000 other houses and 3,700 hectares of rice and other crops, causing economic losses of $10.4 million according to the country’s General Statistics Office.

Vietnam is one of the countries most affected by natural disasters and climate change, according to the United Nations Development Program. It faces six or seven typhoons every year on average.

Banks rush to cash in on Vietnam’s FDI boom: The Banker

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Vietnam has seen a boost from investment moving out of China, significantly increasing its foreign direct investment levels. Peter Janssen (The Banker) looks at how international and domestic banks are grabbing a share of this growing business.

Shinhan Bank Vietnam finds itself in an enviable position. The South Korean bank was one of the first to open a representative office in Vietnam, in 1993, following in the footsteps of one of its main corporate clients, Taekwang Group, which had the previous year relocated some of its shoe production from Busan to Ho Chi Minh City to supply Nike.

“That was a big decision,” says Shinhan head of risk management Ryu Je Eun. “That’s why we are here, but we didn’t expect the very strong development of Vietnam you see now. How could we foresee the current situation?”

After seeing the country’s stock market crash by 80% in 2008 to 2009, the dong plummet 25% between 2010 and 2012, and property prices tumble in 2011 leading to a non-performing loans crisis, Vietnam now seems poised to soar. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth averaged 6.5% between 2013 and 2017, jumped to 7.1% in 2018 and is expected to grow by at least 6.8% in 2019, strengthened by domestic consumption and manufacturing, much of it controlled by foreign direct investment (FDI). Inflation was about 2.7% in the first quarter of 2019. Foreign exchange reserves in the first quarter of 2019 reached $65bn, equivalent to three months of imports.

FDI finds Vietnam

Vietnam is currently the hot topic in south-east Asian FDI. In the first five months of 2019, FDI projects disbursed $7.3bn into the economy, up 7.8% year on year. Total disbursements in 2019 are expected to reach $15bn. New FDI projects approvals hit $6.5bn in the same period (up 38.7% year on year), helped in part by spillover from the US-China trade tussle.

The tensions are forcing foreign investors, especially from Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, to seek alternative production bases to China. Even Chinese firms are moving to Vietnam, with Chinese projects accounting for $1.6bn in approvals in Vietnam during the first five months of 2019. But this trend was arguably under way even before US president Donald Trump played his tariff hike card with Beijing.

Vietnam still an attractive market, with more FDI expected: GBS

“The Japanese, South Korean and Taiwanese, with the encouragement of their own authorities, are all looking in the direction of south-east Asia and that’s primarily because their domestic markets are facing very low levels of growth,” says Jonathan Cornish, head of bank ratings, Asia-Pacific, at Fitch Ratings. South Korean companies, whose collective registered capital FDI is the highest in Vietnam, making up $64.8bn (accounting for 18.5% of the total investment capital), have been betting on Vietnam for decades, and look likely to increase their commitments in the coming years. South Korean electronics giant Samsung accounts for nearly 25% of Vietnam’s total exports.

“Korean companies were coming here even before the trade war, due to rising labour costs in China and the discrimination against South Korean companies in China,” says Shinhan’s Mr Eun. “They are reducing their China business as there is no more motivation to stay in China. In south-east Asia, Myanmar is too early, Cambodia is not ready, Indonesia is politically unstable and Thailand is too expensive, so I think Vietnam is the favourite destination for South Korean companies.”

Vietnam’s factory workers’ salary rate is one-third that of China’s, about half of Thailand’s and is still lower than in Indonesia or the Philippines. Unlike countries such as Thailand, faced with a rapidly ageing population, about 75% of Vietnam’s 97 million population are under the age of 54, and 75% of the workforce is still employed in agriculture, suggesting a huge untapped rural workforce to lure into the manufacturing sector.

Benefiting from trade

There are already repercussions from the US-China trade dispute spillover. According to US trade data, imports from Vietnam surpassed $25bn in the first five months of 2019, up 36% year on year, much of it accounted for by new FDI-avoiding tariffs on Chinese imports. Vietnam ranks eighth in exports to the US market and has already drawn Washington’s attention. In an interview with the Fox Networks, Mr Trump singled out Vietnam as “almost the single worst abuser of everybody…Vietnam takes advantage of us worse than China”. So could times be tough for Vietnamese exports to the US in the Trump era of trade friction?

“All the investment that is coming into Vietnam is only likely to increase the bilateral trade surplus with the US and put it in the firing line,” said Stephen Schwartz, head of Asia-Pacific sovereigns at Fitch Ratings, speaking at a Fitch-hosted conference in Hanoi. Mr Trump has to be factored into Fitch’s sovereign ratings in the current environment. “One of the risks we apply to sovereigns is the very erratic and unpredictable nature of policy-making under the current US administration,” said Mr Schwartz. “US trade policy is at the top of our worry list. Vietnam’s trade surplus with the US ranks sixth globally.”

That said, Vietnam has diversified its export markets both in terms of products and geography. The country joined the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPATPP), which rose out of the ashes of the Trans-Pacific Partnership initiated by former US president Barrack Obama, but was ditched by Mr Trump. The CPATPP will reduce import tariffs on Vietnamese goods in important markets such as Australia, Canada and Japan. On June 30, Hanoi signed the EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement, which will reduce tariffs on 71% of Vietnamese products over a seven-year period, while reducing tariffs on 65% of European imports. During 2018, the EU accounted for 19% of Vietnamese exports, while North America received 21.8%.

Such trade agreements, along with Vietnam’s membership of the Association of South-East Asian Nations Free Trade Agreement, will allow participants to benefit from the impending uplift in Vietnam’s domestic market, which is arguably at a tipping point. Vietnam’s GDP per capita per annum now stands at $2500, close to the $3000 level that economists look out for. “For some reason in emerging markets the $3000 figure seems to be some sort of magic level where everything starts accelerating and feeding on itself,” says Michael Kokalari, chief economist for VinaCapital, a leading private equity fund in Vietnam.

Foreign bank opportunities

Vietnamese banks are already tapping the vast potential of retail banking in Vietnam but foreign banks are also keen to jump in. “I think the FDI sector and small and medium-sized enterprise [SME] sector are growing faster than the average GDP, because the state-owned enterprise sector is not growing fast,” says Nirukt Sapru, CEO of Standard Chartered Bank (Vietnam).

Standard Chartered is one of nine foreign banks to have been granted a licence to operate a 100%-foreign owned bank in Vietnam. While its strengths are in leveraging its international network to arrange mergers and acquisitions and corporate finance, it is also interested in Vietnam’s emerging SME sector.

“We see it as an exciting opportunity [in SME lending],” says Mr Sapru. “We believe that the differential point for us is our network and our role as facilitator connecting Vietnam to the world and connecting the world to Vietnam. The value proposition we bring to them is clearly our network, and our network is not just our international network but includes our Vietnamese network.”

Shinhan Bank Vietnam is also balancing its corporate banking with retail banking in Vietnam. After trying to penetrate retail banking on its own since 2013, in December 2017 Shinhan bought out the retail operations of ANZ, one of the true pioneers in the Vietnam market since 1993.

“[ANZ] had a platform, an organisation, people that Shinhan didn’t have at the time – risk management, agents,” says Mr Eun. “If we had built it up ourselves it would have cost a lot.” The $240m ANZ purchase has allowed Shinhan to become a player in Vietnam’s retail market, targeting the more affluent end of the population. “Currently our portfolio is about 50/50 corporate to retail lending, from zero retail [in 2013] to 50% retail now,” says Mr Eun.

Foreign banks are also using their partnerships with local banks to lend to FDI projects. “One thing that does not get widely discussed regarding Vietnam’s large FDI inflows is how much of the money needed for multinationals to set up their factories or other operations in Vietnam is borrowed locally,” says VinaCapital’s Mr Kokalari.

“This gives foreign banks further motivation to either acquire a local banking licence or to form a solid strategic investor relationship with local banks, to fulfil the financing needs of their home country clients in Vietnam. The partnership between Japan’s Mizuho and Vietcombank is probably the most prominent example of such an arrangement.” Mizuho Corporate Bank holds a 15% stake in Vietcombank, one of the ‘Big Four’ state-run banks in Vietnam.

Making choices

Some Vietnamese banks are also cashing in on the FDI influx, such as Techcombank, but selectively so. “There are three kinds of FDI and we only service one – the FDI here that invests with overseas money using local resources for local consumption,” says Techcombank CEO Nguyen Le Quoc Anh.

The other two kinds of FDI – first using overseas money and local resources for exports, and second using overseas money and overseas resources for exports – are deemed too volatile and capital-intensive for Techcombank, whose lending policy is to focus on domestic consumption. “For example, [take] Samsung air conditioners. Most of the production is for in-country consumption and is using in-country resources so we service that,” says Mr Quoc Anh. “Techcombank is one of the biggest banks servicing the supply chain for Samsung in Vietnam.”

That supply chain, comprised of mostly local Vietnamese companies, is arguably just the kind of development Vietnam requires in the future. FDI companies accounted for $70.4bn in exports (70% of Vietnam’s total) and $52.9bn in imports (57% of the total) during the first five months of 2019. “In China there are a lot of backward linkages with the FDI. Here you don’t have that. The FDI comes in full block, bringing in the banks, their suppliers, everything,” says World Bank lead financial sector specialist in Vietnam, Alwaleed Alatabani.

Communist Vietnam has in the past neglected its domestic private sector, promoting state-owned enterprises instead, but sources say there is growing recognition that the private sector is crucial to the economy. “There is a keenness to develop the private sector,” says Mr Alatabani. “The question is how?”

Read original article on The Banker

The 19-year-old Student becomes Miss World Vietnam 2019

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The 19-year-old student at the Foreign Trade University in Vietnam’s capital Hanoi, Luong Thuy Linh happened to be Miss World Vietnam 2019 on Saturday night after winning a Vietnamese beauty competition.

The 1.77-meter high girl from northern Cao Bang region competed with 38 other young women in the final round of the beauty pageant performed in central Da Nang city.

Linh will stand for Vietnam to attend the 2019 Miss World slated for December in England; she wore a crown made from gold, pearls, diamond and gemstones value USD130, 000.

She also got a cash award of USD13, 000.

According to local media, Nguyen Ha Kieu Loan from Quang Nam provincewas the first runner-up who will have the opportunity to compete at the Miss Grand International 2019.

Nguyen Tuong San from Hanoi was named the second runner-up who will take part in theMiss Intercontinental 2019 pageant.

A man who retired at 34 says it took him 3 years to stop obsessing over money and start tracking something even more important

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  • Brandon, aka the “ Mad Fientist,” is a former software developer who achieved financial independence and early retirement at age 34.
  • He recently dedicated an episode of his podcast to sharing what he’s learned during his “third year of freedom.” 
  • After interviewing a financial expert and a productivity expert, Brandon said he decided to stop tracking his money obsessively and start tracking his activities and habits.

There’s nothing wrong with tracking your spending and saving down to the dollar. In fact, many personal finance pundits rely on detailed spreadsheets as a tool to build wealth.

That’s exactly what Brandon, aka the ” Mad Fientist,” did as he was saving 70% of his after-tax income while living in rural Vermont and then Edinburgh, Scotland.

By age 34, Brandon considered himself financially independent— he left his job as a software developer to spend more time traveling, with friends and family, and working on hobbies.

Brandon recently reflected on this “third year of freedom” during an episode of his podcast, the Mad Fientist. After interviewing a financial expert and a productivity expert this year, Brandon said, one of the biggest changes he made was tracking his habits instead of his every money move.

“I finally started to relax a bit more with money,” he said. “But it’s trying to deprogram 30 years of programming because I’ve always been frugal, this is something that I don’t know where it comes from but even growing up my family would make fun of me just for being so focused on money and being so frugal.”

Brandon said he always updated his financial spreadsheet at least once a month, but a recent conversation with Ramit Sethi, a financial expert and bestselling author, inspired him to take a step back.

“I do plan on updating my spreadsheet, maybe quarterly, or maybe semi-annually, or hopefully even annually one day, but at least taking the last few months off has sort of made that easier,” he said. “And I’m not simply making decisions just based on finding the lowest cost, which I don’t think is healthy. ”

But Brandon hasn’t given up spreadsheets entirely — he’s shifted his focus from tracking money to tracking habits, he said. The idea came from productivity expert and bestselling author James Clear, who says the activities you perform every day become habits, which ultimately become your identity.

“So in my spreadsheet, I have columns that say, ‘Reader’, ‘Strength’, and ‘Creativity,'” Brandon said. “And in the reading column, I simply list all the books that I finished throughout the year. And in the strength column, I list how many days during the month that I went to the gym. And in the creative column, I just list all the things that I created and then published out into the world.”

Brandon said keeping a running list of all the activities he does that contribute to his goals is both “motivating” and a way to make the most of his days. He also writes down “highlights of the year” in an effort to pinpoint what makes him happiest and what he wants to dedicate even more time to.

“Although it’s maybe not as fun as updating my financial spreadsheet,” he said, “it is really rewarding to do that and try to shift my focus away from money and more on to, you know, doing things and creating things and building my new identity and post-FI life.”

Read full story on Business Insider

Vietnam tech company pledges US$10M fund for early-stage startups

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Vietnam-based tech company NextTech announces a total of US$10 million injected into Next100, a fund dedicated for backing early-stage startups.

The main purpose that the fund aims is to provide coaching for startup founders so they can raise larger rounds of capital from other local and international investors as part of scale-up plans, as reported by DealStreetAsia.

During the launch, the company said that the fund will participate in seed rounds of startups with an investment ranging from US$100,000 to US$1 million. This decision, the company highlighted, is a move to help technology entrepreneurs in the middle of the burgeoning startups ecosystem the country is having. Prisca Akhaya T reports on E27 news channel

“Next100’s target audiences are technology startups who are digitising traditional industries, or traditional startups that are leveraging technology to increase efficiency and productivity in their respective sectors; with the common goal to disrupt or optimise traditional practices to deliver new added value ​​for society,” said Dao Minh Phu, Managing Partner of Next100.

According to E27, NextTech was established in 2001 and currently has operations in eight markets across Southeast Asia and China, focussing on e-commerce, fintech, e-logistics, and education with a total of 15 portfolio companies.

The company claims to have an annual transaction volume of close to US$3 billion.

Recently, Next100 invested in VayMuon.vn, a P2P lending platform based in Vietnam, Heyu.asia, a startup that provides order consolidation and shipper services, and Teky.edu.vn, a tech academy for kids.

In 2016, NextTech also participated in the funding round of cross border e-commerce portal WeShop alongside Haspro.

A Facebook exec who has made hundreds of hires says she uses one interview question to instantly reveal a candidate’s true colors

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  • Julie Zhuo has made hundreds of hires for Facebook and says she always looks for a learning mindset in candidates.

  • She believes one question for interviewees cuts right to the chase: She asks them to tell her about a hard or challenging situation they’ve encountered in their career.Zhuo then asks an immediate follow-up question: If you could revisit that experience, what would you do differently?

  • If the candidate claims everything that went wrong was outside of their control, it’s a red flag.

  • Visit Vietnam Insider‘s homepage for more stories.

Facebook executive Julie Zhuo has made hundreds of hires. Currently the vice president of product design, Zhuo started as an intern over 10 years ago. At the time, Facebook had only around 100 employees. Now her team alone has over 250.

Over the years, Zhuo has become a master interviewer. She takes hiring and recruiting seriously. Bringing in good people who in turn bring in more good people determines the culture and growth of her team.

How to interview for a growth mindset

A key personality trait Zhuo looks for is a learning mindset. She has a question that cuts straight to the chase.

She asks candidates to tell her about a hard or challenging situation they’ve encountered in their career. Once she gets the story, Zhuo asks an immediate follow-up question: If you could revisit that experience, what would you do differently?

“I love that question because it allows me to hear a candidate and how they introspect,” Zhuo tells CNBC Make It. She’s curious how you might adjust your strategy or problem-solving approach if you had to go through it again.

Responding that you’d do nothing differently is clearly the wrong answer. Zhuo sees it as a red flag if the candidate claims everything that went wrong was outside of their control.

There’s a right answer, of course. It’s to present lots of ideas of how you might tackle things differently the second time around. “I get really excited about that candidate because they’re showing a lot of productivity, and they’re showing that they can learn really quickly,” Zhuo explains.

Hiring someone even if they don’t check all the boxes

“The most important thing to remember about hiring is this: Hiring is not a problem to be solved but an opportunity to build the future of your organization,” Zhuo says about her hiring process in a recent LinkedIn post.

She describes an interview early in her management career with a young grad named Tom.

Tom didn’t quite nail his interview. He struggled to solve the engineering task she had given him, getting stuck at a few points along the way. But he kept talking through the problem and seemed determined to get there.

Despite his failure to complete the task successfully, Zhuo decided to hire him. She admired his perseverance, thoughtfulness, and dedication. Tom quickly moved up in the organization and became a senior engineering leader. She gave him a chance, even though he didn’t exactly tick the right boxes on paper. How you solve a problem on the spot isn’t necessarily a predictor of future success.

Embracing the right hiring mindset

Zhuo encourages hiring managers to hire thoughtfully and strategically as they can. She acknowledges this can be hard when everyone is feeling the strain of being short-staffed. You might feel the urge to plug the holes as quickly as possible with anyone who can do the job.

Instead, she urges hiring managers to think about what they want the future of their team to look like. Zhuo has observed even a single amazing hire can have a huge impact on a team’s success.

“Hiring well is the single most important thing you can do,” she says.

Read the original article on Inc Copyright 2019

Expats in Vietnam earn $78,750 per year, higher than global average

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Although the average income for expats in Vietnam has fallen compared to the figure of $90,408 last year, 67 percent of expats agree that they have more disposable income when moving to Vietnam than they did in their home country, HSBC reports.

According to a recent survey by HSBC, the reasons for higher disposable income are lower cost of living (e.g. accommodation, schooling, transport, medical bills), increased earnings and expats’ employers covering some of their living costs and expenses, respondents said.

Up to 71 percent of expats who have located to Vietnam say they feel confident about the Vietnamese economy, while 76 percent said they felt secure about the political situation. VNExpress, a local media reports.

On top of all this, many visitors to Vietnam also find the working environment favourable, HSBC said. Vietnam is ranked 3rd after Switzerland and Poland in the Aspiring sub league table, which summarises expats views about the market’s economy, opportunities for career progression and its effect on people who moved to new country.

According the HSBC Expat’s Global Report 2019, the average earnings of people in the 18-34 age group rose 35 percent after relocating overseas, taking the average salary for someone their age from $40,358 to $54,484.

In certain markets, that increase was as high as 51 percent, the report said. This is a much higher increase than changes for those aged between 35 and 54, an average increase of 24 percent, or for those aged 55 or above, at 9 percent.

Trading Economics states in its recent market research reports, Vietnam’s average annual salary at the end of 2018 was $2,920, much lower than what expats on average earn.

In Vietnam, currently there are over 83,500 expats living and working in Vietnam, a report of Ministry of Labor said.

Vietnamese banks ride the retail tide: The Banker

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Vietnam has seen a period of growth that has made its banks stronger than ever. Driven by digital and retail trends, they are now planning for a new kind of future. Peter Janssen reports on The Banker.

Vietnam’s leading banks have experienced rapid growth over the past three years, riding high on an explosion of retail lending. This points, perhaps, to an economy that is primed for take-off, with much of the growth now driven by domestic demand.

This is arguably the beginning of a new era for socialist Vietnam, where state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and foreign direct investment have traditionally been the main engines of growth, and a new era for the Vietnamese banking industry, fraught with risks and challenges and destined to leave losers in its wake.

Vietnam’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 7.1% in 2018, driven mainly by an increase in consumption (65% of GDP) of 9% year on year and manufacturing (20% of GDP) of 13% year on year. GDP per capita per annum is now close to $2500 nationwide, and closer to $6000 in the two largest cities, Hanoi (the capital) and Ho Chi Minh City (the commercial centre). The level of $3000 per capita per annum is the threshold at which economists say emerging markets tend to take off, driven by booms in consumer spending.

Vietnam’s banking system has been cashing in on domestic demand. Consumer credit grew by 65% in 2017 and 30% in 2018, and is expected to reach 20% growth in 2019, according to VinaCapital, a Vietnam-based private equity fund. That kind of credit expansion raises both hopes and fears. “When you have been giving credit at the pace Vietnamese banks have for quite some time, especially to the household sector, inevitably there is some sort of an asset quality correction,” says Jonathan Cornish, head of banks ratings, Asia-Pacific, at Fitch Ratings. “Whether it turns into a crisis is another matter.”

Been there, seen that

Vietnam has been here before, but this time the buzz seems different. Its banks’ lending grew at an average of 33% per year between 2004 and 2011, before and after Vietnam entering the World Trade Organisation in 2007. During the global crash and recession of 2008-09, Vietnam’s stock market fell by 80%, followed by a plunge in property prices and a ballooning of non-performing loans (NPLs) in 2011-12. Much of the NPLs were to SOEs in property deals that raised a few eyebrows.

In retrospect, the NPL crisis was a positive development for the soundness of Vietnam’s banking system, in that it boosted the independence and regulatory clout of the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV), the country’s central bank. “What the SBV did at the time was lend to the distressed banks directly via its refinancing window and essentially took control,” says Michael Kokalari, chief economist at VinaCapital. “Before that it really didn’t have control of the banking system.”

The SBV also set up the Vietnam Asset Management Company (VAMC) to park the banks’ NPLs, allowing them to get on with business. VAMC, which had no capital of its own, has proven a surprise success story. “It was not something that had been tried elsewhere before but actually it worked, whether we liked it or not,” says Alwaleed Alatabani, lead financial sector specialist at the World Bank’s Vietnam office. Asset management companies are a common vehicle for cleaning up NPL crises, but usually they include public auctions of distressed assets. The auction never happened in Vietnam, at least not publicly.

“Some of the real estate companies have fulfilled the role that a distressed assets auction [by the VAMC] should have filled normally,” says Mr Kokalari. Vietnam’s private sector property developers have had access to these distressed assets over the past few years and have gone on a construction spree, building office towers, resorts and residential units for a growing market. The banks have also been buying back their NPLs from the VAMC as their value improved with the market.

“Property prices didn’t start to recover until about a year-and-a-half ago, and 92% to 95% of these NPLs are collateralised by land,” says Mr Alatabani. “So whatever happens in the property market has an impact on NPLs.”

Also helpful was Regulation 42, passed in 2017, which allowed the banks to foreclose on property.

Complying with Basel II

Vietnamese banks are having to clean up their old bad debts before they can apply for Basel II compliance from the SBV, one of the big pushes for the central bank in 2019 and 2020. “We don’t have any debt with the VAMC as of two years ago,” says Dam Van Tuan, executive vice-president of Ho Chi Minh City-based Asia Commercial Bank (ACB). “That is one of the conditions for you to be eligible for Basel II.”

Eight of Vietnam’s 42 banks have already qualified for Basel II compliance, including the state-owned Vietcombank, and joint-stock (private or semi-private-owned) Military Bank, ACB, Vietnam Property Bank, Technology & Commercial Bank (Techcombank), Vietnam International Bank, Overseas Commercial Bank and Tien Phong Bank.

“Vietcombank was the first bank in Vietnam certified by the SBV as compliant with Basel II capital requirements in November 2018, one year ahead of schedule,” says Nghiem Xuan Thanh, chairman of the board of directors at Vietcombank, one of the so-called ‘Big Four’ state-owned banks in Vietnam. Basel II is essentially about raising banks’ capital adequacy ratio (CAR) to provide buffers against future shocks. Vietcombank’s CAR was 9.86% as of the first quarter of 2019, well above the SBV’s requirement of 8%. The state-owned bank is also well respected for its risk management framework. “At the end of 2018, Vietcombank’s NPL ratio was only 0.98%, the lowest among Vietnamese banks of similar size. Our plans for 2019 onwards include keeping NPLs below 1%,” says Mr Thanh.

The SBV originally targeted the top 10 banks to be Basel II-compliant by 2020, but later changed tack to target 70% of the banks. The shift might have been due to the difficulty of getting the other three large state-owned banks – Vietinbank, BIDV and Agribank – on board. The Big Four account for at least 45% of the assets in the banking system.

Attracting foreign capital

One way to boost capital is for state-owned banks to sell equity to foreign banks, something that has been going on for some time in Vietnam. Japan’s Mizuho Corporate Bank has had a 15% stake in Vietcombank since 2011 and in January 2019 bought more shares to maintain the equity level alongside GIC Private (Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund). The deal, which followed Vietcombank’s Basel II certification, was worth $265m. “Following the sale Vietcombank now has the highest charter capital among our peers,” says Mr Thanh.

The other big state-owned banks are following similar paths to capitalisation. Vietinbank is 19.73% owned by Japan’s Mitsubishi UFJ, which may inject more money into the institution. Keb Hana Bank of South Korea is reportedly negotiating an equity purchase in BIDV, and Nonghyup, a South Korean co-operative bank, is reportedly interested in Agribank.

A possible obstacle comes from the SBV, which has limited foreign equity in banks to 30%, with no single investor allowed more than 15%. This prohibition may need to be relaxed if the SBV is serious about getting most of the system up to Basel II standards. Another challenge in attracting foreign banks to buy into the big state-owned banks is rooted in the lack of transparency and accounting for NPLs, not only those still sitting in the VAMC but new ones that may be accumulating.

During the 2011-12 banking crisis, the SBV declared the NPL ratio for the system was below 10%, while independent analysts said a figure of 15% to 20% was more likely. “We still think the NPLs are under-reported and they certainly do act as a drag on the financial performance of the banks, but the buffers are likely to be greater now,” says Fitch Ratings’ Mr Cornish.

In 2019 Fitch upgraded Vietnam to BB (still below investment grade), with the banking sector seen as one of the economy’s drags. “There are a couple of issues that weigh on the rating. One is the weak banking sector and the weak capitalisation which poses high contingency liability risk to the sovereign balance sheet,” says Stephen Schwartz, Fitch Ratings’ head of sovereigns for Asia-Pacific.

Too many banks?

One structural challenge for Vietnam’s banking system is that 42 institutions could be too many. The SBV passed out a bundle of bank licences in between 1990 and 1993, after opening the banking sector to the private sector in 1989. Many of the so-called joint-stock banks were founded by people with little banking experience but good connections to SOEs or the Communist Party. The SBV also handed out nine licences to several 100% foreign-owned banks: HSBC, Shinhan Bank Vietnam, ANZ Bank, Standard Chartered, Hong Leong Bank, Public Bank Vietnam, CIMB Vietnam, Woori Bank and UOB. No new licences have been granted to foreign banks over the past two years in what appears to be a deliberate tactic by the SBV to encourage newcomers to invest in existing banks instead.

There are plenty of distressed banks to choose from. There are the so-called ‘zero-dong’ banks, three joint-stock banks taken over by the SBV in 2011 and 2012 at zero payment. These three banks – Dai Dong Bank, Global Petro Bank and Construction Bank – are on the block for foreign buyers because the SBV has agreed to allow up to 100% ownership. To date there have been few takers.

The SBV has been encouraging mergers and acquisitions (M&As) among Vietnamese private banks and finance companies since the last crisis, opening up growth opportunities for some. HDBank, for example, has been expanding though M&As since 2013 when it acquired 100% of Société Générale Viet Finance and Dai A Commercial Bank. It has now sets its sights on a merger with Petrolimex Group Bank (PG Bank), a subsidiary of the state-owned Petrolimex, which owns 2000 petrol stations nationwide.

“The government asked Petrolimex to divest companies not related to its main business so that was an opportunity for us to acquire it,” says HDBank deputy CEO Pham Quoc Thanh. HDBank is linked to VietJet Air, Vietnam’s first privately owned airline, established in 2007 by the bank’s permanent vice-chairwoman, Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao. HD also owns 51% of HD Saison Finance, a consumer finance company.

With its plans to acquire PG Bank, HD’s management sees huge potential for leveraging these assets to promote its retail banking. “In our ecosystem we will have VietJet Air with 20 million customers, we have HD Saison Finance with 4 million customers and Petrolimex with 20 million customers, so our ecosystem is more than 50 million retail customers,” says HDBank’s Mr Thanh. “Currently, HDBank has only 1.8 million retail customers so the potential is still huge.” The bank plans to become Basel II compliant in the third quarter of 2019.

Retail is king

All the banks in Vietnam, including the Big Four state banks and some less regulated finance companies, are chasing the retail market, both for deposits and loans, and especially for home mortgages. The push towards retail banking and SME lending is happening at the same time as a decline in overall lending to SOEs. Since the loans crisis of 2011 to 2012, lending to SOEs has declined by 50% in Vietnam, falling from 16% of the system’s lending to only 8%, according to World Bank data.

State-run Vietcombank aims to be the top retail bank by 2020. “Vietcombank has devised a multi-phase strategic plan aimed at driving retail penetration through customer segmentation, the development of more customer-centric product offerings and service quality improvement,” says the bank’s Mr Thanh. The bank has a network of 589 branches and 2555 ATMs. Vietcombank’s pre-tax profit was VND18,300bn ($790m) in 2018, the highest in the country.

Private banks are not far behind. Techcombank is pulling in about 200,000 new retail accounts each month through a combination of professional, modern services and a digital platform. The bank officially became Basel II compliant in June 2019, but claims it was already compliant in June 2018, when it completed its initial public offering (IPO) on the Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange. “After we did our IPO our CAR has steadily stood at about 13% to 14%. We have one of the highest CARs in the region,” says Techcombank CEO Nguyen Le Quoc Anh. “For us, within the bank, Basel II was anti-climactic. There was no popping of champagne.”

But there was good reason to celebrate. For banks such as Vietcombank and Techcombank which have met the Basel II standards and have exceeded the minimum CAR of 8%, the central bank extends a higher credit growth ceiling. In Techcombank’s case, the credit rate ceiling is 20% in 2019, close to what credit growth was in 2018. For the banking system as a whole, the SBV has set an average of 14% credit growth in 2019.

Digitalising for retail

Vietnam’s fastest growing, most profitable banks are investing in the future, which is digital, especially for retail banking. “To be able to service retail customers in a cost-efficient manner, the only way is through digital banking,” says Mr Quoc Anh. “This is the way of the future. But it is more than that; it is the way of now.” Techcombank’s retail customer base is already 6.5 million and growing fast. Pre-tax profits stood at VND10,700bn in 2018, second only to Vietcombank. The bank is the only one in Vietnam to have waived fees on digital transactions to attract more customers.

Digitalisation is likely to be another game changer in the banking status quo in Vietnam. “For the smaller banks, if they were to enter this digital race, then not only do they have to pay for the platform but they don’t have the scale to pay for the professionals who are at mid-career and very expensive,” says Mr Quoc Anh. Without a digital platform or nationwide branch network, weaker banks are being forced to lower their interest rates to attract more customers.

“The deposit rates are being driven by the smaller banks that are not in good shape, but are being forced to hike their rates to attract depositors,” says Vina Capital’s Mr Kokalari. The same banks are the ones most likely to have weak risk management systems for their loans. “So we have a two-tier situation where there is still a layer of banks at the bottom that are not in good shape. There are some distressed banks but I don’t think there will be a run,” adds Mr Kokalari.

According to The Banker, The situation in Vietnam today is markedly different to what it was seven years ago. The economy is stronger and the banking system is a lot more secure, despite the rapid credit growth, with many of the top banks already Basel II compliant and others well on the way. Lending has shifted from the SOE sector to the retail sector, which has huge growth potential as Vietnam takes off. That said, the state-owned banks are still there to provide some security for the system, at least in the short term.

“If you look at the banking sector I don’t see any looming crisis because about 45% of the market share is owned by the Big Four,” says ACB’s Mr Tuan. “The approach of the central bank is to have a smooth transformation, not shock therapy.”

Executive interview: Sophie Dao and the journey to support foreign investors in Vietnam

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As of July 2019, Vietnam attracted 2,064 new FDI projects with a total registered capital of over US$8.2 billion, up 24.6% in terms of number of projects.

In addition, 791 existing projects registered to increase capital during the period with a supplemented capital of over US$3.4 billion. The foreign investors also carried out more than 4,300 transactions to contribute capital and acquire shares in domestic companies.

Vietnam Insider talks to Sophie Dao, Partner of Global Business Services (GBS) LLC – one of the most popular business and legal services firm for foreign investment in Vietnam about this topic.

Tell us about foreign investment in Vietnam last few months. What’s the outlook for the rest of 2019?

As you may know, between January and July 2019, Vietnam‘s foreign direct investment nearly 7 percent year-on-year. FDI pledges for new projects, increased capital and stake acquisitions – which indicate the size of future FDI disbursements – surged from a year earlier to 20.22 billion USD. Statistics from the Ministry of Planning and Investment’s Foreign Investment Agency show performance was strong in the first few months of the year.

As a result of the Vietnamese Government’s commitment to continue working on creating favorable conditions for foreign companies to do business in the country, foreign direct investment in Vietnam is expected to continue increasing by the end of this quarter. Trading Economics global macro models and analysts have projected that FDI in Vietnam Vietnam will reach 25.10 billion USD in 2020.

As an investment consultancy, what do you do to help foreign investors in Vietnam?

We support foreign invested companies at every stage of growth, such as business incorporation, legal services, tax and compliance services, and help them further expand their business, including establishing new bases and branching out into key regions of Vietnam. We also assist foreign invested companies already operating in Vietnam to broaden their investments, and we proud of our incorporation services help hundreds of foreign investors access Vietnam annually.

Normally, foreign investors need business information before entering a new market, can you help them in Vietnam?

Sure! At GBS, we provide the information on industry-specific overview of trends, key players, and related market data. We and our associate firms also conduct research tailored to individual requests.

To help foreign investors broaden their investments, we provide information on location-specific incentives, including capital expenditure grants, preferential tax treatment, employment-related subsidies. Our consultants can arrange meetings with local government officials tasked with facilitating investment and study tours to relevant facilities.

Your company has operated in Vietnam for more than 10 years. What kinds of services do investors typically need most?

At the first stage, when an investor enter Vietnam, they need support for licensing and approval, which means meetings with officials of regulatory agencies and municipal governments. Companies already operating in Vietnam also need advice in areas of expertise such as law, tax, accounting, social securities, etc. Investors might need help searching for business networking opportunities with potential partners in Vietnam. Businesses in Vietnam need the most updated information on regulations made by the central government as well as local governments of each region. And sometime FDI companies have asked our team to support with PR activities or conduct joint press releases, utilizing our network with mass media in Vietnam.

What about the procedures relative to foreign Investment and freedom of FDI establishment in Vietnam?

Our government has relentlessly perfected its legal system, created more incentive policies for foreign investors and tried to fulfil its commitments to the international community. As well, Vietnam’s efforts to maintain its socio-political stability and step up and professionalise investment promotion activities play a crucial role in increasing the FDI flow.

Nowadays, every investor can apply for the investment certificate and registration certificate themself in Vietnam. Anyway, if they need any support to start their business in Vietnam, we are here to help.

With assistance by Jenny Nguyen
This article was originally published on August 02, 2019.
All content © 2019 by Vietnam Insider and may not be reproduced by any means without permission.

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