U.S. imposed duties of more than 400% on steel imports from Vietnam

Advertisements

U.S. Slaps Import Duties of More Than 400% on Vietnam Steel, accusing some businesses of shipping products from the Southeast Asian nation to evade the levies in a further escalation of tension between the two trading partners.

In three preliminary circumvention rulings on Vietnamese steel, the Commerce Department said certain products produced in South Korea and Taiwan were shipped to Vietnam for minor processing before being exported to U.S. as corrosion-resistant steel products and cold-rolled steel. Customs officials have been ordered to collect cash deposits at rates as high as 456.23% on imports of the steel products produced in Vietnam using material from South Korea and Taiwan. John Boudreau and Philip Heijmans reported on Bloomberg.

The U.S. is hardening its rhetoric against Vietnam, one of its major trading partners and an economy that’s benefiting from President Donald Trump’s trade war with China. Trump described Vietnam last week as “almost the single-worst abuser of everybody” when asked if he wanted to impose tariffs on the nation.

Vietnam’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

It’s not surprising companies will try to route products through countries such as Vietnam to dodge higher duties, said Rob Carnell, Asia Pacific chief economist at ING Bank.

“It’s a no-brainer,” he said. “You increase the cost and people are going to try and find a way to avoid it. It’s human nature.”

In another case, U.S. Customs and Border Protection is investigating six American companies for allegedly evading anti-dumping duties while importing and misclassifying Chinese-made carbon steel pipe fittings through Cambodia, according to the U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh.

What Bloomberg’s Economists Say
The tariffs will hurt Vietnam, among the few countries that have benefited from trade tensions between the U.S. and China. More significantly, the widening range of countries coming under tariff fire from the U.S. is likely to further hurt investor sentiment at a time when the global economy is weakening.

— Chang Shu, chief Asia economist

Vietnam says it’s working to reduce its trade surplus with the U.S., and is already cracking down on Chinese manufacturers who are rerouting their goods via the Southeast Asian nation for export to the U.S. in order to bypass higher tariffs.

The U.S. Embassy in Hanoi said this week it’s in talks with authorities and hopes “Vietnam takes steps in the near term to address our concerns in a constructive manner.”

Vietnam’s annual trade surplus with the U.S. has exceeded $20 billion since 2014 and reached $39.5 billion last year, the highest in records going back to 1990, according to U.S. Census Bureau data.

Coca Cola fined over advertisement

Advertisements

The Ha Noi Department of Culture and Sports on Monday fined a company for hanging an advertisement sign with unclear content.

The advertisement read “Coca Cola – Mở lon Việt Nam – Trúng vàng mỗi ngày” (Coca Cola – Open can Việt Nam – Win gold every day) and was placed at No 45 Nguyen Luong Bang Street in Dong Da District.

The Coca Cola Viet Nam Company was fined VND25 million (US$1,086). It took down the sign and agreed not to repeat the violation.

The company did not report the advertisement sign’s content to competent organisations, and the sign also affected the capital city’s beauty, according to the culture department.

Moreover, the department said, the name of Vietnam could not be used for an advertisement and could not go together with an informal slogan.

The words “Open can Việt Nam” are not clear enough and did not show information of the products, violating the Law on Advertisement.

The department asked provincial and municipal departments of culture and sports to check advertisement of the company.

The Coca Cola Viet Nam Company has reportedly changed the advertisement into “Cơ hội trúng vàng mỗi ngày” (Opportunity to win gold every day) for its promotion programme.

Source: VNN

Device turning old iPhones into ‘new’ ones available in Vietnam

Advertisements

JC-B1 devices can turn an old iPhone battery into new ones with false information cheating iOS and consumers.

iPhone battery packs are equipped with memory chips, which help store basic information of the battery such as production date, usable time, and number of charges. Users can check the information in iPhone settings.

However, with JC-B1, the information can be counterfeited. The indexes shown on iPhone can be counterfeited and battery testing applications could be deceived.

JC-B1 was made in China. Jcprogrammer, the manufacturer, offers to sell it on many websites. Nguyen Quang Thai from Tan Binh district in HCMC bought the model for VND2.5 billion.

“I have many relations with iPhone repair shops. I once saw them importing the model from China and reselling to other shops. JC-B1 can make deep intervention into products, beyond users’ basic knowledge.

The device lends a hand to dishonest traders, allowing them to buy old cheap iPhones and then change the indexes on the Phones and re-sell as brandnew products. People buying second-hand products think the products are original.

“You can fabricate cycle counts. The device can also allow to re-set battery health to 100 percent, change the names of manufacturers and the production dates,” Thai said.

“It can also copy the series of old battery and save the information on new battery. Since the battery information coincides with old battery, 3utools, the battery testing app cannot discover this.

The device lends a hand to dishonest traders, allowing them to buy old cheap iPhones and then change the indexes on the Phones and re-sell as brandnew products. People buying second-hand products think the products are original.

“I think the device is quite dangerous, because it provides false information. You’ll never know the real battery health situation,” said Dang Nhat Anh in district 12, HCMC.

According to Khang Pham, chief technician at a large retail chain in HCMC, if one buys a second-hand product and sees battery health at nearly 100 percent, the product was very likely ‘treated’ with JC-B1.

“You’d better to buy products at prestigious shops. If you want to buy second-hand products, you need to check the rubber gasket, or the rubber layer around the screen border,” he said.

If the gasket is still new, this means that accessories have not been dismantled and replaced. However, not many shops accept the examination this way.

In late 2017, Apple was involved in a serious scandal when users discovered the manufacturer intentionally slowing iPhone performance in an attempt to prevent phone-crashing power spikes.

Later, the company began a battery replacement, offering one battery pack priced at $29 for every iPhone SE, 6, 6 Plus, 6s, 6s Plus, 7, 7 Plus, 8, 8 Plus and X.

The program with preferential battery price has ended. However, Vietnamese users have been told to go to Apple’s authorized warranty centers to buy genuine batteries.

Source: VNN

Japanese embassy suspends visa applications from travel agents

Advertisements

The Japanese Embassy in Vietnam has revoked and suspended the rights to apply for visas on behalf of Vietnamese tour groups for eight firms.

On July 1, the Japanese Embassy in Vietnam announced seven firms that have completely lost their accreditation including Viet Tourist Trade and Investment JSC, Vietnam Golden Team International Travel JSC, Nam Cuong Tourism Co., Ltd, New Royal Commercial and Services Co., Ltd, International Golden Bridge Co., Ltd, Victoria Investment Trade and Tourism Corporation Co., Ltd, and Hanoi Entertainment Services Corporation.

Related: How to get your Vietnam Visa Online

The Hanoi branch of Vietravel was suspended for six months starting from July 1.

Many Vietnamese visitors have disappeared after arriving in Japan on tourist visas.

On July 2, Vietravel issued an explanation for the suspension. According to the Japanese Embassy in Vietnam, the firms had violated their commitments. The firms must make sure that all tourists go and return in the registered groups and strictly follow their schedules.

In 2018, Vietravel sent 566 groups with nearly 17,000 tourists to Japan. The Hanoi branch may have failed to report on time which tourists returned late and this could be the reason why the branch was suspended.

According to Vietravel, they have applied more measures to prevent similar situations and haven’t registered any violations after sending 11,000 tourists to Japan in the first six months of 2019.

Vietravel said they would work with the Japanese Embassy.

Source: Dtinews

Investors still cautious, VN stocks mixed

Advertisements

Vietnamese shares were mixed on Wednesday morning, while trading liquidity remained low due to investors’ caution.

The benchmark VN-Index on the Hồ Chí Minh Stock Exchange fell 0.28 per cent to close at 959.31 points.

The HNX-Index on the Hà Nội Stock Exchange edged up 0.44 per cent to end at 103.92 points.

The VN-Index and HNX-Index lost 0.38 per cent and 0.60 per cent on Tuesday.

More than 80 million shares were traded on the two local exchanges, worth nearly VNĐ1.8 trillion (US$77 million).

The mixed performance was caused by investors’ caution as they were worried about a worldwide economic slowdown.

Local stocks were mixed with the banking, energy and petroleum, real estate, food and beverage and seafood processing sectors declining.

Gainers included insurance, healthcare and pharmaceuticals, agriculture, and plastics and chemicals.

It was obvious market sentiment returned to the negative side despite trade deals being signed to help Vietnamese exports tap EU markets.

Poor confidence pulled down 20 of the 30 largest stocks by market value and trading liquidity in the VN30 basket.

The VN30-Index decreased by 0.45 per cent to close at 868.98 points.

The afternoon trading session starts at 1pm.

Source: Vietnamnews

U.S. government staff told to treat Huawei as blacklisted

Advertisements

A senior U.S. official told the Commerce Department’s enforcement staff this week that China’s Huawei should still be treated as blacklisted, days after U.S. President Donald Trump sowed confusion with a vow to ease a ban on sales to the firm.

Trump surprised markets on Saturday by promising Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Japan that he would allow U.S. companies to sell products to Huawei Technologies Co Ltd.

In May, the company was added to the so-called Entity List, which bans American firms from selling to it without special permission, as punishment for actions against U.S. national security interests.

Trump’s announcement on Saturday – an olive branch to Beijing to revive stalled trade talks – was cheered by U.S. chipmakers eager to maintain sales to Huawei, the world’s largest telecoms equipment maker and a key U.S. customer.

But Trump’s comments also spawned confusion among industry players and government officials struggling to understand what Huawei policy he had unveiled.

In an email to enforcement staff on Monday that was seen by Reuters, John Sonderman, Deputy Director of the Office of Export Enforcement, in the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS), sought to clarify how agents should approach license requests by firms seeking approval to sell to Huawei.

All such applications should be considered on merit and flagged with language noting that “This party is on the Entity List. Evaluate the associated license review policy under part 744,” he wrote, citing regulations that include the Entity List and the “presumption of denial” licensing policy that is applied to blacklisted companies.

He added that any further guidance from BIS should also be taken into account when evaluating Huawei-related license applications.

Huawei told Reuters earlier on Wednesday that founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei had said Trump’s statements over the weekend were “good for American companies”.

“Huawei is also willing to continue to buy products from American companies. But we don’t see much impact on what we are currently doing. We will still focus on doing our own job right,” a Huawei spokesman said in an email.

The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A person familiar with the matter said the letter was the only guidance that enforcement officials had received after Trump’s surprise announcement on Saturday. A presumption of denial implies strict review and most licenses reviewed under it are not approved.

It is unclear when the Commerce Department will provide its enforcement staff with additional guidance, based on Trump’s promises, and how that might alter the likelihood of obtaining licenses.

The internal memo, not previously reported, came as White House advisers also scrambled to shed light on Trump’s announcement.

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro noted on Tuesday that the government would allow “lower tech” chip sales to the company, which don’t impact national security.

The United States has accused Huawei of stealing American intellectual property and violating Iran sanctions.

It has launched a lobbying effort to convince U.S. allies to keep Huawei out of next-generation 5G telecommunications infrastructure, citing concerns the company could spy on customers. Huawei has denied the allegations.

Source: Reuters

Tropical storm Mun to hit northern Vietnam Thursday

Advertisements

The year’s second storm to hit Vietnam is forecast to make landfall in the north on Thursday morning.
At around 7 a.m. on Wednesday Mun lay centered 220 kilometers from Bach Long Vi Island in the Tonkin Gulf and around 340 kilometers south-southeast of Quang Ninh, home to the world-famous Ha Long Bay, with winds of 75 kph.

The storm will move at a speed of 15 kilometers per hour west-northwest for the next 24 hours, according to the National Center for Hydro-Meteorological Forecasting.

The center predicted its center would be on the coast between Quang Ninh and Ninh Binh Provinces by 7 a.m. Thursday, with wind speeds remaining unchanged.

Weather reports from Hong Kong, mainland China and Japan said the storm would make landfall over the northern coast between Quang Ninh and Hai Phong port city at 4 a.m. on Thursday.

According to U.S.-based weather station AccuWeather, Mun will move on a northwesterly course into northern Vietnam near the border with China after reaching the Gulf of Tonkin, bringing rainfall of 150-300 mm in Vietnam and southern parts of Guangxi Province in China. Rainfall of 180 mm in a day is considered heavy.

Due to the effects of the tropical storm, rough waters are expected in the Gulf of Tonkin, including around tourist islands Bach Long Vi, Co To and Cat Hai, from Wednesday afternoon.

Meteorologists also predicted central provinces Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Thanh Hoa, and Nghe An, which have been recently affected by forest fires, as well as the nearby city Da Nang, would be battered by heavy rains from Wednesday.

Provinces further north such as Hoa Binh and Son La, the northern delta and Hanoi should expect torrential rains on Wednesday and Thursday.

Preparations

In Quang Ninh Province, authorities have banned fishing boats and ships from sailing out to sea from 11 a.m. Wednesday and instructed more than 5,000 boats to seek shelter from the storm.

More than 160 night cruises in Ha Long Bay, one of the country’s top holiday destinations, have been suspended. More than 300 boats carrying tourists around the bay were only allowed to operate until 11 a.m. Wednesday.

Authorities in the island district of Co To, not far from Ha Long, have been instructed to send 1,600 tourists, including foreigners, to the mainland.

Nguyen Xuan Cuong, deputy head of the Central Steering Committee for Natural Disaster Prevention and Control, said Mun is not a strong storm but it’s the first of the season and is threatening an area with vibrant economic activities. “Thus, thorough preparations are necessary.”

Mun claimed its first victim when it was just a tropical depression on Monday afternoon. Waves of over two meters sunk a vessel carrying 50,000 liters of diesel off Binh Thuan Province in the south central coast.

Local officials are scrambling to remove the oil from the ship and preparing to deal with possible spills.

The stormy season is coming a month late this year. The country was struck by nine tropical storms last year. Storm Pabuk, the latest one, hit southern Vietnam in January, causing no casualties.

Natural disasters, mostly floods, storms and landslides, killed 181 people and left 37 others missing last year and caused losses of around VND20 trillion ($858 million).

Source: Vnexpress

Pentagon officials said China is testing missiles in South China Sea

Advertisements

The tests are expected to ratchet up tension in the contested region, as well as between China and the US.

China has been testing anti-ship ballistic missiles (ASBMs) in the South China Sea over the weekend, NBC News reported on Tuesday. The move was in contradiction with a 2015 statement by President Xi Jinping pledging not to militarize the man-made outposts China had built in these waters, said Pentagon spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Dave Eastburn.

“I’m not going to speak on behalf of all the sovereign nations in the region, but I’m sure they agree that the PRC’s behavior is contrary to its claim to want to bring peace to the region and obviously actions like this are coercive acts meant to intimidate other South China Sea claimants,” said Lt. Col. Eastburn. China’s latest test was part of a naval drill located near the Paracel and Spratly island groups, territories which are contested between China, Taiwan, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam.

Many see the latest test as China’s answer to the US-Japan joint naval exercise on the South China Sea on June 20, which included the USS Ronald Reagan carrier strike group and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force’s Escort Flotilla 1. China has argued that these exercises constitute aggressive behavior from the US.

There are also concerns that the test signifies an increase in China’s anti-access, area-denial capabilities, which can escalate tension in the area as China’s neighbors react against its expansionism. Vietnam, also a claimant in the South China Sea dispute, has been stepping up its strategic partnership with the US, participating for the first time in the biennial Rim of the Pacific (RIMPAC) military exercise in 2018.

China’s ASBM test came on the heels of a ceasefire in the trade war between the US and China, with President Trump announcing during the weekend G20 summit that future tariffs are on hold while both countries resume trade talks. It is unclear whether continuing Chinese military aggression would present an obstacle in these negotiations.

Bosch R&D Center celebrates fifth anniversary

Advertisements

Bosch boasts a 20% sales growth in Vietnam in 2018 and promises additional investment of 86 million euros in the next five years.

On Tuesday, July 2, Bosch Automotive Research and Development (R&D) Center celebrated its fifth year anniversary at Deutsches Haus, 33 Le Duan, Ben Nghe, Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam. Established in 2014 with an accumulated investment of more than USD 20 million (17 million euros), the R&D center today houses more than 70 engineers and is an integral part of Bosch’s operations in Vietnam.

Initially focused on researching automotive technologies as well as on further developing the skills of the company’s workforce in Vietnam, the R&D center has since expanded its scope to lead the product development of electrical components in the application of active safety and engine management systems. Apart from driving technological advancements for two of Bosch’s automotive manufacturing plants in Thailand and Germany, the center has also started development collaborations with other similar Bosch locations in Asia Pacific, Europe, North and South America.

Mr. Guru Mallikarjuna, Managing Director of Bosch Vietnam, spoke at the ceremony about Bosch’s accomplishments in Vietnam, stressing Bosch’s strong growth rate and the large potential for auto sector growth in Vietnam. Mr Guru especially praised the new regional two-wheeler and power sports division, established last year in Ho Chi Minh City, and promised to continue investing in Vietnam, starting with an investment of 86 million euros in the next five years.

“As a key manufacturing and R&D location for Bosch global mobility solutions, strong investments into increasing the capacity and capability of our plants are essential to keeping our competitive edge besides meeting the growing demand for our products and solutions,“ Mr. Guru said at the ceremony.

Vietnam, Japan agreed to tighten up the monitoring of labor conditions

Advertisements

Japan and Vietnam to bolster monitoring of labor conditions for Vietnamese as Tokyo opens the door to more foreign workers.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his Vietnamese counterpart, Nguyen Xuan Phuc, affirmed during a meeting Monday they will maintain close cooperation in tackling problems such as unscrupulous brokers. Japan Times reports.

The government has stepped up efforts to eliminate the involvement of brokers who charge extortionate fees for processing visas and other services to facilitate workers’ entry into Japan.

In other agreements, the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and four Japanese private banks will extend joint financing worth $200 million (¥21.68 billion) to promote renewable energy in Vietnam.

The Vietnamese prime minister is visiting Japan as he was invited to the two-day Group of 20 summit through Saturday in Osaka, even though Vietnam is not a G20 member.

Vietnam will have African swine fever vaccine very soon

Advertisements

(Reuters) Vietnam said on Tuesday it has had initial success in creating a vaccine to fight African swine fever, which has infected farms throughout the Southeast Asian country and prompted the culling of around 10% of its pig herd.

African swine fever – which has spread to Laos and North Korea as well after being detected in China in August 2018 – was first detected in Vietnam in February and has spread to farms in 61 of the country’s 63 provinces.

More than 2.9 million pigs have been culled in Vietnam, Agriculture Minister Nguyen Xuan Cuong said on Tuesday, out of a hog population of about 30 million.

“I think we’re on the right track, and we will soon have a vaccine,” Cuong said, according to the official Vietnam News Agency (VNA).

The vaccine, developed at the Vietnam National University of Agriculture, has been tested in its laboratory and at three farms in northern Vietnam, state broadcaster Vietnam Television (VTV) said in a separate report on Tuesday.

Experts on vaccines and African swine fever, though, were sceptical over the claims of progress and said there needed to be much more research to prove the viability of any vaccine.

“We need different phases of clinical trials, first in an experimental setting with controlled exposure, and then a field trial with natural exposure to the virus, and that cannot be a small trial,” said Dirk Pfeiffer, a professor of veterinary epidemiology at the City University of Hong Kong.

The complex nature of the virus and gaps in knowledge concerning infection and immunity have so far hindered other global efforts to develop a vaccine against the disease, which is harmless to humans but deadly to pigs.

Researchers elsewhere have abandoned attempts to use a killed virus for a vaccine and teams in the United States, Europe and China have been working on live vaccines instead, which carry higher safety risks.

In Vietnam’s initial trials, 31 out of 33 pigs injected with the test vaccine are still healthy after receiving two shots over a period of months, according to the VTV report.

Other pigs at the farms have died from the virus, the report said, without giving specific figures. No further details were given about the vaccine or the trials.

The agricultural university’s director, Nguyen Thi Lan, said the vaccine still needed further research, and required testing on a larger scale.

Lan declined to comment on the report and referred questions from Reuters to the agricultural ministry, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Pork makes up three-quarters of total meat consumption in Vietnam, a country of 95 million people where most of its farm-raised pigs are consumed domestically.

The country’s pork industry is valued at 94 trillion dong (3.21 billion pounds) a year, and accounts for nearly 10% of Vietnam’s agricultural sector.

African swine fever was first detected in Asia last year in China, the world’s largest pork producer. As many as half of China’s breeding pigs have died or been slaughtered because of the disease, twice as many as officially reported.

(Reporting by Khanh Vu and Phuong Nguyen in HANOI; 
Additional reporting by Dominique Patton in BEIJING; Editing by James Pearson and Tom Hogue)

Vietnam Coffee Market Research Report & Market Outlook: Ken Research

Advertisements

World coffee production in the 2014/2015 season decreased by 2.29% over the 2013/2014 season. This was the first time that coffee consumption decreased after reaching a sharp growth rate since the 2010/2011 season. Coffee production output in the 2017/2018 season was estimated at 159.66 million bags, up 1.2% compared to 2016/2017 season due to the forecast recovery in major producer countries.

The world coffee demand has been increasing, the total output of world coffee in the 2017/2018 season was estimated to be xxx.xx million bags. Global inventories for 2017/2018 season were xx.xx million bags, down 8.61% over 2016/2017 season due to a sharp increase in world coffee exports and consumption, while output increased slowly.

Vietnam currently planted two main types of coffee: Arabica and Robusta. Vietnam coffee market production output in the past years has many fluctuations. In the 2016/17 season, according to USDA, coffee production was estimated to have dropped to xx.x million bags (60kg/bag), the lowest level since the 2012/2013 season. However, in the 2017/18 season, coffee production was expected to recover strongly and reach about xx.x million bags.

Domestic consumption of coffee in the period 2012-2018e with CARG of 7.9%, 2017/2018 estimated consumption volume of about x.xx million bags (60kg/bag), in which consumption of ground roasted coffee accounts for about two-thirds of output, the remaining one third is instant coffee.

In the 2017/18 season, the total quantity of imported coffee was estimated of Vietnam at 1.06 million bags. In the first quarter of 2018, the quantity of exported coffee was estimated at xxx thousand tons, an increase of 17% compared to the same period last year. In general, large enterprises in the industry have gross sales and gross profit rate grown in comparison with 2015, the average revenue growth of the industry in 2016 reached 20%, the average gross profit margin was 12.7%.

Companies Covered In this Report:

  • Intimex Group Joint Stock Company
  • Olam Vietnam Company Limited
  • Nestle Viet Nam Company Limited
  • Phuc Sinh Joint Stock Company
  • 2-9 Dak Lak Import Export One Member Co., Ltd
  • Tin Nghia Corporation
  • Trung Nguyen Group Joint Stock Company
  • Vinh Hiep Co., Ltd
  • Minh Tien Coffee Import Export Co., Ltd

For more information on the research report, refer to Vietnam Coffee Market Research Report

Related Reports:

PMI: New order growth strongest year-to-date

Advertisements

Vietnam Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index at 52.5 in June.

The Vietnam Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index™ (PMI®) posted 52.5 in June, up from 52.0 in May and in line with the reading from April. The average PMI reading for the second quarter of 2019 was above that seen in the opening three months of the year, albeit remaining short of the 2018 average.

June data completed a solid second quarter of 2019 for the Vietnamese manufacturing sector, with business conditions improving amid ongoing new order growth. There was also a return to job creation in June, after employment had dipped marginally in May. Rising workloads also led manufacturers to increase their purchasing activity, with efforts to build inventories amid confidence around the near-term outlook for new orders also highlighted.

The rate of input cost inflation softened to a three-month low, thereby enabling firms to continue recent discounting of selling prices.

Vietnamese manufacturers continued to record solid growth of new orders in June, with the rate of expansion ticking up to a six-month high. Panelists linked the latest rise to the launch of new products and increased customer numbers. Less positive data was seen with regards to new export orders, which rose at the slowest pace since February. There were some reports that the US-China trade tensions had impacted negatively on export orders.

“The Vietnamese manufacturing sector continues to bob along nicely midway through 2019,” said Mr. Andrew Harker, Associate Director at IHS Markit. “The second quarter of the year saw solid growth that was broadly stable across the period and an improvement on the first quarter. Ongoing strength in demand encouraged firms to fill positions that had been vacated by resigning staff in May, leading to a return to job creation. One concern outlined by some firms was the US-China trade issues, which contributed to a moderation of export growth and weaker business confidence.”

Higher new orders were the key factor leading to a 19th successive monthly rise in manufacturing production. The upturn in output was solid and broadly in line with those seen during the rest of the second quarter.

Continued marked new order growth led to a rise in backlogs of work in June; the first in 2019 so far. Firms responded to higher workloads by taking on extra staff, reversing the decline seen in May.

Alongside job creation, higher workloads also encouraged manufacturers to purchase additional inputs in June. Moreover, the rate of expansion was marked and the fastest in three months. Some panelists reported efforts to build inventory reserves. Higher input buying and shorter delivery times enabled firms to raise stocks of purchases for the third consecutive month.

On the other hand, stocks of finished goods decreased modestly for the second month in a row.

Input prices rose at a relatively modest pace in June and one that was the softest in three months. Where input costs did rise, panelists reported higher market prices for items such as oil and gas. Relatively weak input cost inflation meant that manufacturers were able to lower their output prices again. Charges have now decreased in seven successive months, with the rate of decline broadly stable throughout the second quarter.

Although manufacturers remained optimistic that output will increase over the coming year, the level of confidence dropped sharply in June and was the lowest since February. Some panelists reported concerns regarding the US-China trade situation. Where growth was predicted, respondents linked optimism to planned business investment, new product launches, and entry into new markets.

Source: Vneconomictimes

Vietjet to launch two new direct flights to Japan

Advertisements

Vietnam’s private budget carrier Vietjet Air will launch two new direct routes connecting Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang with Tokyo this year.
Vietjet expects to begin daily return flights departing from Vietnam’s southern metropolis HCMC to Tokyo from July 12 onwards. The flight will take six hours each way.

The Da Nang-Tokyo flight is scheduled to take off from October 26 onwards. Each flight will take around seven hours.

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc attended the launching ceremony in Tokyo on Monday during his official visit to Japan following his participation in the G20 summit in Osaka, which wrapped up last Saturday.

Vietjet currently operates three direct flights between Vietnam and Japan: HCMC-Osaka, Hanoi-Osaka and Hanoi-Tokyo.

Vietnamese carriers have been launching new international flights in recent years as outbound tourism surges while the domestic aviation market shows signs of saturation, industry insiders said.

Thanks to visa exemptions, duty-free promotions and ancient tourist attractions, Japan has been attracting increasing numbers of Vietnamese tourists in recent years. Last year, 34,000 Vietnamese visited Japan, up 36.7 percent from a year ago.

The number of Vietnamese residents working and living in Japan jumped 26.1 percent from a year earlier to 330,835 in 2018, accounting for 8 percent of foreign nationals in the country, the Japan Times reported.

It said this growth had propelled Vietnam to overtake the Philippines as the third largest minority group in Japan, behind China and South Korea.

The growing presence of Japanese companies in Vietnam has also sparked increased interest among younger Vietnamese to study and/or undertake technical training programs in Japan in the hope of landing well-paid jobs, the report said.

Japan is third largest source of market for Vietnamese tourism, after China and South Korea. Last year, Vietnam received more than 820,000 Japanese tourists, up 3.6 percent from a year ago.

According to Mastercard, Vietnam has the second fastest growing outbound market in the Asia Pacific region after Myanmar, with projected annual growth of 9.5 percent between 2016 and 2021.

Mastercard forecast that 7.5 million Vietnamese travelers will travel outside the country in 2021.

Vietnam’s aviation industry has been growing at the third fastest pace in the Asia-Pacific, according to the International Air Transport Association (IATA). It welcomed 12.5 million air passengers last year, up 14.4 percent from 2017, the General Statistics Office reported.

Source: Vnexpress

Saigon Co.op acquires Auchan Vietnam

Advertisements

Saigon Co.op has just taken over the whole business operations, staff included, of the 18 Auchan Vietnam branches.

Saigon Co.op and French retailer Auchan have just announced completing the hand-over process of the whole business operations of Auchan in Vietnam. Accordingly, Saigon Co.op will take over 18 stores, 15 of which the French retailer has previously closed and three that have been operating at a profit, along with the e-commerce platform and online application from Auchan Vietnam.

Although the value of the acquisition was not revealed, Saigon Co.op representative said that the two sides have ended the negotiations on price. Saigon Co.op will operate these stores until Lunar New Year 2020 after which the sides will sit down to negotiate further co-operation opportunities, including exporting local products via Auchan’s global retail chain.

The whole business operation, employees, and goods of Auchan Vietnam will be managed by Saigon Co.op. All employees of Auchan will join Saigon Co.op’s staff.

Acquiring Auchan is part of Saigon Co.op’s strategy of expanding scale and market share. Thanks to this deal, Saigon Co.op’s target of 1,000 stores by this year could be reached far easier as the company has 800 stores already.

Do Quoc Huy, marketing manager of Saigon Co.op, said that this company would rename 18 Auchan supermarkets to Co.opmart, Co.optra, and Finelife.

Auchan started developing its first supermarket chain in Vietnam in 2015. As of present, the chain has 18 supermarkets in Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and Tay Ninh.

One month ago, the French retailer announced pulling out of Vietnam. Earlier on Wednesday, Auchan Retail CEO Edgar Bonte told Les Echos that the group had decided to sell its 18 outlets in Vietnam that currently generate a revenue of €45 million ($50.4 million).

As reported by Reuter, the French retailer had said in March that it was conducting a review of its loss-making markets, such as Italy and Vietnam where it has faced tough market conditions.

Source: VIR

Exit mobile version