How Vietnam Rose to Become an ASEAN Star and the opportunities for investors

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Vietnam is fast becoming one of the most exciting economies in Asia. What are the opportunities for investors?

It’s 7 am in Ho Chi Minh City’s (formerly known as Saigon) busy District One. Glass-faced skyscrapers adorn its skyline. Young professionals are trying to navigate through the busy traffic on their motorbikes. Hawkers are selling fast food such as famous Banh Mi by the side of the road. There is a veritable energy, and only one that is present in an aspiring society and a growing economy.

Within walking distance of District One stands the War Remnants Museum, which houses photographs, literature, and objects from the Vietnam War. One can’t help but reflect on the devastation and suffering the war brought on the country.

The contrast may make it feel like there are two Vietnams. And there were, before the war ended and after the country reunified in 1975. After seeing the contrast, it’s a wonder how Vietnam managed to get to where it is today. How did Vietnam grow from one of the poorest countries in the world in the 1970s to one which lifted over half its population out of poverty – all in the span of about 30 years?

The economic miracle

Vietnam spent the first few years of unification running socialist experiments. It was 1986 when it embraced market-oriented socialism, opening up the economy while keeping society firmly in control. After the fall of the Soviet Union, the pace of economic reforms accelerated as Vietnam entered into a slew of trade agreements in the 1990s. A country that started as primarily an agricultural exporter now boasts sizable electronic exports, ranking in the top 10 in the world.

While courting foreign investments, Vietnam also paid attention to reforms at home by directing public investments to education and infrastructure building. According to the World Bank, Vietnam spent a whopping 5.7% of GDP on education, even higher than the OECD (a group of developed economies) average, topping economic powerhouses like the US, Germany, Australia, and the UK.

The reforms also boosted local entrepreneurship, resulting in a plethora of small and medium businesses opening around the country. Today, Vietnam is challenging the regional leaders, Singapore and Indonesia, in the start-up space. The government is actively attempting to lure back local talent that had gone abroad to study and work.

Data and rankings

The data and rankings reflect all these efforts. Vietnam’s GDP has grown every single year since 1981, even during the dot com bust and the global financial crisis. GDP growth for 2018 came in at an impressive 7.1%, at a time when major economies including China’s are faltering.

Meanwhile, per capita GDP has grown from US$231 in 1985 to US$2,343 in 2017. The country’s annual Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) has grown by over seven times between 1996 and 2018. Vietnam has made strides in ease of doing business too with its ranking jumping from 90 in 2010 to 69 in 2018.

The road ahead

With a median age at just over 30 years old, Vietnam’s young and vibrant workforce can help the country move further ahead in manufacturing. This is especially significant as China, the manufacturing hub of the world, is battling with the problem of an aging population with its median age at 37.4 years.

The services sector, though, is lagging compared to its neighbors, who command a higher share of GDP from the sector. Being an export-driven economy, the ongoing trade war may hamper Vietnam too but on the flip side, it may also benefit – only if it can attract manufacturing business away from China.

There are many challenges that Vietnam needs to overcome in order to move into the middle-income category but its journey so far has been impressive.

Hong Kong became the biggest FDI investor in Vietnam in the first quarter of 2019. As China slows down, you may see more capital from Hong Kong flowing into Vietnam, perhaps indicating the emerging relevance of this exciting Southeast Asian economy.

A version of article originally appeared on Fool Asia.
To be advised on how to set up a company in Vietnam as foreign investors, you may contact GBS, a business law firm in Vietnam at info@gbs.com.vn, hotline, SMS, iMessage/ WhatsApp/ Viber: +84903189033 or visit the website at: https://gbs.com.vn

Vietnam records highest increase in per capita alcohol consumption

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Per capita liquor consumption in Vietnam increased near 90 percent in 2010-2017, surpassing regional giants and against drops in Europe.
The Lancet medical journal recently released a study of alcohol consumption in 189 countries and territories from 1990–2017 and estimated rates through 2030, showing people around the world are steadily upping their drinking game.

The study found a 89.4 percent uptick in Vietnamese alcohol intake per capita between 2010 and 2017, the world’s highest, followed by India’s 37.2 percent.

In comparison, the overall rise in Southeast Asia was 34 percent, while Europeans drank less in the same period with a decline of 12 percent.

Vietnam, which consumed 8.9 liters of pure alcohol per person in 2017, also surpassed Japan (7.9 liters), China (7.4 liters) and India (5.9 liters). 5.9 liters of pure alcohol per year would be roughly one can of 330 ml beer per day per adult.

Jakob Manthey, the first author of the study, told the U.K.’s Medical News Today: “Before 1990, most alcohol was consumed in high-income countries, with the highest use levels recorded in Europe. However, this pattern has changed substantially, with large reductions across Eastern Europe and vast increases in several middle-income countries, such as China, India and Vietnam.”

Global exposure to pure alcohol increased from 5.9 liters a year per adult in 1990, to 6.5 liters in 2017. The authors predicted that this would grow to 7.6 liters by 2030.

More specifically, by 2030, half of all adults will drink alcohol, and almost a quarter (23 percent) will binge drink at least once a month, the study estimates.

The likely reason for this is increased alcohol use in low- and middle-income countries as their financial status gets higher.

Dr Jürgen Rehm, one of the authors, told VnExpress International that the association between increases in GPD and increases in adult alcohol per capita consumption was “almost perfect” in Vietnam.

While affordability was the biggest factor, Rehm also attributed Vietnam’s astounding alcohol indulgence to weak alcohol control policy.

“Vietnam still has a lot of unrecorded alcohol, and any policy would need to reduce this volume, and at the same time make recorded alcohol less affordable and less available,” he said.

Vietnam is famous for its beer drinking culture. It is widely believed that business deals in Vietnam tend to go more smoothly over a few drinks at the negotiating table. Vietnam is the biggest beer market in Southeast Asia, consuming nearly four billion liters in 2017.

The country spends on average $3.4 billion on alcohol each year, or 3 percent of the government’s budget revenue, according to official data. The figure translates to $300 per capita, while spending on health averages $113 per person, according to the Ministry of Health.

40 percent of traffic accidents in Vietnam are linked to excessive drinking, according to the WHO, which it says is an alarming rate for a country where road crashes kill a person every hour, on average.

WHO sent a letter to Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc last year, asking Vietnamese government to tighten controls over the production, sales and advertising of beer and alcoholic beverage to discourage drinking and protect consumers’ health.

Also last year, Vietnam’s health ministry proposed an advertisement ban on beer.

World Health Organization has set out global strategies to reduce the harmful use of alcohol by at least 10 percent by 2025, which is not likely to be achieved, author Manthey told EurekAlert of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Source: Vnexpress

Vietnam’s real estate market likely to stay stagnant this year

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Vietnam’s real estate market will likely remain stagnant this year, unlike in 2017 when price increases were rampant in popular spots around the country, predicted deputy head of the Department of Housing and Real Estate Management Nguyen Manh Khoi.

Khoi said there were unlikely to be bubbles in the property market this year because the Government had gained more experience in management and supervision.

Vice Chairman of the Vietnam Real Estate Association (VNREA) Nguyen Manh Ha said the property market has been stagnant in the first months of the year, especially in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.

Supply on the real estate market in Hanoi in the period was reduced by 25 percent from the same period last year, while HCM City saw a year-on-year decrease of more than 50 percent.

The main reason for the declines was that big property projects in the two cities were sold off in the last quarter of 2018. A slowdown in the approval of new projects in HCM City, together with tightening credit policies, also contributed.

“Some have said the real estate market would decline this year, but I think 2018 and early 2019 have showed fairly stable development,” Ha said.

There were 175,000 property products provided to the market last year, 20 percent more than in the previous year. The total number of successful transactions was 113,000.

Experts agreed there would not be a downward trend this year because the Government can draw on its experience from past crises.

Le Xuan Nghia, former vice chairman of the National Financial Supervision Committee, said there would be a huge shift of capital from the stock market to the real estate market, which would likely last until 2021 and potentially until 2023. During the period, the market will show strong development and could be at risk of forming a bubble.

Economist Vo Tri Thanh said rumours had spread quickly about development plans, causing price inflation in some areas. The market needed more transparency to limit uninformed speculation and reduce risks for home buyers.

Ha said the market would continue to be affected by macroeconomic factors, credit policies and the global growth rate.

Credit scale for the market has been gradually reduced since 2016, especially in the last quarter of 2018. The State Bank of Vietnam has sought feedback on a draft that would place stricter controls on credit flowing into the real estate market.

The draft would set a lower maximum level that banks could use to give long- and medium-term loans, which would have a big effect on the property market.

Ha said there were still positive signs for the market such as high demand in big urban areas.

The tightening of credit policies would establish a new investment trend by attracting capital for resorts, industrial estates and offices in some localities.

Source: Dtinews

VN stocks expected to decline, hopes rest on banks

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Vietnamese shares may continue declining this week, dragged down by the impact of recent US-China trade talks and a lack of corporate news, analysts said.

The benchmark VN-Index on the Hồ Chí Minh Stock Exchange ended last week at 952.55 points, for a total weekly loss of 2.22 per cent.

The HNX-Index on the Hà Nội Stock Exchange fell 0.94 per cent last week to end at 105.86 points.

The VN-Index and HNX-Index have lost a total 2.76 per cent and 1.49 per cent so far in May, respectively.

The Vietnamese stock market experienced strong pressure from international markets last week as investors displayed their concern about the escalation of the US-China trade tensions.

The US on Friday raised tariffs on US$200 billion worth of Chinese goods to 25 per cent from 10 per cent.

Despite positive progress made by the world’s two largest economies in last week’s talks, US President Donald Trump said he would impose higher tariffs on all Chinese goods if the two sides could not reach a deal within one month.

That threat may rattle global financial markets over the next month, and Vietnamese shares are no exception.

The Vietnamese stock market needs some time to calm down, especially as local firms are not supplying corporate news and international markets are highly risky, said Trần Đức Anh, head of macro-economics and market strategy at KB Vietnam Securities.

“Friday’s gain was more like a technical rebound that followed the market’s previous shocking declines,” he told tinnhanhchungkhoan.vn.

“The market will need to fall and settle at a lower level so that potential risks are fully priced in before making a recovery,” Anh said.

Speaking about the trade war between China and the US, Anh said there are two main impacts on the Vietnamese economy and equity market.

The first is the pressure on Việt Nam’s exchange rate, he said. The US dollar will get stronger while the Chinese yuan weakens, so the central bank will bear double pressure in controlling the Vietnamese đồng against the two currencies.

“Every time the Vietnamese đồng weakens against the dollar, foreign investors net-sell their local assets and pressurise the equity market,” Anh said.

Foreign investors net-sold a total of VNĐ522 billion ($22.3 million) worth of Vietnamese shares last week (May 6-10). They net-bought a total of VNĐ171 billion ($7.3 million) between April 22 and May 3.

The trade war will also re-direct global trade, having an unpredictable impact on the Vietnamese economy and equity market in the long run, Anh said.

“It may deter global economic growth, pull down Việt Nam’s export and hurt the operation of the Vietnamese firms that are in the value chain set up by Chinese and US companies,” he added.

According to securities firms, the trade tensions have dampened investors’ confidence in the market and brought down trading liquidity to a very low level.

Trading volume through order-matching transactions reached an average of 148 million shares in each session.

Investors are waiting for more positive information of the stock market before buying in stocks again, Sài Gòn-Hà Nội Securities JSC (SHS) said in its weekly report.

“In my view, the cautious stance would still be the main attitude toward the stock market in the coming week,” Anh from KB Vietnam Securities said.

Friday’s modest gain does not mean all bad news has been overcome and the market will simply bounce back, said Hoàng Thạch Lân, head of the individual investor department at Việt Dragon Securities.

“My technical indicators remain negative and the market will likely continue its downturn,” Lân said.

Hopes rest on banks

Bank and petroleum stocks are expected to cushion the stock market in the short term, analysts said.

“The banking sector is one of a few industries that showed earnings growth in their Q1 financial reports,” Anh said. “Shares of large-cap banks should be eyed now for the good quality of assets and performance in the next quarters.”

Energy stocks have been boosted by the rise of oil prices since the beginning of the year. However, they should not be a target for the short term as oil prices are likely to fall soon, Anh added.

Analyst Vũ Minh Đức of Việt Capital Securities Corp’s research and analysis department said energy stocks are now slightly overvalued while bank shares have become attractive following their recent downturns.

Source: VNN

Vietnamese youngsters join hands to make Ho Chi Minh City a better living place

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A group of young people has been spreading the love for Ho Chi Minh City, formerly known as Saigon, through a media project with an aim to gain people’s trust in the moral standards of the society in their hometown.

The “A Beautiful Saigon” project was initiated six months ago by “Touch Saigon” in cooperation with “Human of Saigon,” two famous online communities of people who are willing to make efforts to improve the living quality of the city they love.

Nguyen Luan, the founder of “Touch Saigon,” and the group’s members have been wandering across Ho Chi Minh City to have a closer look into people’s point of view about the city as well as listen to their touching daily life stories.

They then shared the stories to others through music videos, photo books or voluntary campaigns to convey the message that everyone should contribute something to make Ho Chi Minh City a better place to live in.

“Ordinary stories turned out to be more meaningful than ever since they gave us hope about love and humanity in the city,” said Luan.

“A Beautiful Saigon” has received a lot of praise from Vietnamese people living in the southern metropolis and even those from overseas including hairstylist Le Tuan from the U.S., who would fly to Saigon annually to give poor, homeless people free haircuts.

Vietnamese hairstylist Le Tuan gives poor people free haircuts to promote the “A Beautiful Saigon” project. Photo: Le Van / Tuoi Tre

The project has also inspired Vietnamese artists such as composer Ho Tien Dat, singer Nguyen Ha and photographer Pham Hoai Nam to recently release the theme song “Sai Gon Van The” for the event as a gift from them to the kind-hearted youngsters.

Founders of “A Beautiful Saigon” worked with “Chuyen Sai Gon” (Story of Saigon), another group of young people dedicating themselves to environment care in the city, to give away free Vietnamese traditional glutinous rice cakes to the homeless.

The two groups decided to hold a three-month photo contest to raise awareness of environmental issues starting from May.

“A Beautiful Saigon” photo book

Apart from “A Beautiful Saigon,” there are also other people who have secretly devoted themselves to protecting the environment in their hometown.

Nguyen Hong Viet, a 33-year-old office worker in Ho Chi Minh City, has been awarding gifts and flower bouquets to street sweepers as well as spreading their wishes to improve the living environment to other people through photos on his personal Facebook account.

Photos depicting street cleaners flashing a big smile when holding message boards to promote environmental protection on social networks have raised people’s awareness and reminded them to throw away garbage appropriately to keep their living place tidy.

Le Van / Tuoi Tre”> Vietnamese composer Ho Tien Dat (L) and singer Nguyen Ha sing the theme song of the “A Beautiful Saigon” project. Photo: Le Van / Tuoi Tre
Le Van / Tuoi Tre”> Nguyen Luan (right) and the co-founder of “A Beautiful Saigon.” Photo: Le Van / Tuoi Tre

Source: Tuoitrenews

Biofuel fails to make a difference in Vietnam, consumption drops

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After being introduced as a more environmentally friendly option in late 2017, E5 biofuel consumption has fallen.
Low consumption and low profit margin have been blamed for the situation.

Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade Do Thang Hai told VnExpress that sales of E5 RON 92 bio-gasoline (E5) has dropped since the end of 2018.

According to statistics released by the Ministry of Industry and Trade, in 2018, Vietnam consumed over 3.1 million tons of E5 gasoline, equivalent to 42 percent of all gasoline in the market. However, in the first quarter of 2019, this number fell to 38 percent.

Moreover, after over one year of mass selling bio-fuel, a number of petrol stations are beginning to switch back to selling RON 95, as a result of low sales and meagre profit margins.

“Most of our customers are asking for RON 95 fuel now, so after a long time of selling E5 we are switching back to mineral gasoline,” said a private gas station worker in Hanoi’s Ha Dong District, saying her station had removed some E5 cylinders to make space for RON 95.

Binh, a gas station owner in Hanoi, said that his outlet also switched to selling RON 95 a month earlier due to low E5 consumption.

“There are months where we only sold several hundred litres of E5. This is small so it is difficult to store this type of biofuel,” Binh said. Since E5 is a biofuel, if left for long, water will separate from the fuel, causing it to spoil, he explained.

According to fuel traders, the amount of E5 bought by distributors has also dropped sharply since the beginning of 2018. The head of a trading firm who did not wish to be named said that the proportion of biofuel sold to outlets have dropped from 50 at the end of 2018 to only 30 percent in April.

“We can only ensure biofuel sales to outlets in our system, but sales to private distributors will depend on demand and supply of the market. It is difficult to sell to these clients because the profit margin is so low,” he said.

Given the recent rise in global oil price and Vietnam’s price cap on fuel, enterprises are actually making heavier losses selling E5 than RON 95 fuel this April. Specifically, VND3,540 (15 cents) is taken out of enterprises’ price stabilization fund to subsidize every litre of E5 RON 92, while only VND2,045 (8.8 cents) is needed for RON 95.

E5 fuel does not sell well also because consumers still have doubts about its quality. They lack information and prices are not attractive enough for them to make the switch, said the owner of a gas station in Saigon.

“A difference of just VND200 (0.9 cents) per litre is not nearly enough to encourage consumers to use biofuels, given that many consumers are still not confident about the quality of this petrol” conceded Deputy Minister Hai.

In order to achieve a larger difference, enterprises have suggested a reduction or even abolition of the environmental tax charged on biofuels. The retail price of E5 should be VND2,000-2,500 (8.6-11 cents) lower than RON 95 to encourage consumption of biofuels, they say.

“The current tax rate of E5 being equivalent to 95.1 percent of RON 95 is not appropriate. The rate should be readjusted instead based on how much the fuel emits. The figure should be 75-80 percent,” Hai said.

The current environmental tax rate for gasoline of all types, except for E5, is VND4000 (17 cents) per litre.

As of now, Vietnam primarily uses two types of gasoline. Before 2017, Vietnam mainly consumed RON 95, an unleaded high-octane mineral gasoline, that burns more efficiently for higher-performance car/motorbike engines that require it, and RON 92, a lower-grade mineral gasoline used for ordinary gasoline engines.

In January 1, 2018, the government replaced RON 92 with E5, a mix of RON 92 petrol (95 per cent) and E5 bio-fuel ethanol (5 per cent).

“The shift will contribute to ensuring energy security, reducing dependence on fossil fuels and implementing the commitments made by the Vietnamese government to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, among others,” the government said then in a statement.

Source: Vnexpress

Global Markets Fall as Investors Await China Response to Trump

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Global markets traded modestly lower on Monday as investors awaited word of how China would respond to President Trump’s escalation of a trade war.

Chinese stocks finished more than 1 percent lower, while the rest of the region registered similar drops. European markets opened lower. Futures that track Wall Street’s performance indicated that stocks in the United States would open lower too, the New York Times reports.

China’s currency, the renminbi, weakened against the American dollar.

President Trump on Friday raised tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese-made goods. Talks between American and Chinese officials in Washington ended later that day with the two sides still far apart on a number of issues. Markets in the United States fell that day then recovered some ground on the hopes that the trade war could soon end without too much disruption.

According to New York Times, the timing of that end remains uncertain. China reiterated its defiant stance on Monday, as Geng Shuang, a spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry, reiterated that Beijing would not bend to foreign pressure and a response would come. American officials on Monday were set to release details of their tariff plans, which could give China the information it needs to respond.

In China, the Shanghai Composite Index fell 1.2 percent, while the Shenzhen Composite Index fell 1.1 percent. Hong Kong markets were closed for a holiday.

Japanese shares fell more modestly, with the Nikkei 225 index losing 0.7 percent.

In South Korea, the Kospi index fell 1.4 percent, while Taiwan’s Taiex index fell by a similar amount.

Both the CAC 40 index in France and the Dax in Germany were 0.5 percent lower in early trading, while the FTSE 100 index in London was flat.

Vietnamese stocks expected to decline, hopes rest on banks

In Vietnam, shares may continue declining this week, dragged down by the impact of recent US-China trade talks and a lack of corporate news, analysts said.

The benchmark VN-Index on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange ended last week at 952.55 points, for a total weekly loss of 2.22 per cent.

The HNX-Index on the Hanoi Stock Exchange fell 0.94 per cent last week to end at 105.86 points.

The VN-Index and HNX-Index have lost a total 2.76 per cent and 1.49 per cent so far in May, respectively.

The Vietnamese stock market experienced strong pressure from international markets last week as investors displayed their concern about the escalation of the US-China trade tensions.

It’s Time for Vietnam’s Companies to Go Global?

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Usually, the U.S. ambassador in Hanoi brings American interests to Vietnam, but next month he plans to take Vietnamese companies to the United States.

U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Daniel J. Kritenbrink and his team have been recruiting companies in the Southeast Asian country for a business delegation to Washington, D.C., which sparks a broader question: Is it time for Vietnam’s firms to go abroad?

“Investing in the United States is one of the best decisions that Vietnamese firms can make, especially as the country’s economy continues to rapidly expand,” Kritenbrink said. “As firms benefit from this expansion, they should look to expand into new markets and it’s only natural to consider one of Vietnam’s largest export markets, the United States.”

According to a report by Ha Nguyen on VOA News, U.S. economic officers have been holding events in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City throughout the year to lobby them to join the delegation to Washington, which is scheduled for June 10-12.

The proposition comes as Vietnam’s economy is maturing, prompting more companies to consider if this is the time for them to take the next step in their growth and expand beyond the country’s borders.

As Kritenbrink noted, the U.S. is the biggest market for Vietnamese products, which is a reminder that the communist country already has a big presence in the international arena, having established itself as an export powerhouse in the past two decades.

​But Vietnam thinks it would be a major achievement if companies take it to the next level, no longer just shipping goods overseas, but actually setting up operations and offices overseas.

Some corporations have done so already, whether it’s the electronics conglomerate FPT going to Japan or the telecommunications giant Viettel servicing markets from Burundi to Peru.

The trend, however, is broadening to businesses that are not as well resourced. Saigon Innovation Hub (Sihub) announced a program last year to provide support to startups that want to go abroad, a program known as Runway to the World.

“Following our strategy toward 2020, Sihub targets to gather all local and international resources to realize the key mission of boosting economic growth,” Huynh Kim Tuoc said for the launch. He is the managing director of Sihub, which is under the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Science and Technology.

Supporters say going global is the natural next step in Vietnam’s evolution. In the 1980s, the communist government started allowing business activities typical of a market economy. In the 1990s, the United States lifted its trade embargo, and in the early 2000s, Vietnam joined the World Trade Organization. It has since become a leading exporter of rice, textiles and garments, and phones to the international market.

Standard Chartered Bank executive Nirukt Sapru said the context helps, as Vietnam is still seeing increases in gross domestic product, foreign direct investment (FDI) and FDI-driven manufacturing.

“Vietnamese mid-corporate manufacturers can capitalize on this and shield themselves from headwinds by pursuing strategies, such as investing in technologies and exploring new markets, which will help them move up the value chain,” said Sapru, who is the chief executive officer for Vietnam, Southeast Asia, and South Asia at the bank. “In fact, we are seeing an increasing number of local electronics players expressing interest to venture overseas for growth.”

The headwinds he mentioned include trade challenges that could hurt Vietnam’s exports if they hurt the global economy, such as the trade war between China and the United States, slowing growth in China that could affect demand for products and services elsewhere, and U.S. President Donald Trump’s other tariff fights, such as with Japan and the European Union.

By going abroad, Vietnam’s companies hope not just to strengthen their home economy from foreign trade tensions, but also to help build the national brand around the world.

Saigon’s retail sales and service revenue reached over USD4 billion in April

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In general, retail and services sales in Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) up 14.4 percent

The retail sales and service revenue in Ho Chi Minh City reached more than 94.91 trillion VND (4.07 billion USD) in April, up 2.3 percent from the previous month and 14.4 percent from the same time last year, boosted by strong promotional campaigns by shopping malls and supermarkets during national holidays. VNS reports.

Competent authorities’s reports showed that revenues went up in the sales of rice (0.6 percent); beef (0.17 percent); confectionary (0.35 percent); and tea, coffee, and cocoa (0.52 percent). Meanwhile, earnings from pork products fell by 3.36 percent, poultry 0.66 percent, seafood 1.79 percent, vegetables 1.91 percent, and fruits 0.06 percent.

According to the municipal Department of Industry and Trade, the sufficient supply coupled with the effective market stabilization program have kept food prices steady since the beginning of the year.

The two adjustments in oil and gas prices in April only impacted the transport sector, driving coach and train fares to rise by 0.56 percent and 2.67 percent, respectively.

Nguyen Anh Duc, Deputy General Director of Saigon Co.op said that his company has joined hands with suppliers to ensure price stability. The retail chain – which runs Co.opmart, Co.opXtra, and Co.opfood – will focus on essential commodities and continue to run promotional programs to bolster purchasing power. He affirmed that Saigon Co.op will avoid irrational price hikes to protect consumer rights.

Other retailers in the city said that in the context of weakened spending power, distributors and suppliers should join hands to stabilize the market.

In traditional markets, price increases were seen in fresh and frozen food products following surges in fuel and electricity prices.

A local business association said that they want to receive support from relevant authorities amid market volatility so as to ensure logical production plans can be made.

Ho Chi Minh City is now home to 13 million residents, with expanding demands for food. However, the city is only able to meet 20-30 percent of the total daily consumption, relying heavily on imports and supplies from other cities and provinces.

British paedophile moved to Vietnam following his release from prison in the UK

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British paedophile Christopher Trinnaman grins as he stands surrounded by unsuspecting kids in his new home of Vietnam.

The twisted trombone player, 41, moved to the south-east Asian country after he was released from jail in 2015 and signed up with a top orchestra. Dan Warburton reports on the Mirror.co.uk

Christopher Trinnaman posing with a Vietnamese girl @mirror

British authorities say the fiend – a ­registered sex offender here but living unchecked in Vietnam – has done nothing wrong by going there.

But one of his victims slammed the snap, posted on Facebook just before Christmas, as “disgusting” and said: “It’s appalling.

“Why was he allowed to travel abroad? He’s a very manipulative man who is a danger to children. I will always ­remember what he did to me, it will always stay with me.”

Trinnaman targeted her online aged 13, grooming her along with a girl of 14, and she testified at his trial.

The victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said: “We were so vulnerable and he preyed on that.

Convicted paedophile Christopher Trinnaman has started a new life in Vietnam where he is free to make contact with kids @Mirror

“It’s disgusting he is free to go abroad with no monitoring.

“It’s appalling he’s in Vietnam with children. He must be stopped from doing this to anyone else.”

According to Mirror, after he was jailed for grooming the teen and her friend, Trinnaman was described as high-risk and made the subject of a Sexual Harm Prevention Order – restricting contact with children and ­web use.

But it cannot stop him travelling abroad – and we expose Trinnaman’s life in Vietnam just weeks after we revealed how ­thousands of sex offenders are free to roam abroad.

The Sunday People told how courts have handed out 15,355 Sexual Harm Prevention Orders in three years but only 27 had foreign travel restrictions.

Trinnaman has played to large crowds at the Vietnamese National Academy of Music.

There is no suggestion he has acted inappropriately or broken any laws since moving to Vietnam after his 2015 prison release.

Katherine Mulhern, boss of children’s rights charity ECPAT UK, said: “Under the current framework, law enforcement are unable to apply for a restriction on foreign travel for child sex offenders such as Trinnaman if, at the time they applied for a civil order, there was no ­evidence to suggest he would travel abroad.

“We need more preventative tools to target offenders who begin their trajectory of abuse online and are considered low risk but whose offending will continue to escalate and they will seek to travel abroad to offend with impunity.”

Trinnaman sparked a manhunt in 2009 after he fled 24 hours before he was due to stand trial.

He had posed as a ­teen online and persuaded the two girls to send naked pictures before trying to lure one to a hotel for sex.

Police were alerted and found 28 indecent images of kids on his computer in a search of his home.

In 2010 Trinnaman, formerly of Dulwich, South East London, was jailed for four years in his absence at the Old Bailey for causing or inciting a child to engage in sexual activity in 2008 and ­possessing indecent images.

Trinnaman is a trombonist and his music has allowed him to connect with children @Mirror

He was also ordered to sign on to the sex offenders register for life.

Trinnaman was caught in 2011 and within days of leaving HMP Littlehey he failed to register with police.

Scotland Yard said he was “high-risk” and revealed the Sexual Harm Prevention Order restricted his internet use and his contact with girls under 18.

Trinnaman tried to overturn his conviction, arguing that the prosecution defied “his rights to freedom of expression” under Article 10 of the Human Rights Convention.

But three senior judges at London’s Criminal Appeal Court dismissed his bid, saying it had “no merit”.

The People understands Trinnaman’s 14-year-old victim has since taken her own life.

The other victim revealed how he texted photos of his private parts and tried to meet her for sex, saying he “loved her”.

She said: “I was young and naive and didn’t understand the severity of it. I didn’t appreciate how terrible it was.

The paedophile playing with an orchestra in a Facebook snap @Mirror

“Now, I know he was preying on the vulnerable. He tried to pretend he cared for us but he was disgusting.” In 2010, the People spoke to Trinnaman’s victim in a bid to track him down while he was on the run.

Even then, her dad feared him travelling abroad.

He said: “It’s absolutely ridiculous that someone ­facing paedophile ­charges and given bail while awaiting trial is ­allowed to hold on to their passport.

“It would seem such a simple thing to make them surrender their passport as a condition of their bail.

“The other concern is they could abuse ­children abroad and be under the radar.”

We told the Metropolitan Police of our findings and a spokesman for the force said: “A Sexual Harm Prevention Order is an order made by the court and the conditions imposed in this case do not prevent travel abroad.

“No ­conditions have been breached.”

A spokeswoman for Trinnaman’s orchestra said last night: “Christopher John Trinnaman used to work at the Sun Symphony Orchestra as an ­associate principal trombone.

“On April 23, due to his personal reason, Mr Trinnaman resigned from the position and terminated the labour contract with Sun Symphony Orchestra.

“Sun Symphony Orchestra did not know anything about his past. All the necessary information he provided to sign the labour contract was legal.”

 

This article first appeared on the Mirror.

Vietnam is facing challenges to reach 8 – 10 percent export growth in 2019

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Export growth target of 8 -10% in 2019 is facing great challenges.

The latest figures from the Ministry of Industry and Trade show that in the first 3 months of 2019, the total export turnover of the whole country reached USD58.51 billion, up 4.7% over the same period last year but much lower than the increase of 24.5% of the first quarter of 2018. In particular, the main items are mobile phones down 4.6%, rice down 26%, cashew nuts and coffee are down 15%.

Trade surplus slipped: In the first quarter of 2019, Vietnam saw an export surplus of USD536 million. This number was disappointed by the same period last year, the country exported surplus of USD2.7 billion. More worrisome, the foreign-invested sector (including crude oil) saw a trade surplus of USD7.57 billion, while the domestic economic sector saw a trade deficit of USD7.04 billion.

Regarding to those causes, the Ministry of Industry and Trade said that global trade in the first quarter decreased by 1.8% compared to the same period last year, which made Vietnam’s export inevitably slow down compared to its current level. In addition, the key economies in the world as well as the leading trading partners of Vietnam such as US, China, and UK all have volatile developments, making Vietnam’s exports be influenced. “The number of new export orders increased at the slowest pace in the last 3 years. Even Samsung Group had narrowed their export rate to the world because many Chinese manufacturers have quickly caught up with Samsung.

In addition, prospects for export of rubber, pepper, coffee … are not very positive due to falling prices in the context of oversupply “- Ministry of Industry and Trade stated.

Things you should know about Investment shifting trend in China

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According to the researcher Tu Truong Van of China International Research Fund, while the US-China trade war began to constantly escalate, China actively promoting cooperation with key economic and trade partners, especially economic and trade cooperation with their neighbor countries is the response to America.

Vietnam is a neighbor to China. In recent times Chinese enterprises have increased economic and trade cooperation with Vietnam. Along with the increase in Chinese investment in Vietnam, there is also a rapid expansion in bilateral trade. According to statistics of the General Department of Customs of China, in 2017, China-Vietnam trade turnover for the first time exceeded USD100bn, reaching USD121.3bn.

Even surpassing China-Malaysia trade turnover at that time reached USD96bn, becoming the number one trading partner of China in 10 ASEAN countries. In the coming time, economic cooperation between China and ASEAN countries will also enter a period of rapid growth.

Japanese media reported that the textile industry is an important area in which China earns foreign currency revenue. Especially the US is the largest market for China to export textile products, occupying the leading position in the country’s textile products exports. In 2017, the turnover of Chinese textile products exported to the US reached USD45.4bn. In particular, garment exports accounted for over 70% of the total, turnover of about USD33bn while textile materials accounted for nearly 30% of the total, turnover of about USD12.4bn.

However, up to now, the USD253bn of taxes imposed by the US does not include garments, so the impact on China’s textile industry is not great.

The textile industry cooperation between China and the United States has two characteristics: Firstly, a number of US investment companies in China have shifted production facilities. Famous fashion businesses and a number of US distribution businesses have invested in China for a long time worrying that the US-China trade war will escalate, therefore they are considering the shift of investment in China to establish production facilities outside this country. Now, the US has also used garments as punishment targets and imposed an additional 25% of the tax rate, until then, the impact will be quite large. So in the future, US textile enterprises in China will accelerate the transfer of production locations to ASEAN countries and regions. Secondly, Chinese textile enterprises also speed up the establishment of factories in ASEAN countries and regions. In fact, 10 years ago Chinese companies started investing to establish factories in ASEAN countries and regions. The reason is that China’s labor costs are constantly rising.

Meanwhile, the increasing number of countries joining ASEAN or signing a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with ASEAN as well as foreign enterprises investing in the ASEAN region enjoy great preferential policies as well. promote Chinese businesses to speed up investment in Southeast Asian countries.

Japanese media quoted a Japanese business figure saying in January 2017 when the US announced its withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP) has now been renamed the Comprehensive Partnership Agreement and Trans-Pacific Progress (CPTPP), some people have said that investment in ASEAN will decline sharply, but the actual situation is quite the opposite, investment in ASEAN has increased significantly.

Although the United States intends to raise tariffs further and increase pressure on China, its businesses have shifted production facilities to Southeast Asia, so the impact that China must bear will not be too big. Moreover, it is believed that this trend of Chinese investment shift will be accelerated in the coming time.

Many foreigners injured in central Vietnam traffic mishap

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14 Singaporeans, 01 Korean and 02 Vietnamese were injured as a bus crashed into a cliff in Thua Thien-Hue Province of Vietnam on Saturday afternoon.

All of seventeen people were rushed to the Hue Central Hospital. VNExpress reports.

One of them had suffered a spinal cord injury, one had a dislocated groin, one had a broken leg and another a radius fracture. The remaining patients had flesh wounds and were undergoing CT, X-Ray and ultrasound procedures for diagnosis.

The patients are in stable condition, Pham Nhu Hiep, director of the hospital said.

According to VNExpress, the injured students were part of a group of 30 traveling in two buses to the Bach Ma National Park in the central province of Thua Thien-Hue. The two Vietnamese injured were the driver and tour guide.

15 foreign students, 2 Vietnamese injured in central Vietnam traffic mishap | @ NDO

The 24-seat bus crashed about one kilometer away from the national park’s entrance as it headed downhill, at around 3 p.m. The front portion of the bus was badly crushed.

Bach Ma is a 22,000-hectare national park,  Bach Ma is also the name given to the highest 1450m mountain in the park. Bach Ma mountain is 18 km away from the coast.

Within the park are ecotourist, forestry and science departments. There is also a community centre for the local communities who live in the park.

Buses between Hue and Da Nang stop at Cau Hai if you ask the driver top let you out (public bus from Hue is 20k). Train from Cau Hai. Private motorcycle taxi from Cau Hai to the park’s entrance. Unfortunately there are not many grab drivers around. The park entrance is off Highway 1 The entrance is 3 km from the small town of Cau Hai, 40 km south of Hue, 65 km north of Danang and 90 km south of Hoi An, where the park road meets National Route 1. Cycling and motorcycling to the summit are prohibited.

First call using 5G technology in Vietnam successfully conducted

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Telecom giant Viettel and Sweden’s Ericsson Group yesterday successfully conducted the first call using fifth generation (5G) technology in Vietnam.

The call was part of Viettel’s 5G technical testing programme to evaluate the application of the technology in Vietnam. Vietnam News reports.

At the ceremony, its network connection speed with end-use devices reached 1.5 to 1.7Gbps, surpassing the theoretical speed limit of the 4G LTE network and equal to that of commercial fiber optic cable.

This event marked Vietnam as one of the earliest countries to successfully test a 5G network, after the US, Australia, Japan and South Korea.

“We want to be at the forefront of the Fourth Industrial Revolution and develop the ICT sector, so that Vietnamese people and businesses can compete in the global economy. That’s why it is necessary to deploy 5G early,” said Minister of Information and Communications Nguyen Manh Hung.

Hùng affirmed that 5G is an opportunity for Vietnam to boost its ranking in the world.

Vietnam will bring 5G into commercial operation in 2020 and will be one of the first countries to deploy the latest network.

“One of the applications in the first phase of 5G is smart factories. Viettel and other network providers must experiment to cover 5G in all hi-tech zones, national innovation centres and smart factories by 2020,” he added.

“With the mission of pioneering a digital society in Vietnam, Viettel is confident in mastering modern technologies. In terms of transmission infrastructure, IoT technology based on 4G LTE-M and NB-IoT has been deployed by Viettel to become one of the first 50 operators in the world to deploy these technologies. Viettel is ready to apply artificial intelligence solutions to solve social problems. Viettel also builds the largest and most sophisticated network security team in Việt Nam to protect the safety of users on the internet,” said Lê Đăng Dũng, Viettel Group’s acting chairman and general director.

Ericsson has accompanied Viettel in the experimental implementation of 5G. Denis Brunetti, Head of Ericsson Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos said Viettel and Ericsson acknowledged the importance of using 5G in applying and improving the benefits of Industry 4.0.

Everyone can hop on a helicopter to see Vietnam’s famed Ha Long Bay

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Most visitors to Vietnam’s famed Ha Long Bay opt for cruise views of the UNESCO heritage site but from Friday tourists can hop on a helicopter to see the area’s famous karst rock formations from the skies.

A pair of five-seater helicopters soared up to 300 meters (1,000 feet) to offer passengers aerial views of the limestone towers, cruise ships and the odd houseboat dotting Ha Long’s green waters for the maiden flights on Friday. Agence France-Presse reports.

Helicopter manufacturer Bell said the trips, which start at $125 for 12 minutes, were aimed at tapping into a growing number of tourists to Vietnam — many from the world’s second-biggest economy.

The trips start at $125 for 12 minutes

“With the Chinese economy growing, you’re seeing more tourists come here,” said David Sale, Bell’s managing director for Asia-Pacific.

The number of visitors to Vietnam grew nearly 20 percent last year, with one-third of the total coming from its powerful communist neighbor to the north.

Domestic tourism is also booming among Vietnam’s fast-growing middle class with expanding appetites — and budgets — for travel.

Ha Long Bay is one of the country’s top draws, with as many as 500 cruise ships in the bay every day and a newly-opened airport helping to funnel visitors into the area.

But the tourist boom has also prompted environmental concerns in the once-pristine bay in Quang Ninh province, also home to home to rapid industrialization.

“We’re under pressure from the coal industry, the urbanization process, the arrival of more tourists and the population increase,” said Le Minh Tan, deputy director of Quang Ninh’s tourism department.

He added that a waste-water management system is set to be rolled out soon to deal with sewage spewed out by cruise ships daily.

“We’re launching many programs in the area to ensure the environment of Ha Long is green and clean.”

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