What’s new with Vietnam’s regulation on use of foreign currencies, which takes effect from this May ?

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The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) has issued Circular No. 03/2019/TT-NHNN on amending and supplementing a number of articles of Circular No. 32/2013/TT-NHNN guiding the implementation of regulations on restricting the use of foreign currencies in Vietnam.

Accordingly, Circular 03 supplements regulations concerning the cases in which the use of foreign currencies is allowed in the territory of Vietnam for non-residents. Foreign investors are allowed to pay deposit and provide collateral in foreign currency by transfer when they participate in auction in the specific cases, such as: (i) To purchase shares in state-owned enterprises which are entitled to equitization as approved by the Prime Minister, or (ii) to purchase the state’s shares and capital contributions in state-owned enterprises and enterprises with state capital to be divested as approved by the Prime Minister; and (iii) To purchase shares and capital contributions of state-owned enterprises invested in other enterprises which conduct the withdrawal of state capital as approved by the Prime Minister.

The Vietnam Government Portal reports, in case of winning the auction, foreign investors shall transfer investment capital in line with the provisions of law on foreign exchange management in order to make payment for the value of purchasing shares and capital contributions. In case of the unsuccessful auction, foreign investors may transfer abroad the amount of deposit and collateral in foreign currency after subtracting the related arising expenses (if any).

This Circular takes effect from May 13, 2019.

Vietnam Market Key Trends and Opportunities for Reinsurance, What it looks like in 2021?

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GlobalData’s ‘Strategic Market Intelligence: Reinsurance in Vietnam-Key Trends and Opportunities to 2021’ report provides a detailed outlook by product category for the Vietnamese reinsurance segment, and a comparison of the Vietnamese reinsurance with its regional counterparts.

It provides values for key performance indicators such as premium accepted, premium ceded, cession rates, and total investment income during the review period (2012-2016) and forecast period (2016-2021).

The report also analyzes distribution channels operating in the segment, gives a comprehensive overview of the Vietnamese economy and demographics, and provides detailed information on the competitive landscape in the country.

The report brings together GlobalData’s research, modeling and analysis expertise, giving reinsurers access to information on segment dynamics and competitive advantages, and profiles of reinsurers operating in the country. The report also includes details of insurance regulations, and recent changes in the regulatory structure.
This report provides in-depth market analysis, information and insights into the Vietnamese reinsurance segment.

Key Highlights:

  • Key insights and dynamics of the Vietnamese reinsurance industry.
  • Comparison of Vietnamese reinsurance segment with regional counterparts, along with premium accepted trends.
  • A comprehensive overview of the Vietnamese economy, government initiatives, FDI, country risk, investment opportunities and enterprise structure.
  • Vietnamese insurance regulatory framework’s evolution, key facts, taxation regime, licensing and capital requirements.
  • Vietnamese reinsurance industry’s market structure giving details of premium accepted and premium ceded along with cession rates.
  • Distribution channels deployed by the Vietnamese reinsurers.
  • Details of the competitive landscape, M&A and competitors’ profiles.

Scope:

  • This report provides a comprehensive analysis of the reinsurance segment in Vietnam.
  • It provides historical values for the Vietnamese reinsurance segment for the report’s 2012-2016 review period, and projected figures for the 2016-2021 forecast period.
  • It offers a detailed analysis of the key categories in the Vietnamese reinsurance segment, and market forecasts to 2021.
  • It provides a comparison of the Vietnamese reinsurance segment with its regional counterparts
  • It provides an overview of the various distribution channels for reinsurance products in Vietnam.
  • It profiles the top reinsurance companies in Vietnam, and outlines the key regulations affecting them.

Reasons to buy:

  • Make strategic business decisions using in-depth historic and forecast market data related to the Vietnamese reinsurance segment, and each category within it.
  • Understand the demand-side dynamics, key market trends and growth opportunities in the Vietnamese reinsurance segment.
  • Assess the competitive dynamics in the reinsurance segment.
  • Identify growth opportunities and market dynamics in key product categories.
  • Gain insights into key regulations governing the Vietnamese insurance industry, and their impact on companies and the industry’s future.

Companies Covered:

  • Vietnam National Reinsurance Corporation (Vinare)
  • PVI Reinsurance Company
  • For more information on the research report, refer to the report on Reinsurance in Vietnam

Contact Ken Research at Sales@kenresearch.com or call +91-9015378249

Saigon’s streets seriously flooded due to a heavy rain

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Saigon (Ho Chi Minh city), the largest economic hub in southern Vietnam has suffered from widespread floods as part of heavy rain in the afternoon Of May 07.

Heavy downpours that began on May 07 inundate many streets in Ho Chi Minh City @ VNExpress
Heavy rain followed by serious flooding are the norm during the rainy season in Ho Chi Minh City, which lasts from May till end of October every year | @ VNExpress
Flooding in Nguyen Huu Canh Street, Binh Thanh District @ VNExpress
The flood level was as high as one meter in low lying areas. @ VNexpress
Heavy traffic on many roads after the rain finished. @ VNExpress
For everyone, who lives in Thao Dien area, district 2 has grown accustomed to an annual invasion of the flood @VNExpress
Floodwater couldn’t stop these boys playing their game

More rivals, more pressure in delivery market

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In early February 2019, many online sellers stopped taking orders via social networks because of a goods deadlock at border gates. At the same time, the goods-carrying trucks of J&T were seen rolling on the streets in HCM City.

The deadlock at border gates occurs every year, though delivery firms in Vietnam have increased their capacity. This is attributed to the high growth of e-commerce in Vietnam.

The Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT) reported that e-commerce revenue in Vietnam in 2017 was $6.2 billion, an increase of 24 percent over 2016.

It once predicted that revenue would hit the $10 billion threshold by 2020, but just raised the forecast figure to $15 billion.

Charles Brewer, CEO of DHL e-commerce, said the revenue from the market would account for 10 percent of total value. This means that the Vietnamese e-commerce delivery market was valued at $620 million and would be $1.5 billion by 2020.

With more than 80 percent of transactions in Vietnam made in cash, the cash flow through e-commerce delivery firms in 2017 was estimated at $4 billion and will be $12 billion by 2020.

J&T, a big player from China, is looking at the Vietnamese market.

According to Scitech & Digital News, J&T has joined the Filipino market. Thailand is the only market that J&T has not set foot in. However, a representative of the group has affirmed that it will soon enter Thailand.

In Vietnam, the best known e-commerce delivery service includes Viettel, VNPT, GHN (giaohangnhanh), Giao Hang Tiet Kiem, LEL (belonging to Lazada), DHL eCommerce and Ninja Van. Of these, Viettel, VNPT, GHN and Giao Hang Tiet Kiem are leading the market.

GHN and Giao Hang Tiet Kiem are competing for the No 1 position in the market. Each of them can handle 400,000 orders a day. Giao Hang Tiet Kiem, a delivery service, is now the strategic partner of Shopee, a e-commerce platform marketplace, so the appearance of J&T is believed to have an impact on GHN.

According to Nguyen Tran Thi, CEO of GHN, the Vietnamese market is different from others. First, there are many administrative procedures to be followed when delivering goods with trucks or airplanes on long-distance routes. This takes delivery firms time to learn about the market.

Second, the competition. The owners of goods stalls have power and will choose the forwarders. As such, low prices must not be the decisive factor in the competition.

According to a report on Vietnamnet

Vietnamese airlines are preparing to launch direct flights to US as early as this year

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Vietnamese airlines are preparing to launch direct flights to the U.S., paving the way for a new era of economic ties between the Southeast Asian country and its biggest export market.

Three local airlines, including flag carrier Vietnam Airlines, are expected to start nonstop U.S.-bound flights as early as this year, which will shorten the travel time by about eight hours.

Flights now take 20.5 hours to fly from Ho Chi Minh City, the nation’s commercial center, to San Francisco via South Korea’s Incheon International Airport. Direct service to San Francisco or other major cities in West Coast areas would take only about 13 hours.

Economic ties between the two countries have been growing steadily in recent years. The U.S. is the largest market for Vietnamese-made goods and home to 2 million Vietnamese expatriates.

In February, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration announced that Vietnam complies with international safety standards, opening the door to Vietnamese airlines’ direct services to the U.S.

The FAA has granted the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam a Category 1 rating under its International Aviation Safety Assessment program, which means the authority meets standards for personnel licensing, operations and airworthiness.

For years, Vietnam’s efforts to obtain U.S. approval of direct flights were frustrated by its aviation authority’s failure to meet international standards in terms of its air traffic control and incident response capabilities. The authority’s Category 1 rating will allow Vietnamese carriers equipped to secure U.S. authorization to start flying directly to the U.S.

In February, two Vietnamese budget airlines signed $20.9 billion in deals on the sideline of the second summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Hanoi.

Vietjet Aviation agreed to buy 100 737 Max airplanes from Boeing for $12.7 billion. The deal includes 20 Max 8s and 80 of the new, larger Max 10 model. The Boeing 737 Max 8 was involved in two deadly crashes since last year, resulting in groundings of the aircraft series around the world.

The Southeast Asian country’s biggest budget carrier also struck a $5.3 billion deal with GE for aircraft engines and maintenance services. Meanwhile, Bamboo Airways, a new carrier launched in January, also signed a contract to buy Boeing 787s worth more than $2.9 billion.

Trump hailed the deals, saying: “Moving forward as partners, we will achieve great prosperity and success for the American people and for the Vietnamese people.”

Vietnam Airlines and VietJet are most likely to be the first airlines to start direct service. Some U.S. airlines will also consider taking advantage of this new business opportunity.

Vietnamese airlines will probably start with flights to San Francisco and other cities with a large Vietnamese community and then gradually expand their services to other major U.S. cities like Washington and Chicago.

Bamboo Airways also has its sights set on the U.S. CEO Trinh Van Quyet told Nikkei that there will be strong demand for direct flights to the U.S. among Vietnamese tourists and overseas Vietnamese. “We will particularly focus on expansion of services to the U.S. and Europe in the next three years,” he said.

During the Vietnam War, many wealthy Vietnamese in southern parts of the country immigrated to the U.S., mainly to the West Coast. Some Vietnamese Americans have achieved business success in the U.S., including Henry Nguyen, who is known as the man who introduced McDonald’s into Vietnam, and David Thai, who founded the Highlands chain of coffee shops.

About 690,000 people traveled from the U.S. to Vietnam in 2018, up 12% from the previous year and 60% compared with five years earlier, according to the Vietnam tourism administration. The U.S. ranked as Vietnam’s fourth-largest source of international visitors, following China, South Korea and Japan. The number of visitors from Vietnam to the U.S. topped 100,000.

But direct flights to the U.S. may not become a cash cow immediately for Vietnamese carriers.

Vietnam Airlines CEO Duong Tri Thanh has told local media that the company would lose $30 million on nonstop service to the U.S. in the first year. He also said it will take at least five years for the flights to turn profitable.

Meanwhile, the Vietnamese market for domestic flights is bound to become more competitive in coming years. In addition to Bamboo, Vietravel, a major travel agency, has filed for permission to establish an airline.

Only airlines which can beat out rivals in the domestic service market will be able to offer flights to the U.S., which will not be profitable for the time being.

“We plan to differentiate ourselves from domestic competitors by raising the quality of our services with the goal of becoming a five-star airline,” Bamboo Airways CEO Trinh Van Quyet told Nikkei. Currently, only 11 airlines in the world are awarded the five-star title rated by Skytrax, a British airline review and rating company.

According to a report on Nikkei

More and more foreign tourists heading to Vietnam

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By Don Ross

Vietnam clocked up close to 6 million visits in the first four months of the year encouraging officials to believe the country could welcome around 18 million visits by the end of 2019.

The latest statistics posted by the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism for January to April reached 5,968,880 visits, an increase of 7.6% over the same period last year.

During April alone visits reached 1,468,766 according to the provisional figures filed the Government Statistics Office representing an increase of 9.5% over the same period last year.

Scenic Seaplane Flight over Halong Bay @ Hai Au Aviation

Tourism during the four months made strong gains in Asian markets with the exception of China down 3.8%, Cambodia down 56.4% and Laos down 19.9%.

Despite the 3.8% contraction in visits from China, a trend seen across the region, China remained the top source market with 1,707,819 visits.

In the second place, Korea, with 1,445,879 visits, grew 23.7% suggesting the market could ultimately close the gap and overtake China possibly by the year-end.

There was a big gap between second-placed Korea and Japan in third place that generated 302,804 visits based on a steady 8.2% growth rate.

Taiwan in fourth place delivered 284,310 visits over the four months up 25%.

Trang An, a limestone complex in the northern province of Ninh Binh. From here, boat after boat sets out to explore a maze of 250-million-year-old limestone karst towers and waterways, which covers over 6,000 hectares (14,800 acres). According to UNESCO, the Trang An Complex displays signs of human activity from more than 30,000 years ago. @ Trang Bui

The USA, the only market outside of Asia to appear on the top five supply list, generated 280,996 visits up 6.7% while Russia previously in fifth-place generated 273,782 visits up by 4.5%

Asian markets delivered mainly robust double-digit growth rates as seen in Malaysia generating 205,463 visits up 15,7%. Thailand supplied 174,777 visits up by a massive 46%.

The two notable Asian markets Singapore and Hong Kong presented more modest growth rates of 3.1% and 6.5% on volumes of 94,501 and 19,400 respectively.

But looking at Southeast Asian markets, Indonesia deserves a mention for its 29.1% improvement that generated 36,540 visits based on better air connections and suggests there is considerable potential for Vietnam’s tourism industry to attract more visitors from Southeast Asia’s most populace nation.

Travel from the Philippines at 58,132 visits during the first four months presents an equally attractive outlook as visits surged by 24.4%.

Hanoi railway street

In general, European markets maintained positive but less impressive growth rates. The UK by far the largest market with 124,782 visits improved by just 4.5%.

Australia a strong supporter of Vietnam’s tourism in past years tallied 147,201 visits, down by a marginal 0.3% probably due to seasonal trends. During 2018, Australia delivered 386,934 visits representing an improvement of 4.5%.

Last year, Vietnam tallied 15,497,791 visits up 19.9% on the previous year.

 

This article first appeared on ttrweekly.com

Foreign airlines target Vietnam’s niche market ?

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Some airlines in Southeast Asia are looking to fly to secondary airports in Vietnam, which are considered a potential niche market in the country.

Malaysian budget carrier AirAsia has launched a few direct air routes from Thailand and Malaysia to the cities of Can Tho and Nha Trang. The Saigon Times reports.

The Can Tho-Kuala Lumpur air service was put into operation at the start of April, while two other air routes from Nha Trang and Can Tho to Bangkok, Thailand, were launched on May 1 and 2, respectively.

According to Saigon Times, the Malaysian carrier operates these air services at a frequency of three or four weekly flights. The opening of these air routes was expected as the country’s major airports, such as Hanoi-based Noi Bai International Airport and Tan Son Nhat International Airport in HCMC, are overburdened.

Meanwhile, local airports, such as Can Tho International Airport, Nha Trang-based Cam Ranh Airport, Van Don Airport in the northern province of Quang Ninh and Cat Bi International Airport in the northern port city of Haiphong, boast great potential for growth.

Of these localities, Nha Trang City is the most attractive tourist destination, with international arrivals rising consistently over the past few years.

Statistics from the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam show that Cam Ranh International Airport welcomed three million tourists in 2018.

The direct air routes from Thailand and Malaysia to Nha Trang City are aimed at helping tourists fly directly to the city instead of transiting through Hanoi City or HCMC.

Besides this, Vietnam has issued a number of price and fee reduction policies at some airports to encourage airlines to launch more direct air routes to secondary airports to ease the overload being faced by airports in Hanoi and HCMC.

Given the high potential for tourism, the authorities of Can Tho City and the Mekong Delta provinces are ramping up tourism promotion activities to develop the sector.

Apart from this, foreign direct investment (FDI) in the Mekong Delta region from airlines launching routes to Can Tho City is on the rise.

Statistics from the Can Tho branch of the Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry indicate that the FDI capital injected into the region totaled US$1.5 billion in 2018, accounting for 10.6% of the country’s total FDI capital, while the number made up 5% or 6% in previous years.

AirAsia’s decision to launch routes to Can Tho City was made following the success of routes to other secondary airports in Vietnam, including the Nha Trang and Phu Quoc airports.

In addition to AirAsia, other airlines in South Asia such as Bangkok Airways have launched direct routes to multiple secondary airports in the country.

In the wake of opening the Bangkok-Cam Ranh air route at the beginning of 2019, Bangkok Airways planned to launch more air services from Thailand to Van Don Airport in Quanh Ninh Province and Can Tho Airport.

Choosing the niche market in Vietnam is seen as a wise decision since it is less competitive but creates great opportunities for success.

 

This article first appeared on Saigontimes

Nonstop flights to US from Vietnam will be started very soon

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Vietnam to start direct flights to US as early as this year. Nonstop service to cut travel time to San Francisco by eight hours.

Vietnamese airlines are preparing to launch direct flights to the U.S., paving the way for a new era of economic ties between the Southeast Asian country and its biggest export market. The Nikkei reports.

Three local airlines, including flag carrier Vietnam Airlines, are expected to start nonstop U.S.-bound flights as early as this year, which will shorten the travel time by about eight hours.

Flights now take 20.5 hours to fly from Ho Chi Minh City, the nation’s commercial center, to San Francisco via South Korea’s Incheon International Airport. Direct service to San Francisco or other major cities in West Coast areas would take only about 13 hours.

According to Nikkei, Economic ties between the two countries have been growing steadily in recent years. The U.S. is the largest market for Vietnamese-made goods and home to 2 million Vietnamese expatriates.

In February, the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration announced that Vietnam complies with international safety standards, opening the door to Vietnamese airlines’ direct services to the U.S.

The FAA has granted the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam a Category 1 rating under its International Aviation Safety Assessment program, which means the authority meets standards for personnel licensing, operations and airworthiness.

For years, Vietnam’s efforts to obtain U.S. approval of direct flights were frustrated by its aviation authority’s failure to meet international standards in terms of its air traffic control and incident response capabilities. The authority’s Category 1 rating will allow Vietnamese carriers equipped to secure U.S. authorization to start flying directly to the U.S.

In February, two Vietnamese budget airlines signed $20.9 billion in deals on the sideline of the second summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Hanoi.

Vietjet Aviation agreed to buy 100 737 Max airplanes from Boeing for $12.7 billion. The deal includes 20 Max 8s and 80 of the new, larger Max 10 model. The Boeing 737 Max 8 was involved in two deadly crashes since last year, resulting in groundings of the aircraft series around the world.

The Southeast Asian country’s biggest budget carrier also struck a $5.3 billion deal with GE for aircraft engines and maintenance services. Meanwhile, Bamboo Airways, a new carrier launched in January, also signed a contract to buy Boeing 787s worth more than $2.9 billion.

Trump hailed the deals, saying: “Moving forward as partners, we will achieve great prosperity and success for the American people and for the Vietnamese people.”

Vietnam Airlines and VietJet are most likely to be the first airlines to start direct service. Some U.S. airlines will also consider taking advantage of this new business opportunity.

Vietnamese airlines will probably start with flights to San Francisco and other cities with a large Vietnamese community and then gradually expand their services to other major U.S. cities like Washington and Chicago.

Bamboo Airways also has its sights set on the U.S. CEO Trinh Van Quyet told Nikkei that there will be strong demand for direct flights to the U.S. among Vietnamese tourists and overseas Vietnamese. “We will particularly focus on expansion of services to the U.S. and Europe in the next three years,” he said.

During the Vietnam War, many wealthy Vietnamese in southern parts of the country immigrated to the U.S., mainly to the West Coast. Some Vietnamese Americans have achieved business success in the U.S., including Henry Nguyen, who is known as the man who introduced McDonald’s into Vietnam, and David Thai, who founded the Highlands chain of coffee shops.

About 690,000 people traveled from the U.S. to Vietnam in 2018, up 12% from the previous year and 60% compared with five years earlier, according to the Vietnam tourism administration. The U.S. ranked as Vietnam’s fourth-largest source of international visitors, following China, South Korea and Japan. The number of visitors from Vietnam to the U.S. topped 100,000.

But direct flights to the U.S. may not become a cash cow immediately for Vietnamese carriers.

Vietnam Airlines CEO Duong Tri Thanh has told local media that the company would lose $30 million on nonstop service to the U.S. in the first year. He also said it will take at least five years for the flights to turn profitable.

Meanwhile, the Vietnamese market for domestic flights is bound to become more competitive in coming years. In addition to Bamboo, Vietravel, a major travel agency, has filed for permission to establish an airline.

Only airlines which can beat out rivals in the domestic service market will be able to offer flights to the U.S., which will not be profitable for the time being.

“We plan to differentiate ourselves from domestic competitors by raising the quality of our services with the goal of becoming a five-star airline,” Bamboo Airways CEO Trinh Van Quyet told Nikkei. Currently, only 11 airlines in the world are awarded the five-star title rated by Skytrax, a British airline review and rating company.

by TOMOYA ONISHI, Nikkei staff writer

Google Assistant now available in Vietnamese

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Google on Monday announced that Google Assistant, its artificial intelligence-powered virtual assistant, is now available in Vietnamese, allowing people to interact with their Android devices using their native language.

iOS users have to wait a few days before they can experience Google Assistant in Vietnamese, Ha Lam Tu Quynh, director of communications and public relations at Google Asia Pacific, told a launch event attended by around 200 journalists and tech writers in Ho Chi Minh City.

Google Assistant is a ready-to-help personal assistant, letting users search the Internet, schedule events and alarms or do things on their devices through natural voice communication in Vietnamese.

Vietnamese users can also check the weather, ask for Google Maps directions or Google Translate translations, play songs on YouTube, and even ask Google Assistant to tell jokes, among a litany of other queries and requests.

Google Assistant’s program manager Elin Barnes said the virtual assistant’s artificial intelligence is capable of learning new things and preferences from its users, as well as understanding different accents of the Vietnamese language, over time.

As of today, Google Assistant is available in 36 languages on one billion mobile devices, Barnes said at the event.

Asked why Vietnamese, a language that is not really common in the world, was added to the list of supported languages by Google Assistant, the program manager said the question is not ‘Why?’ but ‘Why not?’

“Vietnam has a large population of young, tech-savvy users who are always willing to try the new things,” she explained.

Barnes said the Vietnamese-speaking Google Assistant is not immediately a perfect product, as it is only “one day old” in Vietnam.

“It is like a baby that will learn new things and improve over time,” she said.

“We appreciate all feedback from users to help improve the product.”

Android users in Vietnam can try the new personal assistant by upgrading their mobile devices with the latest Android version, while Google Assistant will be available for iOS users in the next few days.

Source: Tuoitrenews

Vietnam stock market plunges as 70 percent of stocks close in red

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Vietnam’s benchmark VN-Index fell 16.17 points (1.66 percent) to 958 with most stocks losing value in Monday’s afternoon session.
This is the lowest point of VN-Index since mid-February. The index represents stocks listed on the Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange (HoSE), which accounts for around 90 percent market cap of all listed stocks in Vietnam.

The VN30-Index, which represents the 30 largest cap stocks in the market, also fell hard, down 17 points (1.86 percent) to 878 points.

In Hanoi, the HXN-Index (Vietnam’s other main bourse) and UPCOM-Index (unlisted public companies trading shares) decreased by 1.36 percent and 0.88 percent respectively.

Although the VN-Index was able to recover slightly after dropping 20 points at 2 p.m., it still closed with 240 stocks down, equivalent to 70 percent of total trading stocks. In the VN30 basket in particular, there were only 2 gainers as opposed to 28 losers.

GAS shares of PetroVietnam Gas Corporation, Vietnam’s biggest listed energy firm, led the market’s downward trend, dropping 4.6 percent, followed by SAB shares of Vietnam’s biggest brewer Sabeco (down 3.2 percent), and MWG of electronics retailer giant Mobile World Group (down 2.1 percent).

Stocks in banking, energy and real estate sectors also fell, for the most part, with the exception being stocks in the textile and seafood sectors. TCM shares of textiles corporation Thanh Cong Group and ANV shares of seafood producer Navicorp rose an impressive 3 percent each.

Stock markets across Asia have not fared any better. According to Bloomberg, most of China’s stock indexes dropped sharply by more than 5 percent after Monday’s session, as did stock markets in Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore, which experienced falls of between 1-3 percent.

On Sunday evening, U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted that he would raise tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods, because talks on a US-China trade deal were moving “too slowly”.

He said tariffs of 10 percent on certain goods would rise to 25 percent Friday, and $325 billion of untaxed goods could face 25 percent duties “shortly”.

Source: Vnexpress

Danang park polluted by wastewater

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A large amount of untreated wastewater has been discharged into a park in the central city of Danang over the past 10 days with the local authorities struggling to deal with the problem.

According to some local people, the park has seen few visitors recently due to the seriously polluted lake.

“Although there has been no rain over the past 10 days, several pipes containing foul-smelling black wastewater keep discharging into the lake,” a local man said.

An environmental worker also said that dead fish has been seen on the lake.

On the morning of May 6, Danang Drainage and Wastewater Treatment Company admitted that untreated wastewater has been found flowing into a 10-hectare lake at the 29/3 Park, which had polluted the area.

Director of the company, Mai Ma, however, confirmed that the amount of wastewater discharged into the lake was just about between 200-500 cubic metres a day.

“We found two pipes that are discharging wastewater into the lake,” Ma said. “We have sent workers to check the pipes.”

The official also added that Danang is planning to build a wastewater treatment and discharge system along the coast. Once completed, all wastewater in the area will be collected to the Phu Loc Wastewater Treatment System.

Many beaches in Danang have also been polluted by wastewater from surrounding residential areas.

Source: Dtinews

Four Vietnamese women detained for illegal sex work in Malaysia

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Malaysian authorities have arrested 184 foreign women, including four Vietnamese, for allegedly working illegally and offering sexual services in Kuala Lumpur.
Last Wednesday immigration officials raided two entertainment centers on Jalan Klang Lama after receiving a tip-off from local residents that many foreigners were working there illegally, the Asia Times reported Sunday.

They found 175 Thais and five Laotians besides the four Vietnamese, all reportedly aged between 20 and 50. They were alleged to have entered the country using social visit passes and worked illegally as guest relations officers.

They earned a lot of money by offering “sexual services” to customers at the two places, the report said.

The officials also held three Bangladeshi men, who acted as managers of the two places, and three Malaysian men for interfering with the discharge of their duties.

All are being held pending further investigation.

Prostitution is restricted in Malaysia. There are no federal laws against it, but there are laws against related activities, such as soliciting or living on the earnings of a sex worker.

Southeast Asians can travel across the region without a visa, but are only allowed to stay for 30 days.

In recent years many Vietnamese have been visiting neighboring countries like Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia and staying on to work illegally.

Many have been caught and deported.

Source: Vnexpress

HCMC cracks down on drugs, following murders and grand seizures

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Ho Chi Minh City authorities are cracking down on drugs, especially methamphetamine, whose use is becoming rampant.
The police have been ordered to search for drug users and keep a close eye on bars, hostels, dance clubs, and music festivals to prevent drug use at these places. Heroin has long been the common drug in Vietnam, mostly among older men, but the use of synthetic drugs like meth is on the rise especially among a growing class of hard-partying youth.

Courts and prosecutors have been asked to throw the book at drug pushers to increase deterrence, and quickly send addicts to rehabilitation centers.

The authorities said the drug scene is becoming problematic, with the city becoming a transit point for drugs thanks to its logistics and infrastructure.

Criminals are becoming more professional in their methods and change storage and distribution locations frequently, they said.

In March the city police made three major busts, seizing almost 900 kilograms of methamphetamine and heroin.

All of them originated in the Golden Triangle, an intersection of China, Laos, Thailand, and Myanmar. In two of the cases they were on their way from HCMC to Taiwan and the Philippines.

Last month, they seized another 1.1 tons of meth and arrested two Taiwanese men for investigation.

The city has 23,000 addicts on its database, but said the actual number could be much higher. New addicts are younger and use a variety of drugs, especially meth, and their addiction is the cause of a number of recent murders and robberies, it said.

On Tuesday a 29-year-old man allegedly murdered his grandmother, mother and aunt while he was high on meth. In March a 26-year-old man used meth and killed his parents and grandmother and girlfriend’s grandmother.

Vietnam has become a key trafficking hub for narcotics around the Golden Triangle, the world’s second-largest drug producing region.

The country also has some of the world’s toughest drug laws. Those convicted of possessing or smuggling more than 600 grams of heroin or more than 2.5 kilograms of meth face death.

Source: Vnexpress

The Asia Commercial Bank to meet Basel II standards

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The Asia Commercial Bank (ACB) has become the seventh bank in Vietnam to meet Basel II standards, the second edition of the Basel Accords.

Late last week, the bank was officially given approval from the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) to apply Basel II standards, raising the number of Vietnamese banks meeting the global norms ahead of the SBV’s schedule to seven.

According to SBV, all of ACB’s activities have started to follow Circular 41/2016-TT/NNNN regulating the application of Basel II standards since this month.

Basel II is the recommendations on banking laws and regulations issued by the Basel Committee on banking supervision. Basel II comprises minimum capital requirements, supervisory review and market discipline, aims to enhance competition and transparency in the banking system and make banks more resistant to market changes.

So far, SBV has approved seven of more than 30 local banks to apply Basel II standards, which are are Vietcombank, VIB, OCB, MBBank, TPBank, VPBank and ACB. Vietnam News reported.

With the application of Basel II ahead of the SBV’s deadline, the banks will be prioritized by the SBV in getting higher credit growth limits this year. According to current regulations, the SBV sets a credit growth limit for the entire year for each bank to ensure the credit growth target of the entire banking system during the year and all local banks expect to have high credit growth limit as their income still mainly depends on lending.

Dang Khac Vy, Chairman of Vietnam International Bank (VIB) said at the 2019 annual general meeting of shareholders that, VIB expected the SBV to approve its credit growth limit proposal of 35 per cent in 2019 as it was one of the first banks to meet the central bank’s Basel II standards.

MBBank and TPBank also set high credit growth targets of 20 per cent for this year and are waiting for approval from the central bank. As for MBBank, industry insiders forecast the bank could then ask for another extension to increase its credit growth limit to 30 per cent this year.

Meanwhile, credit growth targets set at other banks, which haven’t met Basel II standards, are lower. Techcombank, for example, wants credit growth of 13 per cent while the figure for Kien Long Bank is 15 per cent.

Mekong Delta water has been polluted, turned blackish, killing fish and marine life

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Water in the Cai Lon River in Hau Giang Province, southern Vietnam, has turned blackish in recent days. Photo by VnExpress/Thuan An

Sugar factory accused of discharging untreated effluent; seafood farms on the Cai Lon River hit hard. Severe pollution in southern Vietnam has caused water in a river in the Mekong Delta to turn black, killing fish and other marine life.

Residents living near the Cai Lon River in Hau Giang Province claim that a sugar factory located by the river has been discharging untreated effluent, VNExpress reported.

Water in the river has turned black as a result and is also spreading foul smell.

Local authorities said they have taken samples of the polluted water to determine the cause and will take action accordingly.

Long My Town resident Pham Thi Thuy Linh, 35, said the water has been pitch black for 10 days and is only getting worse. Almost all of the fish, shrimp and frogs being farmed by nearby households had been killed by the polluted water, he said.

The Cai Lon River is the key source of water in Long My Town. A water treatment plant in the neighborhood uses about 4,000 cubic meters from the river to provide water for 6,000 families in the town.

However, the river has become so polluted that the plant is now extracting water from artesian basins under the ground instead.

The waters of the Mekong Delta are seriously polluted, says Vietnam’s Environmental Agency under the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment. Pangasius aquaculture is part of the problem.

According to a report on VietNamBridge, the content of E. coli bacteria in the delta’s rivers and canals is two to five times the level permitted. The pollution is due in part to the expansion of rice fields from 3.2 million hectares in 1995 to 3.9 million hectares this year and the increased use of fertilizers and pesticides.

Another reason is pond expansion to grow pangasius (basa and tra). According to the news report, water surface area used to raise the fish has expanded from 200,000 hectares in 1995 to more than 700,000 hectares today.

Citing the Institute for Aquatic Economics and Planning, the report says aquaculture in the Mekong Delta results in nearly 500 million cubic meters of mud and waste annually, including more than 2 million metric tons from tra and basa farming.

 

Asia Time/ VNExpress/ Vietnamnet, inputed by Vietnam Insider
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