FPT appoints new CEO

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Deputy CEO of Vietnam tech giant FPT Nguyen Van Khoa will replace his boss as the CEO of the corporation this month.
Khoa, born 1977, is among the leaders of the younger generation of FPT. He joined FPT in 1997 as a tech support staff.

In 2012, Khoa was appointed the CEO of FPT Telecom, an internet provider, leading a staff of 14,000 at the age of 35.

During his time, FPT Telecom, a subsidiary of FPT Corporation, successfully installed the 1,800-kilometer North-South optical fiber route to replace the previous copper cable in only one year.

This infrastructure allows FPT to launch its Internet Protocol Television business instead of traditional cable TV.

Under Khoa’s management, from 2012 to 2017, FPT Telecom’s revenue surged by 2.6 times and its profit 1.6 times.

The company’s staff doubled and has the highest contribution ratio in FPT Corporation’s profit between 2012 and 2016.

Khoa became the deputy CEO of FPT in March 2018.

Bui Quang Ngoc, the current CEO, will leave his chair on March 29 but will still remain the deputy board chairman of FPT.

FPT Corporation’s before tax profit soared 30 percent from 2017 to VND3.85 trillion ($165.95 million) last year.

FPT last year announced the acquisition of 90 percent stake in U.S. company Intellinet Consulting, paving the way for the Vietnamese tech giant to become a global provider of digital transformation services.

According to a report on VnExpress

Vietnam outlines possible scenarios for digital development

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The scenarios for digital economy development are expected to help the government recognize risks and opportunities for better policy-making methods for the future.

The strategies leading to the achievements Vietnam has gained so far may not bring similar effects in the future because of changes in international integration and technology development.

Vietnam has decided to shift its direction to developing a digital economy, in the context of the fourth industrial revolution.

As of mid-2018, Vietnam had 30,000 businesses operating in the fields of software, hardware and digital content. Specialized training centers and hi-tech parks for software developers and engineers have been established in Hanoi, HCMC and Da Nang. With the startup movement, a lot of apps and platforms have been created.

Because of the high level of internet and smartphone connectivity, Vietnamese have strong demand for digital technology products.

A survey by AlphaBeta in 2017 found that Vietnam was leading in Asia Pacific in the domestic demand for digital technology products. Currently, e-commerce (Tiki, Sendo, Lazada), sharing economy (Grab, Go Viet), fintech and social networks (Facebook, Zalo) are the fastest growing sectors in the digital economy.

The Ministry of Information and Communication (MIC) predicted that IT alone would make up 8-10 percent of Vietnam’s GDP by 2020.

Four scenarios

Experts warned that digital technologies associated with the fourth industry revolution, including AI, robotics, automation, drone technology and big data analysis, may damage the market and job structure, causing high risks to the economy and society.

“The future of Vietnam’s Digital Economy”, implemented by Data 61 research team under CSIRO (Australia) and SATI under the Ministry of Science & Technology with Foresight method, is one of a few in-depth studies on the issue.

The study has built up a series of scenarios possibly to happen in the future in Vietnam: Scenario 1 -Traditional heritage; Scenario 2 – Digital Transformation, Scenario 3 – Digital Export and Scenario 4 – Digital consumption.

Scenario 2 is believed to have the biggest impact on Vietnam in the upcoming 20 years. The digital economy could generate VND3,751 trillion more for Vietnam’s GDP in the next 20 years, or $162 billion, or 2/3 of GDP in Vietnam.

This means that $8.1 billion more could be created each year thanks to digital transformation. However, researchers predicted that 38 percent of jobs may be replaced.

According to Vo Tri Thanh from the Central Institute of Economic Management (CIEM), Vietnamese want Scenario 2 the most because it is the best. However, the best scenario may not be the most practical.

According to a report on Vietnamnet

Tourists run for life as restaurant in downtown Ho Chi Minh City catches fire

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Foreign tourists and attendants ran out in panic as a restaurant in District 1, the central business district of Ho Chi Minh City, caught fire on Saturday morning.

Flames were first seen off the Hang Duong Restaurant, a multi-story building on Ngo Duc Ke Street, near the city’s Nguyen Hue Walking Street, at around 10:30 am, according to people living in the area.

The fire began to grow rapidly, with flames soon licking the top of the building. By 11:15 am, dense black smoke from the fire could be seen engulfing nearby houses and buildings.

The whole Ngo Duc Ke Street was blocked as firefighters worked to contain the blaze.

The fire was put out just before noon, with local authorities confirming that the restaurant was not crowded at the time of the incident, so there were no casualties.

An investigation is underway to identify the cause of the fire, as well as to calculate the damage.

Source: Tuoitrenews

HCM City pilots cashless bus fare payment system

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Ho Chi Minh City started piloting cashless payment system on public buses on March 8.

Public Transport Management and Operation Centre under the city Department of Transport has officially launched the system with the Zion Company and Vietnam Thuong Tin Commercial Bank (Vietbank) as project partners.

Passengers can buy Unipass card or install ZaloPay on their mobile phones to use the QR code to buy bus tickets. A passenger can only use the card to pay once for each bus. Passengers will have to go to transaction points to buy the UniPass.

Students account for 50% of the total bus passengers and must also go to transaction points to have discount cards made. When getting on the bus, they will not have to show their student cards since the information about their schools or universities will be added to the system when the cards are made.

Tran Chi Trung, head of Public Transport Management and Operation Centre, said they would pilot the system in one year and in two phases. The first phase will be operated by Zion Company on nine routes and 141 buses. The second phase will start in July by Vietbank with seven routes and 139 buses.

After that, they will expand the project to other buses, the waterway buses, the metro line and other means of public transports in the future.

“One of the most important factors is to be able to build and apply this technology to the public transport system,” Trung said.

Tran Quang Lam, deputy director of the Department of Transport, said they would hold a quarterly review meeting to address any issues.

Source: Dtinews

HCM City seeks state funds for metro

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The chairman of HCM City People’s Committee Nguyễn Thành Phong has asked the Prime Minister for permission to borrow VNĐ2.15 trillion (US$93.5 million) from the central government to pay contractors who are building Metro Line No 1.

The Metro Line 1 extends from Bến Thành Market in District 1 to Suối Tiên Tourist Park in District 9.

“The payment will help the project run in line with the plan, and it would help to avoid complaints and lawsuits about debts,” Phong wrote in his letter.

He said the city would repay the money to the central government after the Ministry of Planning and Investment provides fund for the project.

Phong also suggested that if the Government cannot provide the city with the money from the central budget the Prime Minister should allow the city to use the funds from the city’s budget instead for the metro.

According to current regulations on advance payments for investment projects, the Metro Line Number 1 project does not meet requirements to get money in advance from the city’s budget, and can only receive funds from the central government’s budget.

Due to the urgency of the project, the city said it hoped to receive approval from the Prime Minister.

The Metro Line Number 1 project uses funding from ODA and funds arranged by the central government, while corresponding capital has come from the city’s budget.

According to the capital plan for 2016 -2020, the project was slated to receive VNĐ7.5 trillion ($326 million) of its total investment capital of VNĐ20.5 trillion ($891 million).

The city received VNĐ2.7 trillion ($117.5 million) in 2016 and 2017.

In 2018, total investment was expected to increase, but funds could not be provided until the additional investment was approved.

Source: VNS

Sellout say some, but pungent, strong-smelling pizza sells out

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A pizza incorporating a Vietnamese dish with strong smelling fermented shrimp sauce sells out despite naysayers.
The bun dau mam tom, steamed rice vermicelli with deep-fried tofu and fermented shrimp paste, is a popular Vietnamese street food, but a Saigon pizzeria has decided it belongs on a pizza, too.

The bun dau mam tom pizza, as one can imagine, has the normal crust with a thin layer of cheese on top, with the unusual topping of pork, fried tofu, fried fish cake and a variety of herbs like cilantro and perilla, and to top it all, it uses the fermented shrimp paste used in bun dau mam tom.

The dish, only available in HCMC for a limited time, was priced VND140,000 ($6) and was served in just one size.

“I was so curious so I had to come here and try this. Not too bad,” said Huy Hoang from Ho Chi Minh City.

The pizza got a thumbs down from several people.

“They weren’t meant for each other. The shrimp paste is just too salty for me and you can’t even adjust it” said Vinh, a customer.

Many foreigners who tried the new pizza liked it, restaurant staff said, adding that they were no longer serving it since they have run out of stock.

The “bun dau mam tom” pizza with fermented shrimp sauce. Photo courtesy of 4P.

Another twist

Previously, the restaurant’s Hanoi branches had released another combination of pizza and Vietnamese food, the cha ca pizza with fried fish, shrimp paste, fish sauce, peanut and dill. The dish, priced the same price as the bun dau mam tom pizza, and is only available in Hanoi.

The “cha ca” pizza is only available in Hanoi. Photo courtesy of 4P

Source: Vnexpress

Vietnam dance team wins plaudits at Asia’s Got Talent 2019

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The Hanoi X-Girls progressed to the next stage Thursday after a striking performance at Asia’s Got Talent 2019.
The group’s hyper-showy dance moves and earned praise from the celebrity judges to go on to the deliberation round.

Music producer David Foster said: “For me, in general, I thought the choreography was really unique and it told a story. And it’s doesn’t always happen on this stage. So good going!”

“It was definitely a solid performance. I mean, there were a few minor slip-ups but I don’t think it hindered your overall performance. You guys all had very charismatic expressions and were all very fierce. I liked it,” said Korean superstar Jay Park, who joined the troupe for a few minutes on stage and showed off a few moves himself.

Anggun, an Indonesian music icon also said she was entertained and liked it. So the Hanoi X-Girls got three yesses from the judges to enter the next round.

Hanoi X-Girls was formed in 2016, specializing in Poly Swag Hip Hop and Waacking. Having performed in several dance competitions, they were crowned the champions of 2018 Hot Steps Dance Competition and 2018 LG Twinwash Dance Challenge in Vietnam.

Other Vietnamese representatives like LifeDance team and junior dance duet Gia Nhu and Anh Duc also secured a place to the deliberation round at Asia’s Got Talent 2019.

Source: Vnexpress

YouTube to cut ties with Vietnamese firm behind many of its top channels

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Video-sharing site YouTube will terminate its partnership with Yeah1 Group, a Vietnamese media corporation that owns shares in various multi-channel networks (MCNs) that control some of the platform’s most popular channels, claiming the group has violated several of its policies, Yeah1 announced in a recent statement.

MCNs are third-party service providers that affiliate with multiple YouTube channels to offer services that may include audience development, content programming, creator collaborations, digital rights management, monetization, and sales, according to YouTube.

Yeah1 Group owns Yeah1 Network Pte Ltd, which claims on its website to be the seventh-largest MCN in the world in terms of total views.

The Vietnamese corporation also indirectly owns a 16.93 stake in Thailand-based network SPRINGme Pte Ltd and 100 percent of U.S.-based ScaleLab LLC.

Yeah1 acquired the U.S. MCN in January for US$20 million.

In a statement, Yeah1 said YouTube will terminate its content hosting services agreement with Yeah1 Group and its affiliates after March 31 due to violations of channel management policies by SPRINGme.

YouTube claims SPRINGme has abused its privileges as an MCN by providing illegal services to third-party channels.

Newly-created YouTube channels are found to have paid SPRINGme to be admitted into the network, which makes enabling monetization on the channels easier thanks to the MCN’s credentials.

Normally, an independent channel needs at least 1,000 subscribers, 4,000 hours of accumulated video view time and appropriate content in order to enable monetization, which allows the channel to make money from ad placement, a YouTube content creator told Vietnamese news site Zing.

These requirements are not needed when a channel is under the affiliation of an MCN, which YouTube entrusts with filtering out unqualified content creators.

After monetization has been successfully enabled, SPRINGme terminates partnership with such channels to rid itself of any responsibility for their content.

The practice was recently discovered by YouTube, which launched a massive campaign to close thousands of channels found to have enabled monetization using this method.

In a statement, Yeah1 Group pledged to fulfill its responsibilities with partnered channels before and after the March 31 deadline, even in the “worst case scenario” that its partnership with YouTube is terminated, which will affect all MCNs under its ownership.

Yeah1 says it is still working with YouTube on the issue with a goal to reach a deal to limit the punishment to channels managed by SPRINGme only, and will announce the final outcome by March 11.

In 2018, YouTube earnings contributed around $1 million, or around 13 percent, in after-tax profits to Yeah1.

Yeah1 Network Pte Ltd alone claims to own more than 1,500 YouTube channels.

Source: Tuoitrenews

Hanoi, Vietnam Attractions: Hoa Lo Prison Museum

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These pilots include Pete Peterson (the first US ambassador to a unified Vietnam in 1995) and Senator John McCain (the Republican nominee for the US presidency in 2008). McCain’s flight suit is displayed, along with a photograph of Hanoi locals rescuing him from Truc Bach Lake after being shot down in 1967.

The vast prison complex was built by the French in 1896. Originally intended to house around 450 inmates, records indicate that by the 1930s there were close to 2000 prisoners. Hoa Lo was never a very successful prison, and hundreds escaped its walls over the years – many squeezing out through sewer grates.

Polyglots might notice that the French signs are watered down compared with the English equivalents.

 

By lonelyplanet.com

 

Women in business: Vietnam ranks 2nd in Asia, holding 36 percent of senior management

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Women are currently holding 36 percent of senior management positions in Vietnamese businesses, posting the second highest ratio in Asia after the Philippines with nearly 37.5 percent, the latest report by international consulting firm Grant Thornton has revealed.

Some 29 percent of senior management roles globally are now held by women, compared with 28 percent in Southeast Asia, local online newspaper VnExpress cited Grant Thornton’s “Women in Business 2019” report as reporting on Friday.

In Vietnam, the top positions usually occupied by women include financial director, executive director, human resources director and marketing director, according to the report.

Vietnam is among the top 25 countries in the world closing the gender gap in the labor force, said the World Economic Forum.

There are around 145,000 small-and-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) currently run by women in the country, accounting for a quarter of all SMEs nationwide, Vietnam News Agency reported on Friday.

Vietnam is targeting to have 1 million enterprises by 2020, of which more than a third will be owned by women, according to the country’s development plan

- Xinhua

First VinFast car has just rolled off the factory lines, Billionaire Pham Nhat Vuong immediately gained $348 million

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First Made-in-Vietnam VinFast car – Lux SA2.0 off the production line, marking the success of the “Made-in Vietnam” commercial automobile test production cycle. Billionaire Pham Nhat Vuong immediately gained $348 million from the upsurge of VIC shares today.

Yesterday, in Haiphong, the first VinFast Lux SA2.0 was assembled. This event proves that the VinFast factory is ready for operation, only 18 months after announcing its automotive plans. Vietnam Investment Review reports.

The car is equipped with a DOHC 2.0L engine with a maximum of 228 horsepower, 350Nm torque, an 8-speed automatic gearbox, as well as numerous outstanding safety functions.

According to Le Thi Thu Thuy, vice chairwoman of Vingroup cum chairwoman of VinFast, the company confirmed that all segments of the manufacturing line are operational, ready for trial manufacturing before replication.

“We are consistently striving to create premium products, enabling the Vietnamese spirit and brands to reach the international level, as well as contributing to the development of the industry and automobile manufacturing in the country,” said Thuy.

This was the first unit completely produced at VinFast’s Haiphong factory

With this success, VinFast is going to be the first automobile manufacturer in Vietnam having a closed, synchronous, and complete production cycle. Thereby, VinFast not only maintains its initiative, but also significantly increases localization rate, contributing to the development of supporting industries.

Additionally, the Haiphong facility’s painting workshop, stamping workshop, and welding workshop are also very modern and automated to guarantee absolute accuracy and international standards.

The first cars during the trial period will be delivered to numerous countries like Austria, Australia, South Korea, and others to verify their quality against the high standards of Europe.

VinFast’s Fadil and Lux are expected to be handed over to customers from the second and third quarter of this year.

Chairman Pham Nhat Vuong also took the new car for a ride and swore to use the SUV in the future instead of his Lexus 570.

The first VinFast car during the test drive

After the launching of the first VinFast car in Haiphong, all shares associated with Vingroup have increased sharply this morning. Specifically, in addition to slight increases in VRE, VJC, VNM, and VHM rose by VND2,200 and VIC increased by VND4,300 to VND122,000 ($5.3).

At this price, VIC has climbed to a new peak and raised the value of Vingroup’s chairman Pham Nhat Vuong’s assets by $348.7 million in a single day to $9.9 billion.

According to the financial statement of Vingroup, as of the end of 2018, the total assets of the group increased by 35 per cent over the previous year to $12.57 billion, with equity rising 88 per cent to $4.3 billion.

Vingroup’s net revenue hit $5.33 billion last year, increasing by 37 per cent and exceeding the plan by gaining $600 million in pre-tax profit (up 52 per cent) and $263.5 million in after-tax profit (up 7 per cent).

 

– VIR

The Power of Women in boosting Vietnam’s economy

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As far as Vietnam’s economy is concerned, sisters really are doing it for themselves.

More and more women are running businesses across the country.

There are around 145,000 small-and-medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) currently run by women in Vietnam.

Such SMEs businesses play a crucial role for growth, contributing 30 per cent of GDP and more than half of job creation.

And a quarter of all SMEs nationally are run by women.

But it’s not just at the top where women are making a difference.

The World Economic Forum says Vietnam is among the top 25 countries in the world closing the gender gap in the labour force.

Of all woman, 73 per cent are in gainful employment, just 10 per cent lower than their male counterparts.

By 2020, Vietnam wants one million enterprises and of them they are targeting more than a third owned by women.

That means in the next two years, the amount of companies with a woman at the helm will have to increase threefold.

And that’s a challenge.

Last year was a big success for Vietnam’s economy with GDP growth surpassing 7 per cent, but for the first time the number of enterprises going under topped 100,000.

Lack of capital

“My biggest obstacle is the lack of capital. I need cash to purchase merchandise and prevent risks,” Hồ Thị Hải Ngân, an owner of an electronics shop in Đồng Nai Province said.

The 34-year-old businesswoman took time to find her feet.

Her first two commercial ventures failed but it was a case of third time lucky for Ngân in 2016 when she and her husband opened the store.

She borrowed US$25,000 from VPBank with receivables pledged as security helping her explore new corporate clients.

The need for capital is common among SME owners, especially women, who sometimes face roadblocks related to the lack of collateral and have to face conscious and unconscious biases.

Men often have broader vision and better planning skills while women are risk-averse which, in many cases, make them see an opportunity slip away, Ngân said.

“Women cannot go out and drink a lot with clients like men, and in Vietnam, it’s difficult to get clients without drinking,” she said.

“Asian women need time to get used to their role shifting from a housewife to a business owner.”

A market study by the International Finance Corporation (IFC) showed that 70 per cent of Women operated enterprises (WOEs) in developing countries are unserved or underserved by financial institutions. The financing gap is estimated at $1.19 billion for WOEs throughout Vietnam.

“To continue its rapid growth, Vietnam needs to support this sector to access credit and markets. Much more can be done to connect women SMEs to local and global value chains,” said Amy Luinstra, IFC Programme Manager and Gender Advisor, East Asia Pacific.

In the knowledge based economy, female entrepreneurs must also work harder to get capital, Luinstra said, noting that only 7 per cent of private equity and venture capital is invested in women-led companies in emerging markets.

“Women-owned enterprises are an important customer segment of VPBank,” a representative of VPBank said.

“From an entrepreneur perspective, Vietnamese women are active, creative and enthusiastic. They participate in economic activities and are not inferior to men,” he said, citing examples that women are more willing to be housewives in the South Asia, Middle East and Africa.

VPBank in 2018 launched a loan package specifically designed for women-owned businesses and has disbursed 12,000 loans to WOEs so far. Besides, the bank has also built free access to non-financial services for women-led SMEs, enabling them to share experiences with each other and find new networking opportunities for their business.

More than 50 per cent of the bank’s women customers operate in distribution and service industries. “And we find that women are more sensitive than men in terms of service quality and when being satisfied, they are very attached,” the bank’s representative said.

Need government support

Doing business in the time of integration and technological revolution is difficult and this is amplified by the inconsistent and changing legal framework, creating a big obstacle for businesses, according to Hà Thị Thu Thanh, vice president of the Hà Nội Association for Women Entrepreneurs.

In addition, the new era also requires women entrepreneurs to constantly make efforts, be proactive and creative and have strong mind to cope with challenges, Thanh said and added that they needed more support from the Government.

From a businesswomen perspective, Ngân hopes the Government and State agencies support women in explaining and clarifying policies and legal regulations related to their businesses, as well as enable them to participate more in the trade and investment promotion activities organized by the State agencies.

Her successful electronics business told her that, besides funding, the investment in business relationships and exchanges ideas will pave a way for success.

In the meeting with women entrepreneurs early this month ahead of the International Women Day (March 8), Prime Minister Nguyễn Xuân Phúc reiterated the Government’s support for women-led businesses. He also suggested female entrepreneurs continue learning and enhancing skills, contributing better to the country’s economic development.

– VNS

Return to Vietnam: Inside the Hanoi Hilton

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Fifty-two local veterans have reached their final destination on their two-week return to Vietnam. Their Old Glory Honor Flight flew them from Hue to the capital city of Hanoi.

Some prisoners at Hoa Lo in Hanoi, Vietnam, slept shackled on elevated concrete beds (WBAY photo)

As Jeff Alexander reports in our Return to Vietnam coverage, the vets toured the prison where hundreds of American prisoners of war were held for years.

For the first and only time during their return to Vietnam, the veterans visited a city none of them has ever been to before.

And that’s a good thing — because if they had been in Hanoi during the war, there’s a good chance they would’ve ended up here, the Hoa Lo prison.

“It was obviously a very brutal prison for a lot of people,” A.J. McCaskey from Wautoma remarked.

During the Vietnam War, more than 500 American POWs were held captive for years inside the Hoa Lo prison– better known in America as the “Hanoi Hilton.”

“The home to a lot of American pilots that were prisoners of war,” said McCaskey.

The most famous pilot — the late Senator John McCain — was a POW for five-and-a-half years.

“They really tortured that guy, making him shackled and laying like that, downhill and everything, I don’t know how people could endure that,” Burt Parkman of Green Bay said.

For some of the Navy veterans on this Honor Flight, their mission during the war was to find downed pilots before the North Vietnamese.

Gary Jonet of New Franken recalled his time board a destroyer, “I was on the William B. Pratt, a DLG13. We would launch a helicopter to pick up any downed pilot, whether it was aircraft or helicopter. We rescued seven pilots. Two could not be rescued because they were already dead and the pilots had to leave them because of heavy fire.”

Seeing the evidence of war and imagining the horrors the POWs went through made for a somber visit to the prison.

“Pretty bad stuff as far as how they were treated, and the propaganda in there is definitely more for the Communists,” Jonet said.

In the heart of what was once enemy territory, the vets think back to the war but they say ending up a prisoner here was not their top concern.

“The fear of capture probably was not there as much as just a fear of being maimed, killed or overrun by the enemy,” McCaskey told us.

Tomorrow the veterans will spend their final day in Vietnam before packing their bags and embarking on their long journey home.

This article was first post on WBAY

US-China Trade Talks and Brexit: Extension!

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Both major economic and political events, including US-China trade negotiations and Brexit agreements, are being considered for extension. This seems to have a positive impact on the financial market around the world, especially in China, as well as on the movement of the British pound. The final results of both events will likely to be at the end of May 2019

Specifically, the US president, Donald Trump, recently expressed optimism about the process of trade negotiations with China around key issues and has delayed raising tarrifs on US$200 bn of Chinese goods. The tax increase period is initially scheduled for March 1, 2019 and may be extended for another 60 days. The movement shows the White House’s commitment to achieving a “fair” trade agreement instead of falling deep into the trade war. However, it is clear that the time for negotiation between the two parties is quite short in order to reach a comprehensive agreement. Therefore, we suppose that a high chance of a soft agreement through the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with a focus on trade, requesting China to stop intervene its currency, improving intellectual property protection, and opening the market to foreign investors.

Meanwhile, the government of the British Prime Minister, Theresa May, and the National Assembly seem to have not found an agreement in the negotiation process with the EU. Currently, observers mention many different scenarios in which the worst scenario is associated with the case of Britain leaving the EU without any agreement. However, we think a high chance that the UK will activate Article 50 to delay Brexit for another two months. The deadline will be May 23, 2019. The British pound has rebounded strongly in recent sessions because the concerns about a no-deal Brexit softened. Currently, the British pound and Euro are the main currencies to keep the USD around 96 points.

In our opinion, the negative news related to the Brexit and the European economy has been reflected and pushed the Euro to near the historical bottom. Therefore, positive news will boost EURUSD and GBPUSD exchange rates, meaning that the US Dollar will decrease in the foreign exchange market. For emerging and developing countries (EMDEs) trading and borrowing US Dollar, exchange rate pressure will ease.

Vietnam placed among the most optimistic countries globally

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Vietnam slides to fourth among the most optimistic countries globally in the final quarter of 2018 from the second ranking in the previous three months, in terms of positive consumer index.

According to the latest The Conference Board Global Consumer Confidence Survey in collaboration with Nielsen, a global measurement company, the country’s Consumer Confidence Index (CCI) score decreased seven points from the third quarter to 122 percentage points (ppts) after India, the Philippines and Indonesia, whose score was 133, 131 and 127, respectively, the survey showed.

A report by Minh An on HanoiTimes mentioned, Vietnam’s decrease in consumer confidence in the quarter was highly predictable, according to Nguyen Huong Quynh, managing director of Nielsen Vietnam. “With 2019 just around the corner, Vietnamese people are understandably anxious about their year-end bonuses and Tet holidays spending which is impacted by not really positive previous Tet experience,” Quynh explained.

However, with steady uptrend CCI score throughout the year, Vietnam’s overall confidence level in 2018 was still high above the global (107 ppts) and the region’s average (117 ppts).

Globally and regionally, many countries (39/64 worldwide and 7/14 in Asia Pacific) also experienced similar CCI downtrend due to uncertainties caused by rising costs and political challenges, said the survey.

Saving is top priority

Vietnam continued to place first in Asia Pacific in Q4 2018 for having the region’s most avid savers (78%, up six ppts vs Q3 2018, the highest figure since Q3 2016), followed by Hong Kong (71%), India (68%) and Thailand (67%).

Noticeably, even with this considerable increased intention for saving, Vietnamese’s willingness to spend on big-ticket items such as new clothes, holidays or out-of-home entertainment remained the same or even increased slightly. In compensation, they were less likely to spend on new tech products (43%), home improvements or decorations (39%) and medical insurance premiums (36%).

“Vietnamese’s culture is saving. Coupled with the above-mentioned worries for the upcoming year, it is no surprise that they want to save even more as the year ended. However, we should not jump into the conclusion that the observed reduced spending intentions on some items are permanent. Historical data showed that Vietnamese’s willingness to spend on technology or health-related products is on the rise. Therefore, enterprises should monitor the trend closely to not miss out on opportunities,” Quynh noted.

Job security and health remain Vietnamese’s top concerns

In Q4 2018, Vietnamese consumers continued to rank job security (43%, up three ppts against Q3 2018) and health (43%, up three ppts versus Q3 2018) as their top two key concerns while 27% pointed to work-life-balance (27%) as the third largest concern.

This quarter, the nation’s economy moved down one spot on the key concern list with only 20% of respondents indicating it’s their worry (compared to 27% respondents in Q3 2018), thanks to an improved sentiment about Vietnam’s economic status. Only 36% believed the country is in recession compared to 41% in Q3 2018. That being said, Vietnamese are less positive about their job prospects and personal finances.

Around three-quarters of people surveyed believed they would have good or excellent job prospects (75%, down five ppts vs Q3 2018) or would be in good or excellent financial states in the next 12 months (76%, down six ppts vs Q3 2018).

Other key areas of attention of Vietnamese consumers were their family members, including parents’ welfare and happiness (19%) and children education and/or welfare (8%).

“With inflation well-managed through-out the year (3.4% in Q4 2018) that led to more stable and predictable living costs, we can see that food prices or utilities bills are no longer consumers’ worrisome points in this quarter. With this extra piece of mind, they can now divert their care to more important matters such as their children’s education and future,” said Quynh.

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