Domestic violence is widespread in Vietnam

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In Vietnam, domestic violence spans across every walk of life. but the victims, usually women, conceal it fearing shame and stigma.

An ongoing exhibition at Hanoi’s Vietnamese Women’s Museum, showcases heart-wrenching stories of female victims of domestic violence. Ngoc Dinh reports on VNExpress.

While the Law on Domestic Violence Prevention and Control came into force 10 years ago, domestic violence remains rife among all social classes.

Behind closed doors

“Behind closed doors” is the name of the exhibition, which will stay open until the end of the month, exhibiting victims’ stories, installations and housing models to support domestic violence victims.

Most of the stories were shared from unnamed women.

One of them is a 38-year-old university lecturer in Nam Dinh Province, three hours south of Hanoi. She married a man whose excellent academic achievements she admired.

In the seemingly ideal family, however, she suffers physical violence frequently at the hands of her husband.

“My husband locks the door when he hits me,” she said.

“My husband never accepts that I can do something he does not like, even the smallest thing. If he asks me to buy lemons but I buy kumquats instead, he would think I disrespect him and curse and hit me immediately.”

A 37-year-old bank employee in Vinh Phuc Province, one hour northwest of Hanoi, also endures brutal beatings from her husband.

“He often locks me inside the house to beat me,” she said.

When they have an argument, her husband uses anything within his reach to attack her. “If he can reach a knife, he uses a knife. Without it, he would throttle my neck, leaving marks.”

She showed two scars on her neck as the legacy of an attack when he throttled her neck so tightly she bled.

“I was too weak to resist the violence; he is a strong man. Once he used a chopping knife to slit my throat, I was so scared I called the police.”

She said that once her husband attacked her with a knife but she lied to her colleagues about the injury, saying she was robbed on the street.

“I don’t want my colleagues or my husband’s colleagues know I’m beaten by him, because it will affect his job and my children.”

These tragic stories are repeated by woman after woman across the country. In fact, 58 percent of women who have ever been married experienced at least one of physical, mental or sexual violence at the hands of their husbands, reported the National study on Domestic Violence Against Women by the Vietnamese government and the United Nations.

The Nam Dinh university lecturer, only identified by her initials P.T.T., said: “I asked him we are both intellectuals, so how could he hit me like that. I am a lecturer, yet I am insulted by my husband.”

She has also experienced sexual abuse by her husband.

“My husband has high sexual demands, and I always have to satisfy him or else he will get suspicious.”

Sometimes when she stayed with her children to avoid him, he would grab her, spit in her face and curse.

“I always feel so ashamed and painful like I was raped.”

P.K.H., another teacher in Nam Dinh, started suffering physical abuse in 2012 when she found out about her husband’s affair.

“One time he came home late from work and knocked on the door, but I did not hear it as I was on the phone. When I opened the door he punched me right on my face, causing my eyes to swell.”

M.T.H., 50, a freelancer in Dong Anh District in suburban Hanoi, said, “My children often witnessed their father’s sexual violence against me.

“Sometimes when he would demand sex and I would refuse he would strip off his clothes and turn on the light even in front of our children.”

Her youngest son is now struggling with depression because of such experiences. When her oldest son protested, her husband said, “She is my wife, I can sleep with her.”

Ten percent of women who had ever married have experienced domestic sexual violence, according to the national study on Domestic Violence Against Women. The report also points out that sexual violence does not differ among different age groups or academic levels.

Besides physical and sexual abuse, the report found that women also experience mental abuse and financial abuse from their spouses.

The truth untold

Despite serious threats within their family, many women have never voiced about their abuse for fear of social prejudice.

S.N.B, 42, a freelancer in Lang Son, four hours north of Hanoi, said she endured torture that almost killed her.

“I once lost consciousness on the street, my neighbors had to take me to the hospital.” B said. “Two weeks ago, he used a knife to slit my head, leaving an open wound. I had to receive over ten stitches.”

The husband was arrested by the local police and the knife was confiscated, but S. eventually asked for his release.

“I was afraid people would say it is me who throw my husband into jail. I’m afraid my children would grow up thinking that way, so I withdrew my lawsuit.”

N.T.O., a shopkeeper in Hai Duong Province, more than an hour east of Hanoi, who endured her spouse’s verbal attacks throughout decades, said that she thought confessing would embarrass her and getting divorce was considered a disgrace.

“If I get divorced, people will laugh at us,” O said. “My daughter’s parents in law will not understand, it will put a bad reputation on my daughter.”

Statistics in the National Study show nearly half of the respondents say they have never told anyone about their husbands’ violent behavior; 87.1 percent of the women suffering spousal abuse never sought help from any government body or organization.

In Vietnam, there were one million divorce cases involving domestic violence nationwide between 2008 and 2018, according to the justice department.

Around 97 percent of the nation’s victims are women, according to the National Study on Domestic Violence Against Women, co-conducted by the government and the United Nations.

According to a 2013 report by World Health Organization, Southeast Asia ranked highest after Africa, at 40.2 percent, for lifetime prevalence of intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence, or both, among all women of 15 years or older.

Banks generated income and revenue from services

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In the first nine months of the year, the Vietcombank’s pre-tax profit exceeded the full-year 2017 figure and closed in on the year’s target.

Thanks to a decline in provisioning for risky loans from 36.2 per cent to 29.9 per cent, the profit surged by 47 per cent year-on-year to US$516 million. Thien Ly reports on VNS.

Notably, its net profit from services was up 34 per cent. The bank executive said profits from non-credit activities increased sharply and contributed 30 per cent of the profits.

In addition, the lender’s investments became more selective, focusing on effective products, the executive said.

Military Bank had also reported a very impressive performance in the first three quarters with pre-tax profits doubling year-on-year to VND6 trillion. Services accounted for VND1.69 trillion, half of which came from bancassurance, which rose by 3.2 times.

In recent years, Techcombank has also pursued a policy of diversifying its income sources to reduce reliance on income from credit activities and fee collection while also reducing risks at the same time.

As a result, the profits the bank earned from insurance services accounted for 26 per cent of its total profits from non-credit activities.

Not only big banks but also many small banks have managed to increase the share of their profits from activities other than lending.

VietBank for instance invested $14 million in core banking to shift from providing only credit services to non-credit services.

Core (centralised online real-time exchange) banking refers to networking a bank’s branches enabling customers to access their accounts and perform basic transactions from any branch.

In the past, VietBank’s revenues from non-credit services accounted for only 3 per cent, but they are expected to reach 10 per cent this year and 20 per cent by 2020.

Experts said however the main source of income outside of credit activities is from service fees.

Many banks wanted to increase the fees for many of their services to improve revenues from this segment but the Central Bank of Vietnam shot down the plan.

Bankers said however that they increased fees so that they can afford to develop infrastructure and maintain ATMs.

Experts said banks should focus on offering products and services with financial solutions to collect fees instead of increasing fees for services such as ATM cash withdrawals and mobile banking.

Japan-funded project has celebrated the completion of a new oil refinery in Vietnam

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An oil refinery joint project involving Japan’s major oil wholesaler Idemitsu Kosan in Vietnam has completed.

According to a report on NHK, Idemitsu, Mitsui Chemicals and state-run oil companies of Vietnam and Kuwait have invested in the Nghi Son oil refinery in the northern Vietnamese province of Thanh Hoa.

The refinery, the second of its kind in Vietnam, began full-fledged operation in October. It has a daily production capacity of 200,000 barrels.

On Sunday, about 1,000 people attended a ceremony at the refinery. Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said with the completion of the new refinery Vietnam can provide about 80 percent of domestic demand and reduce its dependence on imported oil.

Idemitsu Kosan President Shunichi Kito said Vietnam’s demand for oil will grow as the motorization of the country progresses. He said he hopes the refinery will provide stable supplies of oil, and that Vietnamese people will be better off.

Vietnam has seen annual economic growth of more than six percent, and the number of motorbikes and vehicles has been increasing.

Peach Aviation is considering flying to Vietnam

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Peach Aviation, a Japanese budget airline to expand midrange flights to Southeast Asia and Vietnam among fresh destinations for it.

According to a report on Nikkei, Japanese low-cost carrier is considering flying to Southeast Asia as early as 2020, hoping to capture travel demand around the fast-growing region.

Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia are among the likely destinations cited by CEO Shinichi Inoue for the seven- to nine-hour medium-haul service slated to begin around that year. “Hub airports are expected to help attract passengers from surrounding areas,” Inoue told Nikkei recently.

The ANA Holdings unit envisions offering such flights from all four of the Japanese airports it uses: Kansai International Airport, serving greater Osaka; New Chitose Airport, on the northern island of Hokkaido; Sendai Airport, in northeast Japan; and Naha Airport, in Okinawa.

Peach Aviation plans to absorb Vanilla Air, another ANA group budget airline serving mainly greater Tokyo, by the end of fiscal 2019. Flights out of Narita Airport near Tokyo are expected to increase with the consolidation.

Competition for budget medium-haul flights out of Japan is expected to intensify as Jetstar Japan and ANA’s biggest competitor, Japan Airlines, move to launch their own services.

Vietnam’s Miss Universe donates her cash prize to community activities

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Here’s another reason to love Miss Universe Vietnam 2018 H’Hen Nie.

The popular beauty queen has given her entire cash prize to community activities, as announced through the official Instagram page of Miss Universe Vietnam on Wednesday.

H’Hen Nie received a total of one billion Vietnamese dong – or around $43,000 – from her managing company and various sponsors.

“She’s decided to donate 100% of her prize for social activities. She wants to complete her promise with her village to provide scholarships for poor students and complete her social project, Room to Read (build more libraries in rural areas, support schoolgirls around the world). Such an amazing act of her,” read the post on the Miss Universe Vietnam Instagram page.

H’Hen Nie finished in the Top 5 of Miss Universe 2018, which was won by Catriona Gray of the Philippines.

In her introduction video for Miss Universe, H’Hen Nie said she gave away all of her prize money after winning Vietnam’s national pageant and opened a library in the countryside to help children learn how to read.

She also revealed that her parents wanted her to get married at the age of 14, but she chose to study and fulfill her own dreams.

Vietnamese shares ended in negative territory today

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Shares fall for fifth straight session as large-cap stocks continued to suffer from an increase in investor selling pressure.

The VN-Index on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange edged down 0.65 per cent to end morning trading at 912.29 points.

On Thursday, December 20, it dropped 0.11 per cent to end at 918.24 points.

On the Ha Noi Stock Exchange, the HNX-Index fell 0.44 per cent to 104.07 points.

The index inched up 0.35 per cent to 104.53 points on Thursday.

According to a report on VNS, more than 119 million shares worth a combined VNĐ2.6 trillion (US$111 million) were traded on the two markets.

The VN30 Index, which tracks the 30 largest stocks by market capitalisation, was down 0.60 per cent to 871.78 points.

Oil prices decreased 5 per cent on Thursday, hitting their lowest level in more than a year, affecting the domestic oil stock group.

Brent crude futures fell 5.05 per cent to settle at $54.35 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures fell $2.29, or 4.75 per cent, to settle at $45.88 a barrel.

Oil firms that saw their stock prices fall were PetroVietnam Drilling & Well Services Corporation (PVD), PetroVietnam Technical Services Corporation (PVS), PetroViet Nam Coating JSC (PVB), Viet Nam National Petroleum Group (PLX) and PetroVietnam Gas JSC (GAS), with falling by between 1.6 and 4.5 per cent.

Other large-caps were also hit, including steel maker Hoà Phát Group (HPG), dairy firm Vinamilk (VNM), Vincom Retail (VRE) and Techcombank (TCB).

Ms Vietnam-Universe continues to charm the world with her modesty

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For Ms Vietnam-Universe to land on the top 5 of the 2018 Ms Universe competition surprises no one.

H’Hen Nie already captured the glare of the limelight and the hearts of millions of viewers even before any results of the competition were announced.

Owing to her composed manner and unruffled approach of Ms USA’s racist remarks which specifically mocked her English-speaking skills, she won the adulation of people all over the world. The global audience saw in Ms Vietnam the grace, the poise, and the spunk expected of an international beauty queen, and they loved her for it.

According to a report by Staff Reporter 2 of The Independent Singapore, this beauty queen who came from a place replete with Buddhist pagodas captivated viewers during the pageant’s competition on December 17 when she came out the first candidate from Vietnam to make it to the top 5. She was loved further when she deviated from the classic beauty queen uniform and rocked a pixie cut and a crop-top and pants ensemble.

The video had over 7million views and the interest continues to rise. This fascination in Ms Vietnam multiplied when it was known that she donated the US$10,000 prize she got from the competition to less privileged children so that they can go to school. She likewise did not hide the fact that she worked as a nanny and domestic helper for her to be able to finance her own education and so that she can pursue her dream of becoming a beauty queen.

H’hen is part of the Rade people, a cultural minority in Central Vietnam. She is one of 6 children of farmers, and, as she shared in a video posted by Miss Universe, her parents are still living in their hometown in rural Vietnam.

“From nothing, I am here. You can do it.” This statement was part of Miss Vietnam-Universe’ opening statement after she made it through the Top 20 of the 2018 Miss Universe competition.

FIFA World Rankings: Vietnam only Southeast Asian team in top 100

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The latest FIFA rankings have been released, with quite a few movers and shakers. Among the teams in the ASEAN region, Vietnam retained their spot in the top 100 after a successful 2018 AFF Suzuki Cup campaign while Indonesia were the major gainers.

According to a report on FoxSport Asia, Philippines have not had the greatest month, first crashing out of the 2018 Suzuki Cup in the semifinal and now dropping two spots in the FIFA rankings to 116.

Among the ASEAN teams, Indonesia were the only gainers, moving up one spot to 159.

Thailand, Myanmar, Singapore and Malaysia all remained static at 118, 139, 165 and 167 respectively.

Cambodia, Laos, Brunei and Timor-Leste too saw no changes in their rankings, staying put at 172, 184, 195 and 196 respectively to round off the bottom.

The top 10 teams in the ASEAN region are as follows:

  1. Vietnam
  2. Philippines
  3. Thailand
  4. Myanmar
  5. Indonesia
  6. Singapore
  7. Malaysia
  8. Cambodia
  9. Laos
  10. Brunei
  11. Timor-Leste

Intellectual property rights in Vietnam’s agriculture still be a problem

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There are over 800 agricultural, forestry and seafood products in the Vietnam’s market, however just 50 have a Geographical Indication, and 140 registered for intellectual property rights.

Among which, just few have been registered for IP protection abroad, inclusive of Ban Me Thuot coffee, Binh Thuan dragon fruit and the Lo Ren star apple.

Related topic: Legal consulting services in Vietnam

According to SGGP, many well-known specialties without IP registration have been rampantly faked, like Nang Thom Cho Dao rice and pangasius fish. Some specialties have even been faked abroad, leading to huge losses in time and money for Vietnam to reclaim the brand names.

Foreign firms have imported many Vietnamese farm produce, only to process and market these under their own brand names.

Despite having many delicious farm produce; localities, businesses and farmers have not interested in IP protection registration. Therefore, , Vietnam is still behind Thailand in the Southeast Asia region in the number of products with protected Geographical Indication.

Many products have been registered for name and Geographical Indication protection but their brand names and labels have not been built up.

A representative from Hoang Phat Company in Long An province said that because dragon fruits of the company have good quality so farmers have “borrowed” its variety to grow and market it without paying royalties. The company has had authorized agencies intervene and handle but procedures have been complicated.

Professor Vo Tong Xuan from Can Tho University, told sggpnews.org.vn that currently IP registration procedures are too complicated for farmers. They should be simplified to suit the current situation of Vietnam. Many farmers have created new plant varieties but been short of financial source and knowledge to do registration procedures. That will affect operations encouraging farmers to create new varieties with unprotected study copyrights.

Danang faces environmental challenges

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Officials in Danang have raised concerns about the increased problems of flooding and environmental issues in the city.

Nguyen Thanh Tien, head of the urban department under Danang People’s Council, said the authorities had invested VND5.2trn (USD222.66m) in three drainage projects in the past 20 years. However, the city’s drainage system is still out-dated and couldn’t cope with the rains on December 9 and 10.

Urbanisation has reduced the number of lakes from 42 to 30. Meanwhile, the authorities haven’t dredged and maintain the lakes for a long time.

“Over VND80bn (USD3.40m) spent on dredging the sewers so we must inspect the final work. We must review the drainage system, build anti-flood plan and investment wisely,” said Nguyen Nho Trung, chairman of Danang People’s Council.

After the plan to turn Danang into an environmentally-friendly city was issued in 2008, the authorities have successfully dealt with 7 out of 13 severely polluted locations. VND2.1trn (USD90m) have been spent on 2016-2018 period and VND6.8trn will be the investment for 2018-2020 period.

To Van Hung, director of Department of Natural Resources and Environment, said 900 to 1,000 tonnes of rubbish was discharged every day. The Asian Development Bank estimated that by 2025, the city will discharge up to 1,800 tonnes of rubbish daily. There are over 2.7 million tonnes of rubbish at Khanh Son Dumping Ground and the city will need an average of VND300bn (USD13m) to deal with its annual amount of rubbish.

He went on to say that many people still think that dealing with environmental issues were the responsibilities of the Department of Natural Resources and Environment and related agencies alone.

“The public must understand that it’s also their responsibility and other agencies must collaborate to deal with the problems,” he said.

Starting from 2019, Danang authorities will implement litter classification plan at homes across the city as an attempt to cut costs of rubbish disposal.

Source: Dtinews

Red River water use proposed to improve Hanoi lake and river

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Hanoi Sewage and Drainage Ltd. Company have recommended using water from the Red River to supply West Lake and to clean To Lich River.
The company on Wednesday held a seminar on solutions to improve the quality of West Lake’s water in a sustainable way.

At the meeting, the company chairman Vo Tien Hung said that West Lake’s water level has sharply decreased over the recent years due to evaporation and the underground osmosis. Rainwater is now the only supply for the lake.

However, in the dry season, rainwater is limited, affecting the lake. Meanwhile, West Lake is being severely polluted.

“West Lake could die if the pollution is not dealt with and the water level continues to fall,” Hung said.

According to Hung, adding water into the West Lake is an urgent need. He suggested three main sources for this, consisting of using underground water through wells, water from Nhue River through canal systems and water from Red River.

Scientists agreed on using water from the Red River for West Lake and To Lich River.

Prof. Duong Thanh Luong who worked at Thuy Loi University said that the alluvium in the Red River was on the fall. This is not good for agricultural production but could be used for West Lake and To Lich River.

“The lower alluvium will help to take water from Red River to the West Lake and To Lich River easier, but the Red River’s water level has tended to fall so it is necessary to consider the amount to be taken as well as the suitable time for the work,” Luong noted.

Professor Mai Dinh Yen, vice chairman of the Vietnam Ecology Association, advocated the use of the Red River’s water for the West Lake annually. He, however, said the work needs to ensure the safety for plants and animals in the lake.

Associate Prof. Ung Quoc Dung, former deputy headmaster of the National University of Civil Engineering University, said that Hanoi should have measures to add water to West Lake and clean the To Lich River.

Source: Dtinews

Vietnam bank CEO gets life, property mogul 17 years in jail

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A bank CEO and real estate tycoon have been found guilty in a $154 million graft case.
The Ho Chi Minh City People’s Court Thursday sentenced former CEO of DongA Bank Tran Phuong Binh, fallen Da Nang real estate tycoon Phan Van Anh Vu and 24 others to various prison terms in a massive graft case that is said to have caused losses of more than $154 million for the bank.

Binh, 59, who was arrested in 2016, will spend the rest of his life behind bars for “deliberately violating state regulations on economic management, causing serious consequences” and “abusing position and power to appropriate assets,” the court ruled.

He is held mainly responsible for losses of nearly VND3.5 trillion ($153.8 million) at the partly state-owned bank, which was incurred as the bank had paid interest to customers beyond the regulated rates, committed violations in foreign currency and gold trading, and got involved in a share-buying scheme.

Vu, 43, received 17 years for “abuse of power to appropriate property.”

According to the indictment, in 2013, DongA Bank planned to raise its charter capital from VND5 trillion ($220 million) to VND6 trillion despite having several financial issues. To achieve this goal, Binh convinced Vu to buy 60 million shares in the bank for VND600 billion.

To raise cash for the deal, Vu mortgaged a plot of land with the bank to secure a VND400 billion loan. Binh then had his subordinates falsify paperwork for the remaining VND200 billion ($8.8 million).

However, the plan to raise the bank’s capital fell through, so Binh instructed his staff to transfer VND600 billion plus interest to Vu’s company, although the latter had only paid VND400 billion to the bank in the original share purchase deal.

Investigators concluded that Vu had misappropriated VND200 billion from the bank. He has admitted to this, but claimed he had only been following Binh’s instructions.

He also repaid the money to minimize the damage incurred by the bank.

The rest of the money is no longer retrievable, investigators said.

At the Thursday trial, Nguyen Thi Kim Xuyen, former deputy chief executive officer of DongA Bank, got a 30-year jail term for serving as Binh’s accomplice. Other defendants received between two-year suspended sentence and 16 years in jail as the trial closed after three weeks.

Dong A Bank came under the spotlight in 2014 when it posted a pre-tax profit of just VND35 billion ($1.5 million), down 96 percent from 2013.

The bank was placed under special monitoring in August 2015 after an investigation by the central bank uncovered several violations in financial management, lending and other business activities, seriously affecting the bank’s financial situation and operations.

Vu was one of the biggest property investors in Da Nang. He was the chairman of three major property companies and a shareholder in a number of other projects in the city, usually considered the third most important locality in Vietnam after Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.

He was arrested in January after being deported from Singapore, and is already serving an eight-year sentence for “deliberately disclosing state secrets.”

Since his arrest, Vietnam has arrested or opened probe against several senior officials accused of involvement in businesses or schemes controlled by him, including two former chairmen of Da Nang, a former deputy chairman of Ho Chi Minh City and two former deputy police ministers.

The anti-corruption campaign spearheaded by Party chief and President Nguyen Phu Trong started with the state-run oil industry, but has since expanded to security, banking and land sectors.

Hai Duyen report on Vnexpress

M&A value expected to rise in 2019

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Many deals struck this year to come to completion next year, according to Baker McKenzie report.

M&As in Vietnam are forecast to reach $4.1 billion in 2019 and domestic IPOs $4.5 billion, according to the recent Global Transactions Forecast Report from Baker McKenzie.

“Notwithstanding a solid domestic economy, Vietnam still sees some cooling in M&A deals during 2018, and we now expect completed M&A deals to come in at under $3 billion for the year,” the report noted. “But a number of deals announced in 2018 will be completed in the coming year, indicating that M&A deal numbers will rebound in 2019.” With reforms to further facilitate foreign investment now underway and with the ratification of the CPTPP, inbound investment in particular is expected to accelerate through 2019-2021. Meanwhile, the report added, the strength in IPOs seen through 2018 is set to continue, and more State divestments from major State-owned firms will be seen in the coming few years.

M&As in the Asia-Pacific have increased in value in 2018, in line with Baker McKenzie’s expectations. Chinese domestic M&As cooled, partly driven by tighter credit conditions, but inbound M&As have gathered pace as overseas firms’ move to protect access to the Chinese market in the event of future trade barriers. India has seen a particularly strong year, with total M&As of around $80 billion. Japan and Australia have both seen stronger inbound and domestic activity this year.

Moving into 2019, underlying conditions for M&As appear solid, with most emerging Asia-Pacific economies being better insulated against US Fed rate hikes than in the past, though they remain vulnerable to US protectionism. Japan is set for an economic rebound and Australia is expected to enjoy robust growth. M&As in Vietnam and India will benefit from important policy reforms, which should make inbound investment more attractive, according to the report. Meanwhile, in China, consolidation in heavy industry and upgrading manufacturing capabilities will be key structural drivers of M&As in 2019 and beyond. But with growth shifting towards a new normal of around 6 per cent and the government seeking to further reduce financial risk via slower credit growth, M&A value in China is forecast to remain noticeably lower than in 2015-2016.

The depreciation of several key currencies in the region (including China’s renminbi) against the dollar in the closing stages of this year will also undermine the dollar value of Asia-Pacific deals in 2019. “We forecast total M&As in the region to rise to $751 billion in 2019. But as in other parts of the world, growth is slowing, meaning equity markets and deals are likely to take a pause in 2020. A modest upturn in growth in 2021 and the stabilization of global liquidity conditions point to a cyclical deal upturn the following year.”

Source: Vneconomictimes

5 Ways Facebook Shared Your Data

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For years, Facebook gave many large technology companies special access to users’ information. Here’s how it worked.

Facebook for years gave major tech companies, including Yahoo and Netflix, greater access to people’s data than it disclosed, a New York Times investigation found. The partnerships helped Facebook draw new users, ramp up its advertising revenue and embed itself on sites across the web.

This is how some of the key deals worked.

Yahoo

In 2011, when Yahoo and Facebook announced their partnership, social networking features were seen as crucial to attracting users to existing websites. In a news release that September, Yahoo announced that it was “putting people’s friends front and center to usher in an innovative way of connecting around content socially.”

Yahoo said people who opted in to its new features would see their Facebook friends and the articles those friends had read, in a “facebar” at the top of the Yahoo News site.

As with many social features from that time, the integration did not work as well as the companies had hoped, and it soon ended. Yet Yahoo maintained special data access for more than 80,000 accounts, according to internal Facebook documents reviewed by The Times. As recently as this summer, Yahoo was able to view a stream of posts from these people’s friends, and it is unclear what the company did with that information. A Yahoo spokesman said the company did not use the information for advertising.

Netflix and Spotify

A man scrolls through a selection of viewing choices on the Netflix Inc. application on a tablet device in this arranged photograph in London, U.K. Photographer: Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg

Netflix and Spotify received access to people’s Facebook messages as part of features that allowed people to suggest movies, TV shows and music to friends. On Netflix, for example, after watching a show, a viewer would be prompted to connect to Facebook and recommend it.

Netflix promoted the arrangement in 2014 as more privacy-sensitive than posting people’s viewing habits on their Facebook pages. Using Facebook Messenger allowed people to “easily, and privately, recommend the shows you love to the people you care about,” Netflix said in a 2014 blog post.

To accomplish such sharing, the Netflix application had to be able to send Facebook messages. But Netflix was given the ability not only to send private messages but also to read, write and delete them, and to see all participants on a thread. A Netflix spokesman said the company was not aware it had been granted such broad powers and had used the access only for messages sent by the recommendation feature.

Netflix deactivated the feature about a year after it was introduced, but documents show that the company still had access to users’ messages in 2017.

Spotify, which continues to offer its own similar recommendation feature, also said it was unaware of the special access.

‘Instant Personalization’

Facebook, in a quest to bind other corners of the web to its social network, shared data with several major websites in a program called “instant personalization.” These partners, which included Microsoft’s Bing search engine and Rotten Tomatoes, the movie and television review site, got access to users’ names, gender, profile photos and any other information they had made public.

Beginning in 2010, if people visited one of those partner sites while logged in to Facebook, a blue bar on the screen would let them know the site was receiving their Facebook data to personalize what they saw. For example, people might see what movies their friends liked, or get tailored search results based on preferences gleaned from Facebook.

Facebook eventually wound down instant personalization, but it continued to allow some sites, including Bing and Rotten Tomatoes, access to much of the same data they had been getting for the discontinued feature.

‘People You May Know’
The internal documents shed light on a Facebook feature called “People You May Know,” a friend-suggestion tool that has long confused and unsettled users.

Gizmodo and other outlets have reported that the tool has recommended connections between patients of the same psychiatrist, estranged family members and people who had simply been in the same location, prompting suspicions that the company was closely tracking users’ whereabouts, listening to their conversations and more.

In some deals, Facebook shared information with other companies and in turn received people’s contact details — data Facebook used to develop complex friend network models and suggest more connections, the documents show. The partners that fed information to the tool included Amazon, Yahoo and the Chinese company Huawei.

The New York Times
The Times, one of nine media companies named in the documents, developed a social-sharing application called TimesPeople in 2008.

The tool incorporated Facebook friend lists and allowed people to share articles and make recommendations to other readers. The feature was shut down in 2011, but The Times continued to have access to friend lists until 2017. The Times spokeswoman said they were unaware of the continued access and were not receiving any data for the feature from Facebook.

According to a report on New York Times

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