Here’s Good News: Business booming in Vietnam

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Foreign companies have been flocking to Vietnam.

Earlier this year, one of the world’s biggest private equity firms Warburg Pincus added banking and logistics to its Vietnam portfolio, pushing its total investment into the country over the $1 billion mark.

Auto players like JAC Motors of China, as well as Kamaz, the largest truck maker in Russia, have recently turned to Vietnam. The Southeast Asian country is seeing money pour in from all over the globe, whether it’s Indonesia’s Gojek in ride-hailing, or Qatar’s Ooredoo in telecommunications.

With a trade war rippling across the Pacific and fears of interest rate contagion in emerging markets, much of Asia looks bleak. So why is the economy in communist Vietnam such a bright spot?

A VIB’s bank employee checks Vietnamese dong banknotes

Stability is key

Gross domestic product is forecast to expand 7 percent this year. The currency and inflation are stable. Growth is expected in exports, manufacturing, foreign direct investment, and other indicators that show Vietnam outpacing rivals in the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

“Vietnam is likely to remain the fastest-growing ASEAN economy in 2018 and 2019, as in 2017,” said Chidu Narayanan, Asia economist at Standard Chartered Bank. “We remain positive on Vietnam’s growth medium term on strong manufacturing activity, as FDI inflows to electronics manufacturing remain strong.”

The bank predicts a current account surplus of 3.7 percent of GDP for 2018, meaning Vietnam takes in more money through trade and investment than it sends abroad. That includes an increase in income from services, such as IT outsourcing.

Vietnam chosen as the most alluring investment destination in Asia | Image source: gbs.com.vn

To explain why the country of 100 million people is outperforming peers, it helps to look at factors like trade, consumer spending, and politics.

On the surface, Vietnam’s communist system would not sound like an appeal for investors. But many actually cite the political stability, albeit through one-party government, as a reason to come here. And in reality most businesses operate in a free market, with some state controls.

Political stability contributes to economic stability, and it helped Vietnam weather a leadership transition that in other countries could spell volatility. Stock markets were not rattled when the president, Tran Dai Quang, died suddenly of illness last month while in office. He will be succeeded by Communist Party chief Nguyen Phu Trong, a man known for maintaining the status quo.

“There will be no major change in Vietnam’s economic strategy or political system as a result of the passing of President Tran Dai Quang,” said Carl Thayer, emeritus politics professor, the University of New South Wales at the Australian Defense Force Academy.

Vietnam likes trade deals

That economic strategy has been characterized by trade deals with as many countries as possible. Through ASEAN, Vietnam has trade pacts with Australia, New Zealand, China, India, Japan, and South Korea. It also signed the Trans-Pacific Partnership, as well as separate agreements with Russia and the European Union.

This could be part of the reason that investor optimism jumped 6 percentage points between the first and second quarters of 2018, according to a European Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam survey released Oct. 3.

“These results show once again that European companies and investors remain confident in Vietnam,” chamber co-chair Nicolas Audier said. “On the cusp of this historic [EU-Vietnam free trade] deal, which would boost trade and investment on both sides, we hope this positive message from EuroCham and its members will inspire the government to continue opening its markets to foreign investment.”

Also drawing in businesses are Vietnamese shoppers. Consumer confidence was higher in Vietnam than in Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore, market researcher Nielsen reported in March. As citizens’ incomes rise, their spending attracts brands in all manner of products.

Spanish fashion retailer Zara has opened outlets here, while Apple in September appointed its first premium reseller in the country, EDigi, authorized to do official repairs of iPhones and Macs. Vingroup, a conglomerate founded by Vietnam’s richest man, launched a line of cars this month with some promotional juice from soccer star David Beckham.

FILE – English former footballer David Beckham poses for photographers.

No economy is perfect

It’s not all coming up roses, of course. Economists say Vietnam needs to keep an eye on borrowing: consumers are using more credit cards, the government is close to its debt ceiling, and banks have more non-performing loans than desired. The real estate sector is also cooling, and the country wants to avoid any of the flak that comes from the trade war between the U.S. and China.

That trade war has made investors bearish on Asia’s biggest economy. Elsewhere in the region, Indonesia is fighting to hold the value of its currency, as investors abscond to take advantage of higher U.S. interest rates.

Philippine inflation is approaching 7 percent, the highest in nearly a decade. In Myanmar, the economic potential that once seemed sky-high is now taking a back seat as that state allows ethnic violence and jails journalists.

Vietnam is not far away but has been spared many of those problems for now.

 

Reporting by Ha Nguyen, read original article on VOA.

Vietnam to remove ownership cap for foreign investors on listed companies

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Banking and aviation limits also expected to be raised, but not above 50%

Vietnam plans to remove restrictions on foreign ownership of state-owned and listed companies by the end of 2019, as Hanoi looks to open its capital-hungry economy further in order to sustain rapid growth.

The Finance Ministry is drafting an overhaul for the nation’s securities law, the first major amendment since 2010.

The planned amendments signal Hanoi’s desire to see Vietnamese shares become part of the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, which would bring an influx of capital into local exchanges.

Foreigners would in principle be able to acquire a majority stake in public companies in sectors not considered critical to national security. These include privately owned listed companies and state-owned enterprises that were privatized, with or without listing on the stock markets.

The move is expected to open business opportunities in the world’s 14th-most-populated country with over 92 million people and a median age of 30. PricewaterhouseCoopers forecasts Vietnam to be among the world’s 20 biggest economies based on purchasing power parity by 2050.

The proposed change would leave decisions on foreign ownership in the hands of managers and shareholders. Foreign ownership is now capped at 49% in general, with some sectors such as banking and aviation limited to 30%. These latter sectors may also see caps raised, but they will remain on a list of so-called conditional businesses, which the government is not willing to let foreigners take full ownership of.

Removing the ownership cap “would be a very encouraging sign for foreign investors,” said Thuan Nguyen, the CEO of StoxPlus, a local financial data provider.

“However, the impact will be limited as shareholders’ approval at annual general meetings is still needed if a company wants to lift the [allowed ownership] ratio to 100%,” the CEO said.

“Vietnam is in a competition with rivals such as the Philippines and Myanmar to be the next destination of investment in Asia, following China and Thailand,” said Junya Ishii, senior analyst at Sumitomo Corporation Global Research, a Japanese thinktank. “Opening up to foreign investment will give them access to advanced technology, which they believe will help them in that race.”

Foreign investors owned 23.33% of Vietnamese stocks as of Sept. 30, compared with 21.6% at the end of 2017. Vietnamese authorities report that the value of foreign investors’ portfolios reached $34.2 billion at the end of July.

Vietnam has around 1,500 public companies, including about 740 listed on the two main stock exchanges in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. More than 780 public companies are listed on a second-tier market or remained unlisted.

As for initial public offerings, the planned amendments will require that at least a 20% stake of the company with charter capital of 30 billion dong ($1.29 million) be sold to a minimum of 100 investors — those who do not own more than 1% of the company.

The ratio decreases to a 15% stake at companies with more than 100 billion dong in charter capital and 10% when this capital tops 1 trillion dong.

Market watchers say more needs to be done to lower barriers to investment in one of Asia’s fastest-growing economies.

“The government needs to shorten the conditional list” of sectors considered sensitive or critical to national security to make the foreign ownership changes more feasible, said Phuong Hoang, an analyst at Saigon Securities Research. Local media report that Hanoi is considering relaxing foreign ownership in telecom companies.

A StoxPlus survey found the greatest anticipation for freeing up foreign ownership in the industries of health care, retail and food and beverages.

Vietnam’s securities law was issued in 2006 and amended in 2010, but did not cite foreign ownership limits. The highest legal document providing for these limits was a Vietnamese prime minister’s decision issued in 2009 to ban foreign investors from holding more than a 49% stake in a public company.

This decision, meant to protect domestic investors, remained in force until 2015 when Hanoi started relaxing foreign ownership rules to attract capital and support local companies going overseas.

A government decree let public businesses operating in unconditional sectors remove the foreign ownership limits if they do not conflict with the company’s charter.

The move helped some listed companies gradually seek shareholders to remove the limit, led by Saigon Securities in 2015. Two dozen followed including Vietnam Dairy Products or Vinamilk, Domesco Medical Import Export, Bao Minh Insurance and DHG Pharma.

Vietnam continues to fall short of upgrading its status to an emerging stock market from a frontier market. Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand are included in this index, while Vietnam remains in the same classification as Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

The government began to work toward that goal in 2013 but missed a chance for an MSCI review in 2017, even as mainland Chinese A-shares moved onto the Emerging Markets Index this year.

Vietnamese financial authorities have been told by the government to accelerate work on modernizing the legal framework needed for an open and transparent stock market, in line with international standards.

(Nikkei)

Vietnam Clinical Laboratory Market is Expected to Reach over USD 200 Million

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Vietnam Clinical Laboratory Market is Expected to Reach over USD 200 Million by 2022: Ken Research

Vietnam Clinical Laboratory Market by Labs (Hospital Labs, Independent Labs and Physician Office Labs) and Type of Tests (Lab Test, X-Ray, Ultrasound and CT Scan) along with company profiles of Medic Lab, VietLife and Hoan My.

  • Increasing insurance coverage will drive the clinical laboratory market in Vietnam in future.
  • Infrastructure upgrade is expected to make a positive impact on the clinical laboratory market in Vietnam.

Analysts at Ken Research in their latest publication “Vietnam Clinical Laboratory Market Outlook to 2022- by Labs (Hospital Labs, Independent Labs and Physician Office Labs) and Type of Tests (Lab Test, X-Ray, Ultrasound and CT Scan)” believe that Obtaining ISO lab accreditation and local accreditation from VILAS, optimizing the number of qualified lab personnel and negotiating improved terms with medical device companies and reducing complexity in procurement will have positive impact on market.

The government will continue to invest in UHC to cover the Vietnamese population with an insurance plan. Vietnam intends to provide health insurance for its major population by 2020. Owing to increase in insurance coverage, clinical laboratories, especially hospital laboratories will witness a rise in clinical lab tests. The government’s focus on specific non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cancer prevention will continue. Hospitals will develop satellite departments to relieve the burden of over crowdedness. Primary care clinics are expanding within clinical testing in Vietnam by upgrading their testing equipment and offering more testing options, while leveraging their network of chain clinics to capture a wider consumer market.

Vietnam Clinical Laboratory market is expected to register positive CAGR of around 10.8% during the period 2017-2022. Rise in demand for screening of infectious diseases and Clinical test outsourcing to independent labs are expected to have positive impact on the demand for clinical tests.

Vietnam Clinical Laboratory Market Outlook to 2022

Government’s and private spending on establishing new hospitals coupled with rise in hospitals expenditure on replacing obsolete imaging and diagnostic instruments have positively augmented the market for clinical laboratories. There has been a rise in incidence of communicable diseases such as HIV, TB, Hep-B and Hep-C due to lack of awareness, delayed vaccination in children. Vietnam is in need of rapid testing for Multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis (MDR-TB), with lab development supported by the government and the World Health Organization (WHO).

Since incidence and prevalence of AIDS is high in Vietnam, the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention initiated development of key central and provincial labs for HIV testing. Rise in disease awareness campaigns about the advent, cause and prevention of common diseases have led to people proactively opting for clinical lab tests to ascertain diseases.

To know more on research methodology, price and other report related information, refer to below link:-

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BOT toll stations will be closed if investors don’t fix roads: Transport Minister

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Toll stations on roads built under Build-Operation-Transfer (BOT) contracts could be closed if investors behind the projects delayed repairs, Transport Minister Nguyễn Văn Thể said on Monday after receiving complaints about poor-quality BOT roads in the central province of Bình Định.

He asked relevant agencies to regularly inspect and assess damage to the roads and propose measures to fix the issues.

Phan Cao Thắng, vice chairman of Bình Định Province People’s Committee said people were very concerned about the quality of parts of National Highway No.1 that runs through the province.

The road was upgraded and re-opened in 2015, but the road surface soon became uneven and potholes appeared.

Lê Kim Thành, director of the ministry’s Department of Construction Management and Quality, said that the 118 km of National Highway No.1 running through Bình Định Province was divided into three parts. The first 28.7 km and the last 40.66 km were built under BOT contracts while the 60.6 km section in the middle was built with Government bonds

Thành said that the road was damaged by frequent flooding and rain. Moreover, the stone used for the road construction was allegedly of poor quality and not adhesive to asphalt.

“Road repairs are merely conducted to ensure traffic runs smoothly,” he said, adding that further work was being carried out to fix the problems.

“By the end of this year, the work will be completed,” Thành said.

Provincial vice chairman Thắng said the first part of National Highway No.1 in Bình Định Province was over 28 km, but the investor upgraded just 23 km, while the third part was over 40.6 km but the investor upgraded about 35 km. However, they opened two BOT toll stations at both ends of the road.

Thắng said investors behind the road delayed a reduction in toll fees despite the province’s policy on toll fee reduction.

“Road users complained about the quality and the toll fees imposed on BOT roads such as National Highway No.1 and No.19,” Thắng said.

Minister Thể said that toll collection must follow current regulations and the project’s finance. He asked for completion of the roadwork by the end of this year.

Also at the meeting with Bình Định Province leaders, Thể asked relevant agencies to develop planning for Phù Cát Airport, Nhơn Hội Port and Quy Nhơn Railway Station.

Source: Vietnamnews

Mixed bag: VinFast’s new cars cause excitement, skepticism

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Vietnamese are excited about the first ever cars to be made in their country but also concerned about their price and quality.
Nguyen Duy Hung, chairman of the Saigon Securities Incorporation (SSI), posted on his Facebook page that he was “lucky” to have his order of five VinFast cars approved.

VinFast, a subsidiary of Vingroup, showed off two cars, a sedan and an SUV, at the Paris Motor Show in France Tuesday just a year after its incorporation, grabbing the attention of the local and international media.

Hung said he would be one of the first people to get the cars.

“Who doesn’t want to be one of the first to own a car made by a Vietnamese brand?”

Tran Phuong Anh, an office worker in Hanoi, was excited to see Vietnam’s first cars revealed in Paris.

She was impressed to see the “shiny and luxurious” new sedan introduced on stage by former England footballer David Beckham.

“It was a moment of pride for Vietnam’s auto industry,” she told VnExpress International.

Vu Ta Thang, a car salesperson in Hanoi, said the looks of the two vehicles would surely attract young people.

“The cars look like a BMW with a Vietnamese brand,” he said.

But many people are concerned the car would be costly and uncertain about its quality.

Le Anh, an automobile expert, believes the sedan will be priced at VND1.4 billion ($60,869) and the SUV at VND1.8 billion ($78,260).

A VnExpress poll of over 1,200 people found 50 percent expecting the cars to cost less than VND1 billion ($42,550). Only 6 percent said they would cost more than VND1.5 billion ($64,200).

One reader identified as Tung Le said the sedan should be priced at VND700 million ($29,780) and the SUV at VND850 million ($36,170), adding it would be “much harder [to sell]” if the prices go higher.

Mike Dunne, an independent industry analyst who has spent more than three decades in Asia, was concerned whether VinFast cars would have demand in a country with an average income of $2,385 last year.

Vietnam’s population is around 93 million, larger than Korea’s, but car consumption is only around 300,000 units a year, he told U.S. media CNBC.

While there is little doubt the market would grow, it won’t happen fast enough to absorb VinFast’s production, planned at 250,000 vehicles annually, he said.

Thang, the car salesperson, said Vietnamese only buy cars with good resale value.

Durability and reliability are why they love Japanese cars, and people in their 40s and 50s would wait for at least one or two years to evaluate VinFast quality, he said.

“Customers would prefer to invest a large amount of money in other brands that have a longer history in the country.”

Bui Ngoc Huyen, chairman of Vinaxuki, which tried to produce a car but ceased production just before its first car was to be released in 2012, said Vingroup’s deep pockets would help, but warned that building a brand takes time.

“You have to move from producing small and cheap cars to luxury ones,” he told Reuters. “It will take several years for a new carmaker to fine tune its products and win the confidence of consumers. It will take between 10 and 20 years.”

Other experts are concerned that VinFast will have trouble establishing a brand in Vietnam where the supporting industry is weak.

There are only 358 businesses in the auto industry in Vietnam compared to 2,500 in Thailand, according to the Ministry of Industry and Trade. Over 90 percent of auto parts are imported, it added.

Source: Vnexpress

Banks expect better business performance in 2018

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A majority of credit institutions in the country expect an upward trend in their business this year, according to a survey released on Monday by the State Bank of Việt Nam.

Under the business sentiment survey conducted last month, which covered domestic and foreign commercial banks operating in the country, 88.3 per cent of the respondents expected their profits this year would be higher than last year. Only 5.3 per cent of the respondents forecast their profit to remain unchanged and 6.4 per cent were concerned about a profit decline.

The respondents forecast that profits for the entire banking system in 2018 would increase by 18.63 per cent against last year, higher than the 13.63 per cent reported in the previous survey conducted in the same period last year.

A total of 72.6 per cent estimated that their business performance in Q3 would be improved in the third quarter, while 80 per cent hoped for continuous improvement in Q4. Of this, 15.8 per cent and 23 per cent anticipated “significant improvement” in Q3 and Q4, respectively.

The survey also showed that many banks expected customer demand for banking services in the second half of 2018 and the entire year to increase compared to last year.

Banks expected the banking system’s credit growth to reach 4.52 per cent in the fourth quarter and 15.22 per cent for the entire year.

The respondents also anticipated capital mobilisation of the entire banking system this year would reach 15.34 per cent, of which the increase in the last quarter was anticipated to be 5.83 per cent.

Banks also said the liquidity of the banking system in both Vietnamese đồng and foreign currencies was currently “good” and that the positive status would continue for the rest of the year.

With optimism about growth prospects for 2018, banks also forecast the industry’s labour market to see positive changes in the coming months.

Despite more recruitment in the first three quarters of this year, many banks said they are still short of employees, with 61.46 per cent of the respondents saying that they planned to recruit more in the fourth quarter of this year.

VNS

Vietnam suffers high gastric cancer rates

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Vietnam stands the 18th among countries with the highest rates of gastric cancer in the world, and most of gastric cancer patients in Vietnam are late diagnosed.
The information was recently given by Associate. Prof. Dr. Nguyen Truong Khanh, head of Gastroenterology Department at Bach Mai Hospital at an International Symposium on liver and gallbladder digestion in Hanoi.

According to Khanh, a high salt intake, staying up late, sedentary lifestyle and HP bacteria infections were the main reasons for gastric cancer rise in Vietnam.

“We are working to provide statistics on Vietnamese people who face the risk of gastric cancer. The best method for the early detection of the disease is endoscopy,” Khanh said.

Professor Hidemi Goto from Nagoya University said that over the past years, experts from the university have helped Bach Mai Hospital with the transfer of endoscopic and surgical techniques to treat gastrointestinal cancer, while many doctors of Bach Mai Hospital have been sent to Japan to gain experience in this area.

In Japan, most of patients with gastric cancer are diagnosed early so the treatment is quite effective. Meanwhile, in Vietnam, the disease diagnosis is often late, affecting the treatment efficiency. That is why gastric cancer patients in Vietnam have to use operations or chemotherapy.

Vietnam sees around 126,000 new cancer patients and 94,000 cancer deaths per year, up to nine times higher than the number of traffic accident-caused fatalities.

Early cancer diagnosis treatment fees are not covered by health insurance. In the coming time, the fees for some kinds of cancer such as breast, live and digestive cancers will be paid by health insurance.

Source: Dtinews

Funky balloons are no laughing matter in Việt Nam

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Huệ Anh faced every mother’s nightmare when he teenage daughter asked to go to a music festival last month.

The 16-year-old wanted to party with friends at the event in West Lake Water Park.

Anh put her foot down and said no. Her daughter probably wasn’t best pleased but her mother had laid down the law.

Seven people died at that festival of suspected drug overdoses. Thankfully for Anh, her daughter wasn’t one of them.

Police have gathered evidence that suggests other revelers at the rave that night had taken balloons, more commonly known as ‘’hippy crack’ or ‘funky balls’.

They contain nitrous oxide, or laughing gas to give it it’s street name.

Anh told the Tin tức online newspaper: “I said no because I didn’t know enough about the festival or what would be going on there.”

She said she feared the fact that her child would give into temptation, and partake in either illegal, or legal but still dangerous, substances.

“It’s hard for the children to resist the temptation to try it,” she added.

A student in a Hà Nội – based university, who wants to remain anonymous, said she often went to streets of Tạ Hiện and Lương Ngọc Quyến to met with her friends at the weekend.

“Sometimes, I also tried funky balls,” she admitted.

Doctor Nguyễn Minh Tuấn of the National Institute of Mental Health told Việt Nam News the balls contained nitrogen oxide, which causes hallucination and could be categorised as a sedative. Usual complications which might occur include respiratory distress, heart attack which could lead to death.

Besides of funky balls, it’s very easy to see urban youngsters smoking shisha in coffee shops in a range of streets in the city, including Nhà Thờ, Nguyễn Hữu Huân, Xà Đàn and Thanh Xuân.

Shisha smoking also called hookah, narghile, waterpipe, or hubble bubble smoking – is a way of smoking tobacco, sometimes mixed with fruit or sugar, through a bowl and hose or tube. The tube ends in a mouthpiece from which the smoker inhales the smoke from the substances being burnt into their lungs.

Causes

Vũ Thu Hương, of the Hà Nội National University of Education, said youngsters often wanted to prove themselves by two ways, one was positive and another was negative.

However, due to lack of experiences and knowledge, they were vulnerable to temptation, some even became criminals, she said.

Poor connection between parents and children were also blamed for the situation, she said.

A lot of temptation appearing in the current living environment was one of the reasons, she said.

Khuất Thị Hải Oanh, deputy director of the Centre for Supporting Community Development Initiatives, said that universities and colleges now failed to provide law-related knowledge for students.

The schools also lacked of healthy forums, activities and space for students to connect with each other, she said.

Another reason was the authority had not promptly reacted to and somehow belittled the problem, Tuấn from the National Institute of Mental Health said.

“The authority hasn’t promptly reacted to and somehow belittled the problem,” he said.

“For example, crystal meth, ecstasy have been categorised as a type of drug, but laughing gas is not.

“The authority has not banned the trading, storing and production of the substance, which leads to the problem. You can see in many festivals, people openly sell funky balls without any troubles.”

Solutions

Tôn Ngọc Khánh, a student of Banking Academy Institute, said schools need to organise more outdoor activities for students so that they could have more space to develop their social skills as well as improve their physical health towards a healthy lifestyle.

Trần Tiến Dũng, a student of the Hà Nội University of Agriculture said forums to discuss on social evils should be held more in schools. It was expected to help students share their comments and ways to protect themselves from the social evils.

Nguyễn Thiên Tú, deputy head of Young People Committee under the Hồ Chí Minh Communist Youth Union, said activities held for students and youngsters should send a particular message to encourage them to say no with unhealthy trends.

Oanh, from the Centre for Supporting Community Development Initiatives, suggested that it was necessary to fill up education gaps for young people and students. Schools had to focus on educating law and regulations for them in the coming time.

Only when they had full knowledge about the law and regulations, they would actively protect themselves from temptation appearing more and more in the modern society, she said.

Colonel Bùi Đức Thiêm, of the Ministry of Public Security’s Drug Crime Investigation Department, told Việt Nam News that currently, the Government only ordered authorised agencies to strictly manage the usage of nitrogen oxide instead of banning.

There were only several countries in the world listing the substance into their management list, he said.

Because if we banned the usage of the substance, it would partly impact to the country’s social-economic development, he said.

Thus, Thiêm suggested the Government and relevant agencies to tighten controls on activities of trading, storing and production of the substances in the coming time.

Thiêm also highly recommended young people to think carefully before trying substances that they did not know well about.

Source: VNS

HCM City Council okays VND1.508 trillion opera house project

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According to the proposal, the opera house is designed to meet international standards. It is expected to have a spacious hall capable of accommodating 1,200 guests and a smaller hall with a capacity of 500 people. The Construction Investment Management Board under the Department of Culture and Sports will be the owner of the project, which is slated for completion in 2022.

The HCMC government said the construction of the venue was aimed at meeting the art demands of over 10 million people and millions of foreigners. The theater is expected to become a new cultural symbol of the city.

Besides this, the new opera house helps enhance the development of art, diversify artistic performances, promote quality, preserve and develop the national culture, and promote spiritual values.

At the meeting, however, some delegates remained hesitant about the opera house project.

Vo Thi Ngoc Thuy questioned whether the new venue would attract spectators when the city is already home to the Hoa Binh Opera and Saigon Opera House and whether the city had surveyed the number of symphony and opera fans yet.

After the HCMC departments and agencies had resolved the queries put forth, all the delegates agreed with the plan to construct the Thu Thiem-based opera house.

The municipal council on October 8 also approved a school milk program aimed at improving nutrition and the physical stature of kindergarten and primary-school students in HCMC during the 2018-2020 period.

Accordingly, the pilot program will be applied to kindergarten and first-grade students in the outlying districts of Cu Chi, Hoc Mon, Nha Be, Can Gio and Binh Chanh. In the 2019-2020 academic year, the program will be extended to all kindergarten and first-grade students citywide.

Total funding for the program in the 2018-2020 period is some VND1.135 trillion, of which some VND350 billion will be subsidized by the State budget and some VND240 billion will be covered by enterprises supplying milk. Students and parents are expected to contribute some VND548 billion, or 50% of the total funding to buy the milk.

The HCMC government, at the meeting, received the council’s approval of a proposal to invest in public projects with total investment capital of VND8.48 trillion, as well as a proposal on the rights to govern the auctions of land-attached properties and land use transfers in the city and a proposal on investment in the city’s supporting industries.

Source: SGT

Another cold spell to hit northern region

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Another cold snap is forecasted in the northern region from October 9.

According to the National Centre for Hydro-meteorology Forecasting, Hanoi would see rains on the evening of October 9 and the temperature would fall to the lowest level of 20-22 degrees centigrade.

This weather would also affect the northern central and central regions, including Ha Tinh, Quang Binh, Thua Thien-Hue, Quang Nam and Quang Ngai, on October 10-13 with quite strong north-east monsoon wind in coastal areas.

Several northern mountainous localities have been predicted to experience the temperature of 19-22 degrees centigrade, even colder in high mountains.

An expert from the National Centre for Hydro-meteorology Forecasting recently said that this year’s winter would come earlier than usual and be colder than the past five years.

The country is expected to face 2-3 storms from now until the year-end which would mostly occur in central and southern regions.

By Nguyen Duong, Dtinews

Vingroup to acquire Fivimart supermarket chain

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Vietnam’s Vingroup’s retail arm, VinCommerce, has completed the acquisition of the Fivimart supermarket system,

According to a press release published on October 8, Vingroup has acquired 100 % of Fivimart from its operator to own all 23 Fivimart supermarkets. These stores will be soon renamed to VinMart, the supermarket brand of Vingroup.

“In VinCommerce’s development strategy, VinMart and VinMart will be established not only Vinhomes residential complexes but also other residential areas nationwide. This deal is one step in realising this strategy,” saidVinCommerce CEO, Ms. Thai Thi Thanh Hai.

Besides continuing to sell consumer goods, food, home appliances and cosmetic utensils, these new supermarkets will also sell safe and fresh food and products with Vingroup’s brands such as VinEco agricultural products, VinMart Cook’s pre-processed foods and VinMart Home consumer goods.

Vingroup’s supermarket system was launched in 2014. After less than four years, the system of VinMart and VinMart has had the largest scale and fastest growth rate in Vietnam.

The deal between VinCommerce and Fivimart came after retail giant AEON terminated its deal with Hanoi-based Fivimart after four years due to losses, selling its 30 percent stake in Fivimart.

Speculation about the divorce between Fivimart and Aeon started in early September.

Since the beginning of their partnership since 2015, Fivimart increased its supermarkets from 10 to 23, while revenue jumped fromVND 1.07 trillion (USD 45.64 million) toVND 1.3 trillion  during the 2015-2017.

However, Fivimart posted losses ofVND 60 billion  in 2015, which later widened to VND96 billion a year later. In 2017, the local supermarket chain reported losses of 23 billion USD, resulting in an accumulated loss of VND 197 billion.

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This article was first posted on VNS/VNA

Google just shut down Google+ for good – Delete your profile now

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Google is known for its collection of wildly popular products, from Search to Maps to Android. But not everything the company touches turns to gold.

Google Glass was supposed to change the world, but it quickly became a punch line. And remember Google Buzz?

Now, Google is killing off one more product: Google+, the social network that was supposed to take on Facebook and LinkedIn. Google decided to shutter the service after a software glitch caused Google to expose the personal profile data of hundreds of thousands of Google+ users (though the company says nothing bad happened).

Of course, the best innovations are the ones that everybody thinks are doomed to fail, so it makes sense that Google has had its fair share of misses over the years. Still, we counted at least 18 products that have ended up in the Google graveyard (but there are probably more – let us know if we’re missing anything).

Here’s how to delete your profile now

Even if you do not use the account it could still be a risk with the recent announcement of the security breach. Here’s how to delete your account ahead of the company’s announcement that they will shut the entire platform down in 10 months.

When signed into your Google account, go to Gmail. Select your icon in the top right. If it has “Google+ profile” up there, you still have an account even if it is dormant.

Click on ‘Google+ profile’ to visit the page. When you arrive click on Settings within the left rail. All the way at the bottom of the settings page is ‘Account – Delete Your Google+ Profile’.

Deleting the profile will impact some content on Google+. Google+ Pages, and Youtube (if you have a linked account). Read it carefully to decide if you want to move forward. You cannot get your profile back once you click delete.

After all these steps, Google will ask for more information on why you are leaving. This is optional. Close the tab if you do not wish to answer.

 

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By Business Insider and Benjamin Lloyd

Dog meat culture clashes with modern tastes in Vietnam

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Vietnamese officials in Hanoi have asked residents to stop eating dog meat, citing health and public image concerns. Vendors and enthusiasts now fear a nationwide ban on what they consider to be a traditional delicacy.

Hoang has been eating dog meat since he was young. He can’t imagine there will be a time that he won’t be eating it at least twice a month. However, Vietnamese officials announced in September that dog and cat meat should no longer be served in the inner districts of the capital city Hanoi because it’s offensive to tourists and can spread diseases like rabies.

Read more: Dog meat trading to be banned in central Hanoi by 2021

Dog meat lovers and restaurant owners fear that the government will try to expand the ban and decide to officially forbid eating dog and cat meat entirely.

“I don’t see how they can ban it. The demand is just too high,” Hoang said at a restaurant in Vietnam’s largest metropolis, Ho Chi Minh City.

In a small alley in Ho Chi Minh City, at least four restaurants serve dog meat, or Thịt chó. People gather around small tables to dine on the canine meat, complementing it with rice wine or beer.

Hoang, who declined to give his full name, is sitting at a table with three good friends. “For us it’s a tradition to eat dog meat. It’s just as normal as eating seafood or chicken,” he told DW.

Read more: Dog thief arrested while carrying the dogs to restaurant

It’s a point many Vietnamese people make. For them eating dog meat is no different than eating any other type of meat. Additionally, some Vietnamese believe that eating dog meat by the end of the month will help them to get rid of bad luck gathered in the weeks before. It’s why these types of restaurants are always more crowded when the month comes to an end.

Tradition vs. international image

The Vietnamese government has a different view on things. Officials in Hanoi say that eating dog meat is damaging the reputation and image of the capital city. They also say that eating the meat could lead to a deadly rabies infection.

In Ho Chi Minh City, authorities are also taking a tougher stand. In September, the city’s largest dog meat market was raided. According to Vietnamese state media, many vendors were fined and a large amount of raw dog meat was confiscated because it came from unknown sources. In Vietnam dogs are often stolen from pet lovers and then sold to restaurants.

Mr. Chien, who didn’t want to give his full name, has been selling dog meat for 10 years in Ho Chi Minh City. He said that pressure on him and his colleagues has grown in the past five years. He needs to be very transparent about where his dog meat comes from.

Read more: The Ugly Truth Behind The Dog Meat Trade

“All the meat I’m selling comes from a qualified supplier,” he told DW. “I have all the papers and licenses that are necessary. Society has been looking down on us, so I need to have my business as clean as possible,” he added.

His restaurant is a popular establishment in the city. Each month he attracts about 1,000 customers, whom altogether eat about 100 dogs per month. “It’s a business. If there’s demand, then there is supply,” Chien said.

An estimated 5 million dogs are consumed every year in Vietnam. Only China, where roughly 20 million dogs are consumed every year, eats more of “man’s best friend.”

Animal rights activists support a ban on dog meat. They have been campaigning for years to get the controversial dish removed from menus, pointing out that the slaughter of dogs and cats is brutal and that Vietnamese people often fear for the safety of their pets.

Mr. Chien is aware of the resistance to dog meat. He said he will stop selling it if the government issues a ban – but he doubts it will go that far. “I think it’s a tradition that’s been here too long to ban it entirely.”

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Written by Ate Hoekstra, this article was posted on DW.

Vietnam moves closer to hosting Formula One race

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Plans for a new Formula One circuit in Vietnam are currently on target ahead of a potential grand prix in 2020, said FIA race director Charlie Whiting,

Although a deal has not been announced by Formula One, Vietnam has been talked about as a potential venue for some time. In August, the Vietnamese government said it would support a race on the streets of Hanoi, and the capital city is in line with Formula One’s vision of racing in “destination cities.”

Last week, Whiting visited a proposed site 12 kilometers west of Hanoi’s centre and said he believes the plans laid out by the local organizers are feasible for a race in two years’ time.

“There’s no actual progress on building the track, but the site’s been identified,” he said. “It’s in the advanced stages of design.

“I think, as far as I’m aware, they’re aiming for a 2020 Grand Prix, which shouldn’t be a problem based on previous experience.”

Whiting said the track would be part street circuit, part purpose-built.

“It’s mainly on the streets, and there’s a section which is not yet built. So, it’s an open site where the pit building’s going to be built. Part of the track will be built there, which doesn’t exist at the moment. But it will become a road, I understand, after that.”

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Laurence Edmondson, F1 Editor reports on ESPN.

Kiwi flies to Vietnam in desperate bid to bring dad home after severe brain haemorrhage

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A Kiwi who took three flights from Kazakhstan to be at his father’s bedside in Vietnam is desperate to bring him home to New Zealand after the semi-retired teacher was found unconscious in his hotel room following a severe brain injury.

Donald Gordon Wills was found unconscious on the floor by hotel staff following a severe brain haemorrhage on September 10, and was admitted to Ba Ria hospital.

According to a report by By Chelsea Boyle on NZ Herald, the 74-year-old teacher has lived in Vietnam for more than a decade, enjoying a semi-retired life where the weather was warmer.

Donald Wills with Yuliya and Maurice Wills at their wedding. Photo / Supplied

His son Maurice Wills, a computer geography specialist, was working on a construction site in Kazakhstan when he got the call.

The 33-year-old lives in Rolleston and grew up under his father’s care in Christchurch.

Maurice Wills completed 42.1km trek across Vung Tau Back Beach in a bid to raise funds to help his father. Photo / Supplied

It took three flights to be by his father’s side in Ho Chi Minh, where he had been transferred to the neurosurgery ICU department of Cho Ray Hospital, where he was in a coma for three weeks.

While he had since woken up, all indications pointed to his father not regaining movement on his left side or his speech, Wills said.

“He has opened his eyes, but he was quite weak. He can nod and he can shake his head.

“I would just like to be close to him in the time he has left and it might lift his spirits to be around his two-and-a-half year-old granddaughter.”

The long-term prognosis for someone of his age with that kind of severe brain injury was not good, Maurice Wills told the Herald.

Maurice Wills with his father Donald in Kaikōura in the 90s. Photo / Supplied

The 74-year-old was “always positive” and “never felt too sorry for himself” even if he was between jobs.

He was not employed or insured when he suffered the brain haemorrhage.

Wills said the quote he had been given to use a charter plane to move his father back to New Zealand was US$270,000 – a sum that was simply out of reach.

“I am just waiting for him to recover enough to try and get him on a commercial flight.”

Preferably one that goes directly from Ho Chi Minh to Auckland, he said.

He said the local Family Medical Centre had told him it would cost US$14,000 for a doctor and nurse to escort him on a commercial flight.

It would cost at least another US$40,000 to modify the plane to accommodate a stretcher and machines, he said.

Wills said he “will do anything for his dad” and recently completed a 42.1km trek in a bid to raise funds for his father’s return.

The distance was in parts a run – in others a walk – across the Vung Tau Back Beach and took a total of eight hours to complete.

He is raising funds through a Givealittle page.

A Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade spokeswoman said the New Zealand Embassy in Ha Noi and Consulate in Ho Chi Minh City was providing consular assistance to Wills and his family.

“For privacy reasons, we will not be providing any further information.”

 

Read original article on NZ Herald
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