Vietnam has been forecasted to see 2-3 tropical storms from now to the year-end which would mostly happen in the central and southern regions.
According to Dr Hoang Phuc Lam, deputy director of the National Centre for Hydro-meteorology Forecasting, 3-5 storms would appear on the east of the country with 2-3 among those predicted to directly affect Vietnam, particularly the country’s central and southern regions.
Lam added that this year’s rainy season would end earlier than usual, so the rainfall would be 15-30% lower than previous years. The Central Highlands and southern regions would see the considerable fall in the rainfall the most.
However, HCM City would see heavy rains of around 100 mm early October.
The highest flood on the upper reaches of Mekong River would appear early October. Meanwhile, the peak flood tides in the southern region from September to December this year would be 5-10cm lower than the level of 2017.
By the end of this year, flash floods and landslides have also warned for many northern mountainous areas.
According to the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Vietnam is one of the five countries most likely to be severely affected by climate change, with 21 types of natural disasters, especially storms, tropical depression, floods, flash floods, landslides, droughts, saline intrusion, and river bank and coastal erosions.
Around 400 people are killed or go missing in the country due to natural disasters annually. Natural disasters account for losses of 1%-1.5% GDP a year for the country.
In the last five years, Vietnam has witnessed the establishment of over 40 new fin-tech companies, such as online payment platforms Moca or MoMo, as well as the country’s first digital banking platform Timo, highlighting Vietnam’s nascent yet rapidly growing fin-tech industry.
Experts have pointed out the huge potential of fin-tech in Vietnam, citing the country’s large population of unbanked, growing middle class, and high mobile and Internet penetration rates.
To keep up with Vietnam’s burgeoning fin-tech industry, here are fin-tech influencers in Vietnam to follow closely:
Nguyen Nguyen is the CEO and founder of Trusting Social, a credit scoring solution that combines big data technology with social, web and mobile data. The solution enables lenders in emerging markets to serve the billions of “financially invisible” consumers who are not covered by credit bureaus.
Nguyen Ba Diep is the executive vice chairman of MoMo, a leading mobile payment company in Vietnam. MoMo offers customer a different way to make payment for both online (MoMo mobile e-wallet) and offline (MoMo Agent). MoMo is one of Vietnam’s most successful fin-tech platforms and is backed by the likes of Goldman Sachs and Standard Chartered.
Nam Tran is the CEO and co-founder of mobile payment platform Moca. Moca recently partnered with Grab to roll out payments solutions for Vietnamese consumers and small and medium-sized enterprises. Tran previously worked at Microsoft and Maritime Bank.
Dominik Weil, Co-Founder of Bitcoin Vietnam and Co-Founder at Ginero
Dominik Weil is the co-founder of Bitcoin Vietnam, a leading blockchain technology provider and a digital exchange solution in Vietnam. Weil is also the co-founder of Ginero, a peer-to-peer digital asset exchange platform built and developed by the team behind Bitcoin Vietnam based in Singapore.
Bao Phuong Nguyen, CEO and Co-Founder at Bitcoin Vietnam
Bao Phuong Nguyen is the CEO and co-founder of Bitcoin Vietnam, the leading cryptocurrency exchange platform in Vietnam. Together with her team, she established Vietnam’s first digital asset exchange as well as other services like the blockchain-based remittance solution cash2vn.
Loi Luu is the CEO and co-founder of Kyber Network, an on-chain liquidity protocol that powers decentralized applications, including exchanges, funds, lending protocols, payments wallets and more. Luu is also a researcher working on cryptocurrencies, smart contract security and distributed consensus algorithms. His research focuses on several problems of cryptocurrencies from improving the security to enhancing the scalability and usability of public cryptocurrencies.
Bao Nguyen is the country director of Vietnam at GoBear, a financial and insurance comparison platform operating across Asia. Nguyen has worked in finance and insurance for more than 24 years in firms that include Prudential, MetLife, Citigroup, AIA, Standard Chartered Bank, and Maritime Bank.
Loc Duc Nguyen is the current fin-tech lead at ACB Bank. He’s experienced in artificial intelligence and payments. Loc previously worked at Feedzai, PayPal and Visa.
Sandeep Deobhakta, Head of Retail Banking at Vietnam Prosperity Bank (VP Bank)
Sandeep Deobhakta is the head of retail banking of VP Bank. Deobhakta joined VP Bank in May 2015. Prior to his current role, Sandeep has lived and worked in many other countries in Asia, the Middle East, Africa and the US. His prior roles include consumer banking, wealth management and transformation roles at various international financial institutions starting with Citibank, Standard Bank, Barclays and AIA Group.
Roger Thomas Moyes, Project Director & Senior Access to Finance Advisor at Asian Development Bank
Roger Thomas Moyes manages the Mekong Business Initiative (MBI), an Asian Development Bank project focused on strengthening private sector development across Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Vietnam (CLMV), with particular focus on high-growth SMEs. This three-year project is supported by DFAT, the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Australia.
Christian König, Fintech Meetup Vietnam Founder 2015, first Fin-tech Vietnam Report in 2015
Christian König is a Swiss and Singapore fin-tech specialist. He consults fin-tech companies around the world with his company, Finanzpro Ltd. He specializes in financial products, social media and content marketing. Chris is also the founder of the Fintechnews Network.
Phan Luong, Head of Innovation at Vietnam International Bank (VIB)
Phan Luong is the head of innovation of Vietnam International Bank (VIB). Luong is responsible for creating and managing part of the digital strategic framework for the bank, managing the innovation department, and monitoring the bank’s portfolio of projects targeting the digitalization of internal operation.
Duong Nguyen, Financial Services Leader and IT Advisory Leader for Vietnam, Lao and Cambodia at EY
Duong Nguyen is the financial services leader and IT advisory leader for Vietnam, Lao and Cambodia practice at EY. Nguyen is also a board member of the Vietnam Fin-tech Club, an organization launched in 2015. She is a professional working in financial services area for nearly 20 years with experiences both in Vietnam and overseas.
Duy Do, Senior Project Manager at Shinhan Future’s Lab
Duy Do is a senior project manager at Shinhan Future’s Lab, a fin-tech accelerator and incubator based in South Korea and Vietnam. Do is in charge of the overall planning of activities, resources, budgets and operations of the platform. He’s also responsible for forging partnerships with other organizations, organizing events and workshops, and support selected startups in their journey in the program.
Deputy Governor Nguyen Kim Anh, Chairman of the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) Steering Committee on Fin-tech
Deputy Governor Nguyen Kim Anh is the chairman of the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) Steering Committee on Fin-tech. The Steering Committee on Fin-tech was launched in 2017 to formulate an action plan and advise the governor on the solutions to complete the fin-tech ecosystem including a legal framework to facilitate the performance and the development of fin-tech companies in Vietnam.
LUX A2.0 named for the sedan and LUX SA2.0 for the sports utility vehicle (SUV)
VinFast said LUX was the prefix in ‘Luxury’, meaning high-end quality in the advanced segment of cars produced by VinFast. The LUX A2.0 and LUX SA2.0 are the firm’s two debut models. VNS reported.
Next to the letter LUX is the letter ‘A’ – the first letter of the alphabet with multiple meanings. The letter ‘A’ stands for international standards, and also the goal of becoming Việt Nam’s leading automobile manufacturing company. In particular, the letter ‘A’ also contains VinFast’s pioneering aspirations in the automobile industry, aiming to develop itself into a global automaker.
The suffix 2.0 in the name of both models are technical specifications, representing the engine capacity of each vehicle. The difference for the SUV is the ‘S’ character.
The names of the first VinFast models are compact and easy to read, remember and spread, as well as being universal in most languages. The names LUX A2.0 and LUX SA2.0 also confirm the pioneering and global vision of VinFast.
VinFast Sedan LUX A2.0
After LUX, VinFast will roll out various models of cars with names that match the position of each segment.
VinFast is currently co-operating with leading names in Europe and America in the automotive field such as BMW, Bosch, Magna Steyr and Pininfarina, who have the best technology and experience in the world, creating LUX A2.0 and LUX SA2.0 with superior “Vietnamese identity – Italian design – German technology – international standard”.
The sedan LUX A2.0 and the SUV LUX SA2.0 will be available to the general public and professionals from October 2-14 at the Paris Motor Show 2018. The models are expected to hit the market in the third quarter of next year.
At 15:25 (Vietnamese time) on October 2, VinFast will introduce its two models of sedan and SUV at the Paris Motor Show 2018. The program will be broadcast live on VTV1 and live-streamed on the website and fanpage of VinFast, and other communication channels.
AES Corporation, Walmart, GE Global, AT&T, IBM, PepsiCo, AIG, FedEx and about top 20 billion-dollar enterprises from various industries joined a Business Breakfast with Vietnam Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc in the framework of the 73rd session of the United Nations General Assembly.
The Business Breakfast, co-hosted by FPT – an IT service provider headquartered in Vietnam – and Business Council for International Understanding (BCIU), was the only business event with the Prime Minister throughout his trip, aiming to promote bilateral relationship on economics, investment and technology. The eGov Innovation reported.
Joining the Prime Minister are Vietnamese ministerial officials including Minister, Chief of Government Office; Minister of Industry and Trade; Minister of Health; Acting Minister of Information and Communications; Deputy Minister of Planning and Investment; Lieutenant General, Deputy Chief of General Staff of the Army of Vietnam; Vietnamese Ambassador to the US; and Ambassador of the Vietnamese delegation to the United Nations.
Moderated by FPT Chairman Truong Gia Binh, the discussion on various policy frameworks and issues related to IT and investment in Vietnam has established opportunities for both sides to network, exchange views on business partnership and discuss about cooperation opportunities in the 4.0 Industrial Revolution. Emerging matters related to digital government, especially in e-Government and Smart City in Vietnam, caught special attention from US corporations. US enterprises’ concerns and problems encountered in the investment procedure in Vietnam were well demonstrated and resolved, thus opening up opportunities and accelerating successful businesses cooperation and investment in Vietnam.
“Vietnam commits to creating favorable conditions, in terms of policies and other factors, for foreign science and technology organizations to cooperate in advanced technologies research and transfer to Vietnamese enterprises,” the Prime Minister affirmed.
“With the young and mathematical-oriented workforce, Vietnam is prepared for the digital era,” said FPT Chairman Truong Gia Binh. “FPT, as Vietnam’s leading technology corporation, is ready to become one of the world’s Digital Transformation pioneers”.
Prior to this event, Binh had bilateral meetings with leaders from top five global corporations such as Coca Cola, COX Enterprises, UPS, RNDC, etc. to promote cooperation opportunities in digital transformation. Through the meetings, US corporations and FPT jointly aimed at the cooperation in which FPT will deliver comprehensive technology solutions from strategic consultancy, system design, development, implementing to maintenance.
Featured image: Vietnam's Prime Minister meets US firms to talk investment in Vietnam
Vietnam has launched a ministry-level government agency aimed at boosting the performance of some of the Communist nation’s biggest state-owned enterprises (SOEs).
The new Commission for the Management of State Capital (CMSC) at enterprises will manage 19 state-owned companies in which the government holds stakes with a combined book value of 1,000 trillion dong ($42.9 billion), the government said on Sunday.
The list includes state oil and gas firm PetroVietnam, flag carrier Vietnam Airlines, top oil distributor Petrolimex, mobile operator MobiFone and State Capital Investment Corporation, which owns shares in Vinamilk, one of Vietnam‘s top listed companies.
The Southeast Asian nation has for years sought to boost SOEs through stake sales, internal restructuring or stock market listings, but progress has fallen short of targets.
“Increasing efficiency of SOEs and, from there, increasing our economy’s competitiveness is essential,” Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said at Sunday’s ceremony to launch the CMSC.
Vietnam created SOEs as national champions to lead key economic sectors, but its efforts have been stymied by corruption and poor management.
CMSC has signed an agreement with Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings to share capital-management knowledge and has proposed similar agreements with China’s state-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission.
The new agency is ready to take over management of the 19 state-owned enterprises from Oct. 1, said CMSC Chairman Nguyen Hoang Anh, with the potential to take on more in the future.
The country is still recovering from – and reacting to – the banking crisis of 2012. Over the last six years, the central bank has done much to put the sector back on its feet. But are the banks good enough, or should they be doing more?
Dozens of bankers and company officials in Vietnam have been jailed or sentenced to death for financial crimes including fraud and mismanagement recently. The sweep is part of a government crackdown on corruption and poor lending practices that led to a surge in non-performing loans.
Back in 2012, Vietnam’s malfunctioning banking sector was mired in all manner of misery, with some lenders’ finances stretched perilously thin after years of unsustainably high credit growth and lax regulatory oversight.
At first, the authorities pretended nothing was amiss, but as the bad debts grew and more scandals came to light, the state stepped in with bailouts and handcuffs. Among the many bankers arrested and incarcerated in the intervening years were Nguyen Duc Kien, the businessman and co-founder of Asia Commercial Bank (ACB), and Pham Cong Danh, the head of privately owned Vietnam Construction Bank (VCB), who was sentenced to 30 years in jail and accused of embezzling $400 million.
If anything, the crackdown on errant bank executives has intensified in the last few months.
In July, Dang Thanh Binh, a former central bank deputy governor, was blamed for causing losses of up to $654 million at VCB and jailed for three years. A month later, a trial at the Ho Chi Minh People’s Court ended with 46 executives packed off to jail, including Tram Be, a former deputy chairman of Saigon Thuong Tin Commercial Bank. Though at least they avoided the fate reserved for former Ocean Bank general director Nguyen Xuan Son, who was charged with embezzlement and fraud in September 2017 and sentenced to death.
What lies behind this reprisal? After all, none of Wall Street’s chief executives were prosecuted in the wake of 2008, although $150 billion in fines were levied on financial institutions. In Britain, the only senior banker to see the inside of a court was John Varley, and criminal charges against the former Barclays chief executive, stemming from the bank’s £11.8 billion ($15.3 billion) emergency cash call at the height of the crisis, were dropped in May.
The root cause of Vietnam’s reaction – some would say over-reaction – to the events of 2012 can be summed up by two words, embarrassment and fear, according to bankers and analysts in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi.
At the time, most people didn’t trust the banks – a lot of them were still buying property in US dollars or gold. So, if you have even one bank going under, that distrust will be reinforced
– Chief executive, Ho Chi Minh City-based investment fund
Embarrassment, because this was a crisis – or, to be precise, a near-crisis, as the financial calamity never quite happened – all of its own making. The government’s decision in 2009 to prime the pump of its economy by making vast sums of new credit available to state-owned enterprises led to a borrowing binge. When SOEs invested badly, lost money and failed to repay their loans, the banks buckled. This was an internal crisis and there was no one for the state to blame but itself.
Hence the fear.
“The people knew exactly what had happened,” says the chief executive of a Ho Chi Minh City-based investment fund. “They knew how the collusion worked between government and the state banks. When the economy was OK it was overlooked, but now it was in trouble, and people were out of a job. They were angry, and the leaders of one-party states get scared when the people get angry.”
And there was another problem.
“At the time, most people didn’t trust the banks – a lot of them were still buying property in US dollars or gold,” adds the fund chief. “So, if you have even one bank going under, that distrust will be reinforced, and you’ll end up with a run on all banks.”
Hanoi’s reaction to this triple threat – a wobbly economy, a teetering bank sector and a restless public – was, in hindsight, startlingly astute and mature. It set out, quietly but resolutely, to fix its banks and to ensure that nothing of the kind could happen again.
The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) in effect used two consecutive five-year plans to coincide with those in the political schedule. The first, which ran until the end of 2015, aimed to restructure or forcibly merge bad or troubled lenders, and resolve the bulk of the industry’s failed or soured loans.
On the surface, it worked.
The central bank took over the worst lenders: VCB, Ocean Bank and Global Petro Bank, and restructured nine lenders, including Saigon Commercial Bank. Several mergers took place in 2015: among these, Maritime Bank fused with Mekong Development Bank, and Sacombank joined forces with Phuong Nam Bank.
Not all the deals stuck. In April 2018, VietinBank, the second-largest lender by assets, called off its attempted merger with PG Bank, a unit of the Petrolimex conglomerate, after failing to agree on the best way to resolve the latter’s historical debts.
But by and large, the central bank achieved its primary objectives: to get the industry back on a level footing and to clear the decks of most of its legacy bad loans. After peaking at 17% in 2013, the non-performing loan ratio for the sector fell steadily, hitting a low of 2% at the end of 2017 – although earlier this year, Fitch Ratings reiterated its view that NPLs are under-reported.
Goals
And so to the second phase, which takes us to the end of 2020. This is where the SBV’s goals start to look more ambitious – and thus harder to achieve. Its stated aims include ensuring lenders keep their bad-debt ratios below 3%, boost capital reserves by issuing convertible bonds and long-term debt instruments, and list shares (at least in the case of the better-run banks) on foreign bourses.
It also wants 10 of its commercial banks to meet minimum Basel II capital requirements, and for at least one of the country’s banks to be in the top 100 in Asia, based on assets, by the end of 2020.
Some banks will [be able to] comply with Basel II rules and some will not. Most of them are struggling
– Dam Van Tuan, ACB
“Of these targets, some are shoo-ins, notably NPLs. At least three lenders – VietinBank, Vietnam Prosperity Bank (VPBank) and BIDV, Vietnam’s largest by assets, have issued term loans since the start of the year, each raising between $100 million and $150 million.
By contrast, no Vietnamese lender has yet sold shares abroad, or is likely to do so soon, although Techcombank did complete its $922 million IPO on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange in April, a sale that valued it at $6.5 billion.
Two other onshore lenders, VPBank and Ho Chi Minh City Development Bank, listed shares onshore in 2017, and more are expected to do so in 2019.
Maritime Bank, whose request to go public was rejected by its own shareholders in May 2017, is preparing to take another swing at a listing next year.
“Our IPO is on track for the middle of 2019,” Huynh Buu Quang, chief executive of the Hanoi-based lender, told Asiamoney in July. “The government is always encouraging lenders to list, and investors who want more access to the sector will soon have greater choice, as between four and nine banks plan to sell shares by the end of 2019.”
The bigger challenge is likely to be the SBV’s drive to ensure that, by the end of 2020, 10 lenders, including Vietcombank, VietinBank, ACB, VPBank and Maritime Bank, meet the minimum requirements set out under the Basel II accords, by holding capital equivalent to at least 8% of their risk-weighted assets.
Currently, only Orient Commercial Bank, a small Ho Chi Minh City-based joint stock lender, is Basel II-compliant, and that institution is not even on the central bank’s rota.
The problem isn’t that leading lenders do not hold enough capital on their books. SBV data shows that the average state-run bank’s capital adequacy ratio was 9.69% at the end of 2017. Rather, the issue is that ratios will plunge below 8% when Basel II standards are applied, with the IMF tipping full implementation of the accords to reduce capital adequacy ratios by between 200 and 400 basis points.
Financial institutions recognize the challenge, and are raising capital and resolving soured debts as fast as they can.
Vietcombank, which won Asiamoney’s award for best domestic bank in 2018, said earlier this year that it would meet minimum rules by July. But when Asiamoney asked in September if it was now Basel II-compliant, it declined to comment.
In truth, few leading banks have much faith in hitting the 2020 target. Dam Van Tuan, executive director at ACB, doubts if many lenders will be able to meet the deadline.
“Some banks will [be able to] comply with Basel II rules and some will not,” he says.
“Most of them are struggling. The big three lenders – Vietcombank, BIDV and VietinBank – we know they need more capital to comply. Even for ACB, when we do gap analysis, if we apply Basel II demands, we find we will need more capital. We need to be at 8% and we are on 6% at the moment.”
This should worry the central bank. Despite the destabilizing events of recent years, ACB remains one of the country’s best-run financial institutions. It reported a 23% year-on-year rise in net interest income in 2017, with net profit up 59%. It has more than 350 branches nationwide, and when Standard Chartered sold its 15% stake earlier this year, the shares were quickly snapped up by a quartet of funds including Indianapolis-based Estes Investments.
If ACB is struggling to make itself Basel II-compliant, it does not bode well for the smaller private lenders or the state-run giants.
Pressures
The banking system faces an array of other challenges. All lenders are under government pressure to raise capital, cut bad debts and boost provisioning. They are also compelled, of course, to lend wisely and well – but this is a harder task than one might imagine.
Every year, the central bank sets a blanket target for credit growth that lenders are expected to hit exactly. Commercial banks were told to increase total lending by no more than 17% on an annualized basis in 2018, a single percentage point below the previous year’s figure. If those figures look high – and credit growth is a concern to analysts who fear another surge in non-performing loans – it’s because the state itself is under huge pressure to maintain a high level of economic growth.
In developed countries, where the burden of keeping an economy financially well-oiled is shared by the capital markets, companies can turn to any number of institutional investors in search of capital. That isn’t the case here.
According to SBV data, banks accounted for 96% of financial sector assets in 2017, or 194% of GDP, against 3% for insurers and 1% for fund managers. That means that, six years on from the last banking crisis, Vietnam’s lenders are still too big – and too important – to fail.
To their credit, they know that all too well.
Speak to chief executives in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City and a picture emerges of an industry under almost intolerable strain. State-run lenders feel pressure to favour state-owned enterprises, while all banks are strongly encouraged to disburse capital to small and medium-sized enterprises.
This makes sense.
The government is selling stakes in leading SOEs, but the process is slow, and these large, capital-hungry firms still dominate entire sectors. SMEs are the life-blood of the economy, accounting in 2017 for 97% of all businesses and 41% of GDP.
Some banks focus overwhelmingly on SMEs. VietinBank alone banks 186,000 smaller enterprises, or 37% of the nation’s total, according to its director of SME lending, Nguyen Thu Hang.
Many allocate at least half of their annual credit to small firms. In 2017, 60% of the capital disbursed by Saigon-Hanoi Bank was channelled to SMEs, according to company data. This leaves little capital free to fund the dreams and aspirations of the country’s best young private firms at the upper end of the SME spectrum. And that’s a problem.
“We are struggling with it,” he says. “We have X amount of capital to give out to everyone, and the biggest share has to go to SOEs and SMEs. Some of it goes to agriculture, because government wants to support that too. And whatever’s left, including credit we want to lend to our best private-sector clients, we have to be really careful with.”The chief executive of one state lender told Asiamoney he felt “crushed” by the burden of keeping the economy ticking over.
Bank chiefs have very little say in how their institutions are run, according to a Ho Chi Minh City-based investment manager whose main equity fund is an investor in two locally listed lenders.
“The flexibility on action is very limited,” he says. “The central bank controls everything. It is in total charge, telling them how much or how little they can grow and to which sectors they need to allocate their portfolios. And this means that leading bankers are more or less simply executors.”
Are the country’s banks any better than they were at the height of the 2012 banking crisis? And are they fit for their primary purpose, which should be to drive an economy brimming with potential forward in the 21st century?
The answer to the first question is yes, but probably not by much. Vietnam’s big banks are certainly profitable enough. In the first half of the year, net profits rose 52% year on year at Techcombank, 53% at Vietcombank and 25% at BIDV, as the banks benefited from a booming economy, rising fee income and a growing urban population that is keen to take out loans, rent apartments, and open accounts.
“Banks’ balance sheets and income statements have improved overall” since 2012, says ACB’s Tuan. “Bad debts are down, provisioning is up, there’s better oversight, internal risk management and transparency, and the central bank is already looking at implementing Basel III” requirements further down the line.
“The SBV is also preparing to adopt a risk-based approach to bank supervision, so in the next three to five years, the sector will be even sounder and safer than it is now,” Tuan adds.
The data, though, suggests that Vietnam’s banks could and should be doing far better. According to the SBV, the sector reported mean returns on assets and equity of 0.25% and 3.35% respectively in 2017. The comparative figures are 1.05% and 7.72% in Thailand and 1.4% and 10.7% in Malaysia. In Singapore, the average ROA and ROE of the three big lenders – DBS, OCBC and UOB – was 1% and 10.4%.
Yes, Vietnam is still a frontier state, smaller than all those regional economies. But it also shows how much further the sector has to go.
Analysts praise better-run lenders like Techcombank, which is focusing on retail lending in the wake of its IPO, and VPBank, which dominates consumer finance via its FE Credit unit.
“VPBank is very sophisticated and very clever when it comes to collecting and analyzing data,” says Barry Weisblatt, head of research at Viet Capital Securities.
But there are still too many cookie-cutter outfits that lack scale and which have not invested in digital or set out to distinguish themselves from the rest of the herd.
One investment banker points to the merger of two smaller commercial banks in 2015 and sighs.
“When you have one pile of garbage and you add another, all you end up with is a larger pile of garbage,” he says.
Challenges
And so to the key question: are the banks fit for purpose? There is no doubt that Vietnam has an incredibly bright future. Growth is forecast at a sustainably high rate of between 6% and 7% until at least 2023, according to the IMF. Foreign direct investment is pouring in at a record pace, and index provider MSCI is expected to elevate the country to full emerging-market status by 2020.
“Vietnam is well on track to becoming a mainstream Asean market,” notes Nirukt Sapru, Vietnam chief executive at Standard Chartered. “The size, proximity and geography of the market mean it is poised for very significant growth over the next five to seven years.”
As foreign capital flows in, ambitious SMEs will be plugged into regional and global supply chains, creating national champions in every sector.
“These companies will need the kind of services we can provide,” Sapru adds, “from foreign exchange to letters of credit, cash management, project finance and M&A.”
It’s a good point. Foreign lenders can see Vietnam’s potential very clearly. Over the coming decades, the country should be transformed into a manufacturing hub on a par with the likes of Taiwan and, perhaps in time, South Korea. But to get to where it needs to go, Vietnam needs better, bigger and probably fewer banks.
When asked if Vietnam’s lenders, six years on from a crisis that nearly toppled the industry, are fit for purpose, analysts in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City offer variations on the same answer.
They want the banks to succeed, and believe they can, but are also painfully aware that too many shortcomings have yet to be addressed.
The most upbeat response comes from ACB’s Tuan, who asks and answers the question, editing himself as he goes. “Are Vietnam’s banks fit for purpose,” he wonders aloud. “I think so. The answer is likely yes. Well, the answer is hopefully yes.”
Elliot Wilson reported on Euromoney
Read full article at: https://www.euromoney.com/article/b1b49s6tt646xj/vietnam-deals-with-its-problem-banks
Do Muoi, a leader who played key roles in Vietnam’s revolutionary fights and opening-up era, died on October 01, 2018.
The former Party General Secretary passed away at the 108 Military Hospital in Hanoi, after battling a sickness for a long time, receiving care from doctors in and outside Vietnam, said the National Commission of Health Services for Officials. VNExpress, a local media reported.
Do Muoi is a native of Dong My Commune, Thanh Tri District in Hanoi, and a member of Vietnam’s Communist Party for 78 years. He became active with revolutionary activities at early age and joined the French Popular Front at 19. In 1939, he joined the Communist Party of Indochina, marking his first step into the political scene.
The former Party Secretary went through national revolutionaries and played a key role in the country’s development. In 1941, at age 24, he was arrested by the French colonialists and sentenced to 10 years in prison at the famous Hanoi prison Hoa Lo. He broke out of jail four years later and continued being active with revolutionary campaigns. He joined the Party unit of Ha Dong, now a district of Hanoi, led its grand coup against the colonial government and became its Party leader from August 1945.
During the war against colonial French, Do Muoi took different positions across the northern region. He was the Party Secretary of Ha Nam, Nam Dinh and Ninh Binh provinces, and Party leaders of multiple revolutionary units in the area.
In 1955, he was the Party leader and chairman of the port city of Hai Phong. That March, he was elected to be an alternate member of the second Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam. A year later, he took the position of the Deputy Minister of Trade and became Minister in 1958. He also became a delegate of Vietnam’s legislative National Assembly.
In September 1960, he was elected to be a member of the Party’s Central Committee at the National Congress. From 1969 to 1971, he was the Deputy Prime Minister and Chairman of the Economic Office of the Prime Minister. He continued to serve as Deputy Prime Minister from 1976 to 1981.
In 1979, he was elected to be an alternate member of the Politburo, the Party’s decision-making body, and in 1986, became its official member.
Do Muoi became the Party General Secretary of Vietnam in 1991 and held his position until 1997. In December 1997, he became an advisor for the Party’s Central Committee, and continued his role until 2001.
Vietnam Logistics and Warehousing Market is expected to reach around USD 86.7 Billion by the year ending 2022
According to a report byKen Research, Vietnam logistics and warehousing market by service mix (Freight Forwarding, Warehousing and Value Added Services), By Regions (Red River Delta, Da Nang, Ho Chi Minh City and Others) and By End Users (Foods and Beverages, Engineering Equipment and Others); Vietnam freight forwarding market by normal and express delivery, by freight movement (sea freight, road freight, air freight and rail freight), by international and domestic freight forwarding and by flow corridors (Asian Countries, European Countries, America and African Countries); Vietnam warehousing market by number of warehouses (Southern Vietnam and other regions), by end users (retail, electronic devices, textile and footwear, wooden products and others), by international and domestic companies and by business model (industrial freight/retail, container freight, cold storage, agriculture and others);Vietnam express market by international and domestic express, by air and ground express and by market structure (B2C, B2B and B2C);Vietnam e-commerce market by channel (3PL companies and e-commerce merchants), by speed of delivery (2 day delivery, 1 day delivery, same day delivery, within 2 hours and others), by area of delivery (intercity, intracity and same region) and by payment method (cash on delivery and others) and Vietnam 3PL market by market (freight forwarding and warehousing) and by international and domestic companies; Company Profile of Major Players (DHL Express Vietnam, FedEx Vietnam, GHN, Damco Vietnam, Sotrans Vietnam, Vinafco, Kerry Logistics Vietnam, Bac Ky Logistics Vietnam, Nippon Express Vietnam, Vietnam Airlines, Transimex Saigon Corporation, Sea and Air Freight International, Vinalink Logistics, PetroVietnam Transport Corporation, Noi Bai Cargo Terminal Services and Others)
Analysts at Ken Research in their latest publication “Vietnam Logistics and Warehousing Market Outlook to 2022 – By Service Mix (Freight Forwarding, Warehousing, Cold Chain, Express Delivery, E-commerce Logistics, Third Party Logistics)” believe that promoting resource expansion or diversification, automation in warehousing, infrastructural development, E-commerce tie-ups, focus on untapped market and location preferences for setting up a logistics Hub will have a positive impact on market. Vietnam logistics and warehousing market is expected to register a positive CAGR of 13.3% during the forecast period 2018-2022. The market is further expected to be driven by expanding industrial activities, growing E-commerce industry, upcoming infrastructure in the country & continuous investment by the government in development of logistics infrastructure and consistent economic growth.
Express services are likely to become more significant in near future as Vietnam’s economy becomes increasingly integrated owing to rapid growth in international trade services. HCMC region is one of the ideal locations for Vietnam’s exports and imports, which is expected to deliver expertise in the ocean and air forwarding industry. Many distribution / warehousing centers in Vietnam are turning to technology and robotics to help them increase efficiency, accuracy and overall productivity in the near future.
The logistics sector in Vietnam is expected to escalate its way in the urban cities where a huge share of traffic is coming from the tier 2 and tier 3 cities. Modern technologies like ERP, electronic data interchange; customs and accounting software, GPS, bar code system, RFID, automatic retrieval system, robotics, drones and other technologies are anticipated to improve the logistics services in near future. Various Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) signed between Vietnam and the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) in 2015 will lead to boost the country’s trade relations in long term. Additionally, foreign investments are estimated to rise strongly in Vietnam as many logistics enterprises in ASEAN countries are keen to invest and have a better understanding of the laws, customs and culture of Vietnam. The country will focus on attracting investment in logistics infrastructure development, constructing regional and international logistics service centers, improving the efficiency of connection between Vietnam and other countries, thereby becoming a modern logistics hub in upcoming years.
The London-based financial and business information firm FTSE Russell has recently announced that it added Viet Nam, currently classified as a Frontier market, to the watch list for possible reclassification as Secondary Emerging.
This information has had positive impacts on the stock market in Vietnam. Ending the trading session on September 27, VNIndex increased by 0.57 per cent to 1,015 points.
Recently, The Leader, a local media channel had an interview with Le Hai Tra, Chairman of Board of Directors, Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE) about this issue.
What positive impacts will the thing that FTSE added Viet Nam to the watch list for possible reclassification as Secondary Emerging have on the stock market?
Le Hai Tra: It is the prospect that Vietnam’s stock market will be officially upgraded 12 months later. This means that investment funds, which are operating based on the FTSE Emerging index, will invest more in listed stocks eligible to be listed in this index basket. Thence, a capital flow is likely to appear, forming a new wave of investment to Vietnam.
In addition to the recent sharp increase in market size, what changes in Vietnam’s stock market have caught FTSE’s attention, adding Vietnam to the watch list?
Le Hai Tra: In recent years, Vietnam’s stock market has met quantitative criteria on size and liquidity of listed companies. Recently, the groups of macroeconomic indicators, the national credit rating, the legal/management system, and the stock market performance have been improved.
MSCI has also been monitoring the Vietnamese stock market for many years but has not removed Vietnam from the Frontier Markets list. What are the main reasons, and can Vietnam change to meet MSCI requirements?
Le Hai Tra: MSCI is not the sole firm which calculates stock indexes. Apart from MSCI, there are international firms that calculate stock indexes for global investment purposes such as FTSE Russell or S&P.
Although these firms have something in common, they have their own views, principles, and criteria on market ranking. For example, MSCI only ranked South Korea in Emerging Market.
The reasons why Vietnam has not been upgraded were announced and fully explained by MSCI. Vietnam has made significant endeavours and improvements but needs to be recognized and supported by the international investment community which will influence the views of firms calculating indexes such as FTSE or MSCI. That is what Vietnam needs to do better.
If Vietnam was ungraded, there would be strong inbound FDI into the stock market of Vietnam, then how would the size of Vietnam’s stock market be? Will foreign ownership limits in some companies become a barrier to this new inbound FDI?
Le Hai Tra: According to the FTSE criteria, 35 companies listed on the HOSE and 4 listed on the HNX are qualified for the FTSE Emerging Index, accounting for 0.52 per cent.
This reflects the fact that Vietnam’s listed companies have limited sizes and liquidity, based on the total market capitalization adjusted by the free-float rate.
Accordingly, it is estimated that investment funds will invest around $500 million in Vietnam’s stock market.
We should note that, according to the FTSE criteria, some stocks with large capitalization of Vietnam are not listed in the FTSE index basket due to unavailable room for foreign ownership or low free-float rates. However, capital flows into the Vietnamese market after upgrading will not only be limited to investment funds operating on the basis of the FTSE Emerging Index.
A large mobile network operator will develop eSIM, the nascent technology which is expected to change the world in the near future.
eSIM for the first time was used in Samsung Gear S2 smart watch marketed in 2016. eSIM is used in Apple’s latest two flagships – iPhone XS and XS Max.
At present, only 10 countries offer eSIM support, including the US, UK, Austria, Canada, Croatia, Czech, Germany, Hungary, India and Spain. There is no mobile network operator offering eSIM support in Vietnam.
This means that all the iPhones imported to Vietnam, including genuine products to be distributed by authorized resellers which bear VN/A code, won’t be able to use 2 sims because Vietnamese mobile operators still don’t support e-sims.
Tri Thuc Tre quoted its sources as reporting that a large telco in Vietnam has taken the first step to develop eSIM.
Analysts commented that it is promising for telcos which are pioneers in the field, because ‘the early bird will catch the worm’.
They said the eSIM market will be large. The first eSIM supporter will attract all iPhone users in Vietnam. Other big manufacturers, including Samsung, Oppo and Huawei, are planning to integrate the technology into their upcoming smartphone models. If so, the number of clients will be huge.
A representative of a large mobile network said on Nhip Song Kinh Te that eSIM is definitely the trend that all firms in the telecommunications industry must follow.
“Mobile network operators will, sooner or later, have to support eSIM, because hardware developers and telecommunication services will follow the trend,” he said.
The senior executive said the story for now is not whether to follow eSIM technology or not, but how and when to develop the technology.
“It’s not easy to develop a new product, which is non-traditional and relates to both software and hardware,” he said.
Sebastian Barros from Axiata in Ericsson cited an Ovum report as saying that the eSim market is expected to increase from 4.4 million devices in 2016 to 234 million by 2021.
Tablets and wearable devices such as iPad Pro and Samsung Galaxy Gear were bestsellers among eSIM devices sold in 2016.
However, the situation will be different as the first eSIM smartphones have been marketed. It is expected that 66 percent of devices using eSIM by 2021 will be smartphones.
However, physical simcards will still exist in the market for the next several years.
The new restriction on banks of using only 40 per cent of their short-term deposits for long and medium-term loans should not take effect next year, the HCM City Real Estate Association has said.
In a document to the Government and the State Bank of Viet Nam, HoREA said: “It is not necessary, it is not practical and does not meet the requirements of developing the real-estate market.”
The rate should remain at 45 per cent, it suggested.
HoREA mentioned in its documents circulars issued by State Bank of Viet Nam including circular 36/2014/TT-NHNN, 19/2017/TT-NHNN, in which the maximum level that banks can use to give long and mid-term loan was 60 per cent in 2016 and 50 per cent in 2017. It will then drop to 40 per cent by January 2019.
The association said the law requires property developers to have own capital of 15-20 per cent of the project cost and can borrow the rest.
But banks are unable to meet that demand since short-term deposits account for a large proportion of their total deposits, the association said.
The second reason the association wanted the new regulation to be delayed was the sharp decline in the property market in the first nine months of the year as credit to the sector fell to the lowest level in three years.
But next year the market would rebound, driven by the mid-priced segment, the association said.
The industrial property market would also grow strongly since many foreign investors are choosing Viet Nam to move into, it said.
This would also boost the office and hired apartment segments, it added.
Young Vietnamese are increasingly choosing outbound tours for their holidays as the tour fees are getting cheaper.
Just two or three years ago, a tour of South Korea cost VND20 million or more, and the cheapest tour to Japan VND30 million. Now, outbound tours have become affordable to many more Vietnamese as tour fees have decreased significantly.
The senior executive of a travel firm in Hanoi said that tours to South Korea, Taiwan, Japan and China are just a little more expensive than tours to Southeast Asian countries.
A tour to South Korea which lasts five days and four nights, for example, costs VND11.5-12 million. Travelers pay VND21-22 million to travel Japan for four days and four nights. Some travel firms offer low-cost tours to South Korea and Taiwan at VND8-9 million only.
According to Tran Thi Bao Thu from Fiditour, outbound tours are getting cheaper thanks to a series of new direct air routes opened by low-cost carriers. Tourism promotion agencies in other countries, aware of the strong rise of the Vietnamese market, are organizing promotion campaigns to attract Vietnamese travelers.
South Korea often runs programs to stimulate demand and cooperates with travel firms to launch attractive products. Singapore props up expenses for big groups of travelers.
Meanwhile, Taiwan is applying a loosened visa policy, under which Vietnamese travelers do not have to prove their financial capability.
The policy on giving support directly to Vietnam’s travel firms in promoting tourism applied by tourism agencies of other countries has also helped make outbound tours cheaper.
Truong Thi Thu Giang, deputy director of Vietravel, Taiwanese, South Korean and Japanese local management agencies usually have working sessions with every travel firm in Vietnam.
“They prop up promotion expenditures per year, per campaign and offer discounts for excursion tickets if travel firms bring tourists to their localities,” she explained.
With tours to Japan at good prices (less than VND30 million), travelers transit in Singapore, or take direct flights to Nagoya instead of Tokyo or Osaka.
As for Southeast Asian markets, the tour fees have been stable for a few years because the service fees have remained unchanged, while the airfare has become cheaper because air carriers have increased the flight frequency and number of seats.
According to the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT), 383,000 Vietnamese traveled to Taiwan in 2017, up by 95 percent over the year before.
Statistics all show the steady increase in number of Vietnamese traveling abroad. The number of outbound travelers has accounted for more than 60 percent of travelers for some years. To attract travelers to domestic tours, the tour fees need to be more competitive.
The first trading session of the new month saw the VN-Index up by more than 6 points at one stage.
The morning’s uptrend, however, did not spread throughout the market. Oil and gas stocks such as PVS, PVD, PVB, and PVC continued to attract good cash flows after the Brent crude price reached its highest level in four years last week.
Bank stocks such as CTG, EIB, MBB, STB, SHB, TPB, LPB and HDB also attracted good cash flows. STB neared its ceiling on trade of nearly 10 million shares, with foreigners net buying 4.3 million.
Bluechips such as VHM, VIC, PNJ, MWG, and HPG also did quite well and helped the market upwards. Steel stocks such as HPG, HSG, NKG, SMC and TLH as well as PHR, TRC and DRI also attracted cash.
The VN-Index increased 4.23 points (0.42 per cent) to 1,021.36 points in the morning session, the HNX-Index 0.35 points (0.3 per cent) to 116.63 points, and the UPCoM-Index 0.2 points (0.37 per cent) to 54.41 points.
Liquidity was quite high at VND3.2 trillion ($137.2 million). Foreign investors were net buyers by VND100 billion ($4.28 million) and provided positive support in regard to investor sentiment.
Top stocks such as HCM, SSI, VND and SHS all fell, while AGR, BVS, BSI, VDS and ART rose sharply.
Mr. Tran Huu Phuc, Head of the Brokerage Department at Vietcombank Securities (VCBS), said that now the index has surpassed the psychological threshold of 1,000 points, this level is now a support threshold from both technical and psychological perspectives. In the context of the market still responding positively to macroeconomic factors and world markets, a less positive scenario would be unlikely.
“We continue to see that the index is in an accumulation phase and heading to a new level in the medium term,” he said. “Its movements over the past week have been positive but there is no sign of any new trend.”
Meanwhile, Mr. Nguyen Nhat Cuong, Deputy Head of Research and Analysis at Vietinbank Securities, forecast that the uptrend in the VN-Index will remain in place with a resistance threshold of 1,025 points in long-term MA 200 in the context of the index still clinging closely to the upper margin of the Bollinger range.
“Therefore, I think the VN-Index will move forward and conquer this threshold in the next trading week with support at the macro level and net buying by foreign investors,” he said. “Q3 business results have also been impressive.”
Vietnam is betting car-making can be a ticket to a more prosperous economy, just as it was for the likes of Japan and South Korea.
VinFast, a unit of Vietnam’s largest conglomerate Vingroup, is set to become the country’s first fully-fledged domestic car manufacturer when its first production models built under its own badge hit the streets next August.
“Where else in the world can you do this with this sort of speed?” said Shaun Calvert, vice president of manufacturing at VinFast Trading and Production LLC, looking out over an area of factory floor where nine months earlier there was only sea.
Calvert was speaking on a recent tour of the company’s new plant, a sprawling island complex in the northern Vietnamese port town of Haiphong, where the two models will be built.
From a standing start, VinFast will have the capacity to produce 250,000 cars annually in the next five years or so, equivalent to 92 percent of all the cars sold in Vietnam last year, according to data collated by the Vietnam Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (VAMA).
Vingroup says it only embarked on creating VinFast a little over a year ago and has earmarked about $3.5 billion for the project.
“We are driving the rapid expansion of the domestic automobile market so we are absolutely focused on winning here first,” CEO Jim Deluca said ahead of the Paris Motor Show this week, where VinFast will reveal its first export markets.
“We’re looking to expand both within ASEAN and outside.”
Most cars sold in Vietnam are foreign brands assembled in the country from kits. But a series of free trade agreements have reduced import duties and are opening up the market. A 30 percent import tax on cars from other Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) countries was scrapped this year.
Electric scooters
Vingroup already dominates the real estate market in Vietnam with Vinhomes, has entered the healthcare market with Vinmec, runs a chain of supermarkets called Vinmart, and entertains tourists at Vinpearl resorts.
“There’s probably 4 million customers today who are associated with Vingroup in one way or another so it’s a huge brand, it’s an aspirational brand, and those customers are ready for a domestic VinFast product,” said Deluca.
In a country synonymous with the motorbikes that zip around the clogged streets of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, VinFast will also produce 250,000 electric scooters a year alongside the 250,000 cars, in an ambitious production target that’s set to eventually increase to 1 million units each a year.
VinFast has also started on the development of a battery electric vehicle with Germany’s EDAG Engineering, to be introduced in the future, Deluca added.
“We felt on the car portfolio it was best to start with an internal combustion engine and then soon after that launch the battery electric vehicle,” said Deluca. “From an infrastructure perspective, it’s a lot easier to charge a scooter than it is an automobile.”
The speed with which VinFast has moved has partly been possible due to a reliance on off-the-shelf parts.
VinFast’s first two models, an SUV and a small sedan, are being built on a frame from BMW. The components have been engineered by Canadian firm Magna International’s Magna Steyr, while design work has been done by Italian design house Pininfarina.
“That gives us the ability to move very, very quickly and to come out with a vehicle that is 100 percent ours and looks like no other vehicles that are on the road today,” Deluca said.
“National pride”
The company has also imported foreign expertise. At least five of the VinFast leadership team, including Deluca and Calvert, are veterans of General Motors Co.
In June, the U.S. automobile giant agreed to transfer full ownership of its Hanoi factory to VinFast for the Vietnamese firm to produce small cars under a GM global license from 2019.
But, despite the institutional experience VinFast has acquired, a move into the highly competitive automobile industry is not without significant risks.
Local auto assembly companies have tried – and failed – in Vietnam to sell home-grown models to the masses. Regionally, companies such as Malaysia’s Proton or Australia’s Holden have struggled to gain traction outside their home countries.
“The key question is why the world needs yet another car brand in a era when hardware is commoditising,” said Bill Russo, head of Shanghai-based consultancy Automobility Ltd and a former Chrysler executive.
“The fact that they have outsourced design and manufacturing and are relying on foreign R&D tells me they are following a traditional path that may not be competitive in an era of digital mobility services.”
Bui Ngoc Huyen, chairman of Vinaxuki, which tried to establish a domestic automaker but ceased production in 2012 before its first car was officially launched, said Vingroup’s deep pockets should help, but warned that building a brand would take time.
“You have to move from producing small and cheap cars to luxury ones,” he said. “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.”
Deluca said VinFast’s early models would be “very affordable” to lure local buyers, but declined to give details of pricing.
But in Vietnam, where hundreds of thousands of people take to the streets with flares and flags to celebrate moderate success after under-23 football games, VinFast is banking on an additional competitive edge
“We think national pride is a tremendous advantage for VinFast,” said Deluca. “What we’re doing here is something special for the men and women of Vietnam”.
Vietnamese shares are expected to continue rising this week, propped up by a string of positive news for the market and domestic economy.
The benchmark VN-Index increased for a third week with growth of 1.4 per cent last week, ending Friday at 1,017.13 points on the Hồ Chí Minh Stock Exchange (HOSE). It was also the highest landmark since June 12 this year.
On the smaller bourse in Hà Nội, the HNX-Index added 0.4 per cent last week, closing Friday at 116.28 points.
Liquidity also maintained high with an average of 441 million shares worth VNĐ5.83 trillion (US$250.2 million) being traded each session on the two exchanges last week.
A lot of good news was released last week, backing up investor sentiment.
On Thursday, FTSE Russell announced it would include Việt Nam on its watch list for possible reclassification. Việt Nam’s securities market is currently classified as a frontier market. With this decision, the local market will have an opportunity to be upgraded to emerging market status.
The FTSE decision was an acknowledgement of Việt Nam’s efforts to improve market quality, and in the short term, a flock of capital would likely flow into the market to take advantage of this news, according to Nguyễn Nhật Cường, deputy director of the analysis division at the Vietinbank Securities Co.
“However, we don’t expect this capital flow to be enormous,” Cường was quoted as saying on tinnhanhchungkhoan.vn.
It would take time for Việt Nam to satisfy some FTSE criteria, such as foreign ownership limits and permission of free movement of capital/foreign exchange, he said.
If these bottlenecks were addressed, Việt Nam’s securities market may receive about $500-600 million from FTSE and MSCI tracking funds, Cường predicted.
Foreign traders concluded last week as net buyers on the HOSE, picking up shares worth total net value of VNĐ467.6 billion. They were net sellers on the Hà Nội Stock Exchange, however, with a net value of nearly VNĐ40 billion.
The market was also supported by good macro-economic information released on Friday. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in the third quarter increased 6.88 per cent over the same period of last year. Inflation is likely to stay under 4 per cent in 2018, well in line with the Government’s target for the whole year.
“All this information is supporting the market. After the VN-Index surpassed the 1,000-point threshold, the market trend is expected to go further,” said Nguyễn Hồng Khanh, head of analysis at the Việt Nam Investment Securities JSC.
However, Khanh warned of short-term profit-taking sessions.
“But I think this is good for the market for the time being. The overheating will easily lead to strong selling pressure afterwards,” Khanh said.
Information that might have negative impacts on the market including the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate hike and escalating US-China trade tensions last week.
Among prominent gainers last week were banking-securities, oil and gas, real estate, and textile stocks.