Vietnam to feel the ripples of the Yuan rout

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China’s currency may have stabilized, but the pain is spreading.

Think the latest yuan rout is over? Tell that to Vietnam.

According to a report by Shuli Ren on Bloomberg, the slide in China’s currency paused this week after jawboning by the central bank, which told commercial lenders it has the tools to stabilize the market and urged them to avoid “herd behavior,” Bloomberg News reported Tuesday. But the ripples of the yuan’s 4.7 percent drop this year may be just starting to spread to the country’s neighbors.

The Vietnamese dong has been moving steadily closer to the edge of its 3 percent daily trading band against the dollar over the past two weeks, as traders bet on faster depreciation.

Under Pressure

Vietnam’s currency traders are pushing the dong close to its daily 3 percent trading band again

State Bank of Vietnam guided the official rate 1.1 percent lower this year, causing a 2.7 percent fall in the market rate. Like the yuan, the dong is loosely pegged to the dollar.

Currency traders are speculating on further declines, having seen how Vietnam has reacted in the past when the yuan has slumped. On Aug. 12, 2015, one day after China jolted global markets with a sudden yuan devaluation, Vietnam widened the dong’s trading band. The currency ended the year with 3 percent depreciation in the official exchange rate, and a 5.1 percent drop in the market rate.

The retreat in the dong’s market rate this year is little more than half the slump in the currency of its bigger neighbor, suggesting further depreciation is possible – particularly if the yuan resumes its decline.

It’s unclear how serious China is about stemming the yuan’s slide. Instead of deploying its $3 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves to sell the dollar, Beijing has largely been using onshore currency swaps to stabilize the spot rate. That’s a less effective tool because traders can simply place bearish bets offshore instead.

Vietnamese traders may also be skeptical of China’s rhetoric. On July 3, People’s Bank of China Governor Yi Gang said the country would “keep the yuan exchange rate basically stable at a reasonable and balanced level.” The currency fell more than 2.5 percent in the ensuing month. The yuan is the worst performer of 12 major Asian currencies against the dollar in the past month.

Near the Cliff

The yuan depreciated 3.1 percent against the dollar over the past month, the most among major Asian currencies

State Bank of Vietnam may be forced to yield. In just one week in July, it sold more than $2 billion to banks to meet demand for the dollar, the Saigon Times reported. It’s unclear how much the central bank has shelled out since to prop up the dong. At this rate, it will quickly erode the $12 billion of foreign reserves painstakingly built up last year.

Vietnam is more reluctant to countenance depreciation this time around. Unlike in 2015, inflation is now a problem, with the consumer price index blowing past the central bank’s 4 percent target rate for two months in a row.

Vietnam is Southeast Asia’s most open economy on some measures, with imports accounting for almost 100 percent of GDP. As a result, it’s more vulnerable to price pressures. A 1 percentage point fall in the dong could lead to a 0.25 percentage point increase in headline inflation, HSBC Holdings Plc estimates.

Vietnam’s inflation rate has edged above the central bank’s 4 percent target

Two years ago, it took a dovish Federal Reserve to release the pressure on the yuan. Vietnam can’t count on that now, with the U.S. central bank determined not to overheat an already strong economy.

If the market pressure persists, Vietnam will be forced into grudging rate increases, like its Southeast Asian peers Indonesia and the Philippines.

It had better hope the PBOC means what it says.

This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

To contact the author of this story: Shuli Ren at sren38@bloomberg.net

Vietnamese restaurant opens in Huntington, WV, USA

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A new Vietnamese restaurant opened in downtown Huntington on Wednesday.

According to a report on herald-dispatch.com, Pho U & Mi, located at 1451 3rd Ave. in the former Clean Eatz building, specializes in pho and banh mi and other specialty food and drinks. Pho is a Vietnamese soup that is a staple of Vietnamese cuisine and culture.

“Our bread is baked fresh daily,” said new owner Alex Phan. “At Pho U & Mi we offer quick lunch sandwiches with Vietnamese food, along with a few house specialty dishes, including pho (beef noodle soup) or chicken noodle soup. We also serve rice with curry chicken, as well as wok bang beef with rice. For those who like spicy food, and we have noodle beef stew.”

Phan said the restaurant also will feature appetizers, such as egg rolls, spring rolls and crab rangoon.

“We also offer boba tea of some of the famous flavors,” Phan said. “We also have fruit smoothies to cool you down during these hot summer days.”

The restaurant currently has five employees, but it is still hiring.

Pho U & Mi is open from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and from 11:30 a.m to 8 p.m. on Sunday.

A grand opening is scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 18, with Hot Rod Grille being the DJ for the event.

“The DJ will be playing top 40 and some country music during lunch from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 5 to 7 p.m. during dinner,” Phan said.

For more information, call 681-888-5338 or 304-763-1763.

Not only in Vietnam, people also eating dog meat in the UK

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Call for a ban on people eating dog meat in the UK

Would you eat dog meat?

According to a report by Imran Rahman – Jones Newsbeat reporter on BBC, UK law says that you can’t buy or sell dog meat, but if you humanely kill a dog you own, you can eat it.

But there have been calls to make it illegal, including from SNP MP Dr Lisa Cameron who believes the public would be “right behind legislation calling for a ban”.

A spokesman for the prime minister says the UK has some of the highest animal welfare standards in the world and “we wish to maintain that”.

Dr Cameron is the chair of the All-party Parliamentary Dog Advisory Welfare Group.

She told Newsbeat she wants a law banning eating dog meat to be passed quickly, adding: “I don’t imagine that there will be any party in parliament which would stand against that.”

This is one of eight dogs which was brought to the UK after being rescued from a farm in South Korea

A ban is also backed by Foreign Office minister and Conservative MP Sir Alan Duncan who told the Sun it is “absolutely right”.

Dr Cameron says there has been a rise in the consumption of dog meat in the UK, but two animal welfare organisations that Newsbeat spoke to say that they don’t have evidence for this.

The World Dog Alliance says it doesn’t know if there are people in the UK who eat dog meat – but still wants it to be made illegal.

Humane Society International told Newsbeat it has “never come across any evidence to suggest that dog meat is being consumed in the UK”.

Some countries in Asia eat dogs such as Vietnam, South Korea, and it is also said to happen in Switzerland, although it isn’t widespread.

Animal organisations claim that some dogs which are eaten in other countries are stolen pets, are kept in horrible conditions and are tortured before they’re killed.

Dr Lisa Cameron is an SNP MP for East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow

Kike Yuen is project executive at the World Dog Alliance, based in Hong Kong, which campaigns to promote laws on banning dog meat consumption around the world.

The organisation has been lobbying for a similar law in the US. There have been few reported cases of people eating dog in the country.

Proposals for a law banning eating dog meat in America is currently working its way through US Congress.

“The reason why we did the legislation in the United States is because we found that there are some Asian immigrants eating dogs there,” Kike told Newsbeat.

He adds: “We are worried that it is going to happen in the UK.”

This dog was rescued from a farm in South Korea

Humane Society International runs campaigns to end the dog meat trade in countries including Indonesia, China and South Korea.

Spokesperson Wendy Higgins says she “wouldn’t want anyone to think that dog meat eating is rife in the UK or that it has anything to do with the number of people that we have living in this country from Asia”.

She added: “Most people across Asia are united in wanting to see an end to the dog meat trade and I don’t see numbers of people from Asia in the United Kingdom having any impact on that whatsoever.”

Despite there being no evidence that people in the UK eat dogs, Dr Cameron said “the government has to take action to nip it in the bud”.

She added: “I think it’s a concern if it is happening at all, no matter where it is happening. I’m not aware that it’s linked with any particular groups in terms of research outcome.”

Theresa May’s official spokesman said: “The commercial trade in dog meat in the UK is illegal, but we will look closely at the decision taken in the US.

“Britain is a nation of animal lovers and we continue to have some of the highest animal welfare standards in the world.

“We wish to maintain that.”

Banks won’t get higher credit limits

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The State Bank of Việt Nam (SBV) will not adjust upward credit growth limits for commercial banks, except in some special cases, for the rest of the year, SBV Governor Lê Minh Hưng said.

The special cases are banks that have been required by the SBV to support ailing credit institutions in their restructuring in 2018, Hưng said.

According to current regulations, SBV sets a credit growth limit for each commercial bank depending on the bank’s health at the beginning of the year. This is done to control credit growth for the entire banking system and to support Government targets.

Earlier, many banks said they were hoping for higher credit limits as they had already used up most, if not all, of their assigned quota for the year.

The central bank’s target this year was to expand lending by a maximum of 17 per cent, lower than the 18.17 per cent recorded last year.

Experts believed that the credit slowdown would allow banks to pay more attention to credit quality and credit risk management.

To control the credit quality, SBV also required banks to focus their lending on production, business and priority sectors such as agriculture businesses, firms producing goods for export, small- and medium-sized enterprises, enterprises operating in auxiliary industries and hi-tech enterprises including startups.

They must strictly control lending to sectors with high potential risks such as real estate, securities, consumption, build-operate-transfer (BOT) and build-transfer (BT) projects to promptly detect any problems. — VNS

Japan arrests three Vietnamese nationals after massive shoplifting haul

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A shopper (L) checks items inside a shoes shop in Tokyo, Japan. Photo by Reuters/Issei Kato

Japanese police have arrested three Vietnamese nationals after discovering 1,700 stolen items in a house in Saitama Prefecture.

The three arrested persons are all unemployed. One of them has been identified as Pham Trong Ha, 26, Japan’s Sankei newspaper reported on Monday.

Police from Ishikawa Prefecture busted the trio following the discovery of the 1,700 shoplifted items, about 300 of which were medicines and cosmetics, in Ha’s house in Kawaguchi City, Saitama Prefecture.

The goods are suspected to have been shoplifted by several Vietnamese groups before being stored in Ha’s house, from where they would be shipped to Vietnam for sale.

Ha’s criminal activities were uncovered following statements by another unnamed Vietnamese shoplifter that Ishikawa Prefecture Police had arrested in May, the Sankei report said.

Ha has confessed to knowing that the items stored in his house were most likely stolen goods.

Vietnamese expats in Japan have committed more crimes than any other foreign non-permanent residents living in the country last year, according to Kyodo News.

Police recorded 5,140 crimes committed by Vietnamese people in 2017, up from 3,177 the year before, accounting for 30.2 percent of the total number of crimes committed by foreign nationals.

Shoplifting was the dominant crime, with 2,037 cases, while burglary jumped to 325 in 2017 from just 12 the previous year.

Vietnamese have surpassed Brazilians to become the fourth biggest minority group in Japan after the number of non-permanent residents in the country grew more than six-fold between 2008 and 2017, when it reached about 260,000 – Vnexpress reported.

Little Saigon or Viet Town? Debate Over Naming Cultural District in Boston Neighborhood

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A group is trying to bring cultural district status to historic Fields Corner in Dorchester, hoping to rename it ‘Little Saigon’ or ‘Viet Town’ to reflect Vietnamese roots

Khang Nguyen, a major voice serving the Vietnamese in one of Boston’s largest neighborhoods, is part of a group trying to bring cultural district status to Dorchester, which means it could be officially called “Little Saigon” or “Viet Town.” Jonathan Choe and Kaitlin McKinley Becker reported on NECN.

There’s a name debate going on in one of Boston’s largest neighborhoods.

A group is trying to bring cultural district status to the historic Fields Corner, considered to be one of the most ethnically diverse areas in Dorchester.

Khang Nguyen is a major voice serving this emerging inter-generational community through his weekly online videos. He’s also vice president of the Vietnamese-American Civic Association of Massachusetts where he helps many refugees and immigrants who fled the tiny Southeast Asian country after the war.

By his organization’s estimates, there are now nearly 5,000 Vietnamese living in Dorchester alone, and more than 100 establishments, including restaurants, grocery stores, a senior center, and a cosmetology school, are all owned and operated by Vietnamese entrepreneurs.

Nguyen says it’s now time for the Fields Corner commercial district to reflect this majority.

“We want the name, that will prove it is current to this situation,” Nguyen said.

Nguyen is part of the working group trying to bring cultural district status to the area, which means it could officially be called “Little Saigon” or possibly “Viet Town” to reflect his people’s roots.

“Just to be clear, we are not renaming Fields Corner or everything that says Dorchester,” said Boston City Councilor at-large Michelle Wu, who is helping all the community stakeholders navigate through this process that is now getting a bit complicated. “We just saw it the year before in Jamaica Plain with a district now called Boston’s Latin Quarter.”

But not everyone agrees with the proposed name change to reflect Vietnamese roots.

Candice Gartley, who leads the All Dorchester Sports League, a non-profit serving the part of Fields Corner that isn’t of a Vietnamese majority, says, “Many of our kids come from Geneva Avenue. African Americans, Cape Verdeans.”

After flooding, Vietnamese diocese urges aid for victims

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In this photo taken on July 22, 2018, a village is submerged in flood water in the suburb of Hanoi, Vietnam. Flooding triggered by tropical storm Son Tinh has killed at least 20 people and left over a dozen missing in northern Vietnam.(Credit: Vietnam News Agency via AP.)

Heavy rains have caused flooding in northern and north-central Vietnam, and officials of the local Church are encouraging aid for those affected. The Crux reported.

Father Paul Nguyễn Quốc Anh, director of Caritas in the Diocese of Hưng Hóa, has challenged laity and religious to buy food, water, and medicine for the flood and landside victims, “for Catholics and non-Catholics,” AsiaNews reported.

Continuous rains from July 23 – Aug. 6 have led to flooding around Sơn Tây which has killed at least 28 people. Eleven people are missing, buildings, roads and bridges have collapsed, and agriculture has been severely affected.

Hà Văn Huyên, the leader of a village in the Yên Bái province, recalled the devastating moment of a flash flood.

“At first I saw that the flow of water was very small,” he told AsiaNews. “Then, the water started flowing in waves. Five minutes later, the water rose more and more. When I saw the danger, I screamed for people to escape. After only an hour, this huge flood appeared, about ten metres high and wiped out many houses.”

Also damaged in the flood was the Sùng Đô chapel in the Nghĩa Lộ District. The church’s pastor, Father Joseph Nguyễn Trọng Dưỡng, described the damages to his parishioners, which is largely made up of H’Mông people.

“About 20 families have lost their homes and their rice paddies. The family of Mr Cứ A Chu, who has 13 children, lost home, rice field and gardens. People have little rice left to eat and unclean spring water to drink.”

On July 27, Auxiliary Bishop Alsphonse Nguyễn Hữu Long of Hưng Hóa visited the small mountain community of Sùng and the missionary area in Tả Phời. The areas are notably poor and remote. The bishop encouraged the residents to persevere during this difficult time.

Samsung Galaxy Note 9 prices leaked after getting listed in Vietnam

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It seems that the leaks of the Samsung Galaxy Note 9 won’t end till before the launch. In the latest leak just hours before the Unpacked event that is taking place today, the company itself has spilt the beans and revealed the price of the phone.

According to a report on Firstpost.com, with most of the alleged specifications of the device being out due to the various leaks, we probably can expect what the phone would be like.

Samsung Galaxy Note 8. Image: Tech2

Also, the Galaxy Note 9 has been flaunted through teasers by the company itself.Galaxy Note 9 was spotted being listed for pre-order in Vietnam which showed off the device’s price as well as some gifts like a complementary pair of premium AKG N60NC wireless headphones that are bundled with it. But these pre-order gifts might differ from region to region.

Leaked prices of the Galaxy Note 9. Image: Phone Arena

The screenshots of the listings have been taken out by Phone Arena, but the pre-order page has vanished just before the launch. No surprises there!

These listings show the 128 GB and 512 GB variants of the smartphone as per the screenshots. Also,  Slashleaks has locked down the leak pre-order page, but still it hasn’t been completely taken off.

Leaked prices of the Galaxy Note 9. Image: Phone Arena

These screenshots reveal that the Galaxy Note 9 is priced at VND 2,50,00,000 which comes to roughly Rs 73,700 for the 128 GB internal storage variant. The 512 GB variant is priced at VND 2,94,90,000 which comes to about Rs 87,000.

The prices seem to fall in line with the previous rumours, even though prices in all the markets differ.

Leaked prices of the Galaxy Note 9. Image: Phone Arena

As per the report in PhoneArena, along with the all-new S Pen, the device is said to be packed with a free fast charge wireless charging stand, USB C to HDMI adapter for DeX support, clear view cover and a JBL Inspire 700 wireless sports headphones. But as mentioned before these might differ for different regions.

Now to get the official details you can check out the Unpacked event on Twitter, Facebook or visit the Samsung Newsroom.

Ten-digit phone numbers not affected by network code shift

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Cell phone subscribers with 10-digit phone numbers will reportedly not be affected by the coming two network code shifts in mid-September of this year and July of next year, officials said.

According to a report on  SGT, The Ministry of Information and Communications had previously launched a plan to switch mobile subscribers from 11-digit phone numbers to 10-digit ones, which will take effect on September 15. Subscribers with 11-digit phone numbers for human-to-human (H2H) communication will have their numbers converted to 10-digit ones, with new network codes dependent on the carrier they register with.

Meanwhile, current subscribers with 10-digit phone numbers will see no changes during the second network code shift and will continue using machine-to-machine (M2M) communication between July 1, 2019, and December 31, 2019.

In particular, users who insert 10-digit SIM cards into smart connecting devices, such as power meters and car black boxes, will shift to using the new M2M network code. In the second shift, mobile carriers will work with their customers to recall their 10-digit phone numbers and concurrently apply the prefix 1x for M2M subscribers.

The 10-digit mobile phone numbers beginning with 09x will be offered to H2H human users only, which means the numbers will be used by humans, not machines.

In the coming time, local mobile network carriers VinaPhone, MobiFone and Viettel will establish systems for managing M2M subscribers only, with the aim of helping customers take the initiative to supervise the operations of SIM cards inserted into M2M devices, including measurement and navigation devices.

According to the Telecom Department under the ministry, after local carriers switch 11-digit numbers to 10-digit ones, mobile phone numbers with the prefix 01x will then be applied to M2M subscribers.

M2M subscribers refer to devices used for transmitting and receiving data and text messages, while H2H subscribers are customers who register for mobile subscriptions for daily human communication.

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DHL eCommerce and DHL Express in Vietnam Advances Efforts to Combat Illegal Wildlife Trade

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In order to help combat the shipping and transport of illegal wildlife products, TRAFFIC, through the USAID-funded Wildlife Trafficking Response, Assessment and Priority Setting (Wildlife TRAPS) Project, delivered a capacity building workshop today for staff at DHL eCommerce and DHL Express in Viet Nam to learn how they can play a key role in helping prevent the trafficking of wildlife – Reported by Traffic News.

The workshop covered the local and global implications of wildlife trafficking crimes, the role of the CITES convention in regulating the international wildlife trade, common wildlife trafficking trade routes, the modes and methods used by wildlife traffickers for shipping illegal products, and risks to the transport and logistics sector. During the workshop, participants discussed potential vulnerable points along their supply chains in Viet Nam and ways to strengthen their company’s operations, staff and customers’ awareness, and reporting mechanisms for wildlife trafficking. Last October, TRAFFIC and DHL convened another workshop for DHL staff in Ho Chi Minh.

It has become critically important for DHL to work together as a Group to identify the smuggling of live animals and their parts and derivatives through cargo, post and express channels, and to ascertain actions to reduce these risks. Our cohesive effort towards cutting off transportation links of these products to buyers is a small but important step towards ending illegal wildlife trade on a global scale

“This training is useful as we know that wildlife is transported [through courier companies]. We want our staff to know how to check shipments for animals. This is really important for our day to day work.” – Nguyen Ngoc Quynh, Central Hub Manager, North, DHL eCommerce Viet Nam

Following the workshop, staff were awarded certificates of participation along with informational resources for further learning. In the coming months, TRAFFIC will continue to provide technical guidance to DHL in Viet Nam to support the implementation of those action points identified during the event.

“Criminal networks take advantage of the connectivity and ease of online marketplaces and commercial transport supply chains to smuggle illegal wildlife and DHL in Viet Nam is setting in motion strategies to protect themselves from this to happen through their business. The Deutsche Post DHL Group is already a signatory of the United for Wildlife Transport Taskforce Buckingham Palace Declaration, so this workshop could be seen as another practical step in helping to implement those high-level commitments” said TRAFFIC’s Monica Zavagli, Wildlife TRAPS Senior Project Officer.

Viet Nam ranks fourth in wildlife trafficking instances through the air transport sector[1] globally, and is the second most common destination (after China) for the trafficking of rhino horns. In recent years, Viet Nam has been on the front lines of many large-scale illegal wildlife seizures, intercepting shipments of rhino horn, ivory, leopard skins, and pangolin scales, among other commonly traded wildlife products.

This was the second workshop in the past month between TRAFFIC and DHL around strengthening in-country supply chains against wildlife trafficking. The first was held with staff in Bangkok, Thailand in late July, and also focused on local capacity building.

Many in the transportation sector are recognising the need to take action against wildlife trafficking. Recently, Etihad developed a new 20-minute online module designed to inform its employees of the business risks associated with the illegal wildlife trade and ways to prevent them. In addition, the USAID Reducing Opportunities for Unlawful Transport of Endangered Species (ROUTES) Partnership has conducted trainings across Africa, the Middle East, and Asia to train airport and airline employees in key wildlife trafficking hubs.

Continue reading “DHL eCommerce and DHL Express in Vietnam Advances Efforts to Combat Illegal Wildlife Trade”

Difficult question for VN Central Bank: Curbing interest, inflation rate

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The government of Vietnam wants to keep the interest rate low and stable in order to encourage economic sectors to expand business, thus helping economic growth.

The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) had to sell more than $2 billion last week. The move, as analysts commented, shows that foreign capital flow in the market is getting weaker.

Foreign portfolio investment is believed to be the major driving force which helped keep the dong/dollar exchange rate stable in 2017 and the first half of 2018.

However, US policies have prompted international investors to withdraw capital from emerging markets.

Analysts stressed that the rapid depreciation of the dong in recent days must not be entirely blamed on foreign capital flow or foreign currency supply-demand imbalance. This was mostly caused by the expectations of the national economy.

The expectations come from outside factors. The China-US trade war is likely to spread and turn into a currency war. The US FED continues its policy on raising the interest rate which may last to 2019 and even to 2020. As a result, many currencies have depreciated sharply against the greenback.

Vietnam’s businesses fear that the fluctuations would have a big impact on the value of the dong in the future. And they have every reason to worry, based on the dong valuation by SBV on a basket of eight currencies, including Euro, Japanese JPY, Chinese CNY, Thai THB, Taiwanese TWD, Korean KRW, Singaporean SGD and US dollar.

To protect themselves, businesses have been implementing hedging operations by buying foreign currencies forward in order to satisfy demand for payment obligations in the future.

Interest rate under pressure

The central bank’s sale of $2 billion means that VND46 trillion was withdrawn from the banking system last week. The interbank interest rate immediately soared by 2 percent over the week before.

In principle, the demand for cash in the national economy tends to increase rapidly toward the final months of the year. Therefore, dong withdrawal from circulation would affect banks’ liquidity.

Meanwhile, the CPI (consumer price index) is under pressure to increase in upcoming months.

The interbank interest rate hike, plus the pressure on inflation, will both force commercial banks to raise the deposit interest rates to mobilize more capital.

VP Bank and Eximbank were the first banks to lift their deposit interest rates, though the increases were not that high.

According to a report on Vietnamnet

Vietnam e-commerce market growing fast

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Vietnam is one of the most attractive eCommerce markets in the region for investors. With an explosive 33% compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) over the past two years, Vietnam ranks high among the fastest-growing eCommerce markets in the region.

Frost & Sullivan forecast that the eCommerce market in Vietnam will reach a value of $3.7 billion by 2030. The year 2017 alone was a flourishing year for Vietnam’s eCommerce market with millions of dollars in investment capital poured in from foreign investors.

To explore the investment landscape in Vietnam, iPrice has collaborated with Cento Ventures to analyze the pattern of eCommerce investment in Vietnam. The report revealed the following findings about Vietnam’s eCommerce scene:

The big 6 behind Vietnam’s eCommerce funding

The largest investors in Vietnam’s eCommerce market include tech giants, venture capital firms and investment companies such as Alibaba, Tencent, Temasek Holdings, Dragon Capital, CyberAgent Ventures and IDG Ventures Vietnam.

Alibaba, Tencent, and Temasek started investing in Vietnam’s eCommerce market only in recent years, while both Dragon Capital and IDG Ventures Vietnam have been seeding investments since the early beginnings.

JD.com, owned by Tencent, the largest Internet company in China, recently completed its large-scale investment in Tiki.vn and became the largest shareholder of Tiki in January 2018. Although the exact figures were not disclosed by both parties, local media estimated it to be $44 million.

Besides Tiki.vn, Tencent also expanded its stake in Vietnam’s largest digital content company and the only billion-dollar startup in Vietnam – VNG. The amount of investment is confidential, but according to a credible news source, Tencent is now VNG’s largest foreign shareholder.

In addition, Singapore-based Sea Limited (Garena) has entered the Vietnamese market via Shopee, the mobile-first marketplace platform. The largest shareholder of Sea Limited, which operates Shopee, is also Tencent.

Lazada is backed by two giants – Alibaba, the Chinese multinational eCommerce and technology conglomerate, and Temasek Holdings, the global investment company owned by the government of Singapore.

In November 2014, Lazada made a funding announcement worth $249 million from Temasek Holdings. In June 2017, China’s Alibaba invested $1 billion in Lazada and increased its total stake to 83%.

Prior to investing in Lazada, Temasek also invested in FPT Corporation, an internet corporation which owns Sendo and FPT Shop. As of July 2018, Sendo has become one of the most popular eCommerce sites in Vietnam in terms of web traffic, according to SimilarWeb.

The report also revealed that Vietnam is a hotspot for investors from around the world. The burgeoning eCommerce market in Vietnam has attracted major investors from Japan, Germany, the United States, Korea, China, and Singapore.

With six companies invested in Vietnam’s eCommerce market (BEENOS, CyberAgent Ventures, econtext Asia, SBI Holdings, Sumitomo Corporation, Trancosmos), Japan tops the list of foreign countries with the highest number of investors in Vietnam. In 2017, Japan invested a total of $9.1 billion in Vietnam, taking over Korea ($8.5 billion) and ranked as the largest foreign direct investment (FDI) country in Vietnam.

Germany and the US are two countries outside of Asia that are actively invested in Vietnam’s eCommerce market.

In 2012, Intel Capital, the investment arm of the computer processor juggernaut, revealed that it had invested a combined $17 million in two Internet companies in Southeast Asia, with one of them being VC Corp, the Internet content firm in Vietnam. VC Corp has since been known as the parent company of several eCommerce platforms: Mua Re, Enbac, Mua Chung, Rong Bay. Over the years, the list of US investors continued to grow, with firms such as JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Summit Partners allocating capital to the Vietnamese eCommerce industry.

Deutsche Bank and Rocket Internet are among the most prolific German investors in Vietnam. After selling several start-ups like Easy Taxi, Foodpanda, and Zalora to its competitors, Rocket Internet’s strongest presence in Vietnam remained with its investment in Lazada. Deutsche Bank, on the other hand, had become one of the largest shareholders of FPT Corporation since 2007. The German investment bank and financial services company later went on to increase its share in FPT in June 2011.

According to a report on EnterpriseInnovation

East Sea low pressure system concerns forecasters

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A low pressure system in the East Sea has forecasters concerned due to its unpredictable development.

The low pressure system remains weak but is likely to strengthen into a tropical depression, heading towards the Hoang Sa archipelago and Hainan Island (China) in the next 24-48 hours – Vietnamnet reported

At 7am on August 7, a tropical convergence strip was positioned at 15.8 degrees north, 114.8 degrees east, about 270km-370km southeast of the Hoang Sa (Paracel) archipelago,  according to the National Centre for Hydro-meteorological Forecasting.

The low pressure system is proving problematic for meteorologists to predict its direction of movement but for the next 24 hours, it is not likely to cause strong winds or bring heavy rains to northern provinces.

Due to the effects of the low pressure system, heavy showers and thunderstorms will affect the East Sea area on August 7, including the Hoang Sa archipelago.

The confluence of the tropical convergence strip and south western monsoon will cause rough seas and strong winds in the coastal areas from Binh Thuan to Ca Mau. Thundershowers, gales and tornadoes are likely to hit coastal areas from Binh Thuan to Ca Mau, Kien Giang and the Gulf of Thailand.

Chinese men arrested for Quang Ninh petrol station theft

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One of the Chinese men, Ding Ning Shan, at the police station

Two Chinese men have been arrested after attacking a female staff member in an attempted theft at a petrol station in the northern province of Quang Ninh – Dtinews reported.

At around 10 pm on August 7, after fishing the working shift at the petrol station at Hai Tien Commune, Mong Cai City, Nguyen Thi Thu Huong, a staff member from the ASEAN Company came to the firm’s office to drop off the money she collected from petrol sales.

Then suddenly, the two men rushed to tie her hands and muffle her mouth. After hearing the scuffle colleagues from the petrol station and nearby people attempted to arrest the men.

The two men tried to escape. However, one of them was initially detained by police, while the other stole a car at the company’s offices which he rammed into the police to save his accomplice and then two fled.
They escaped onto the Hai Yen Industrial Park for some kilometres and then were found in a nearby field before being arrested. The police confiscated knives, gloves and drills from them.

 Ding Shi Jie at the police station

The two then were identified as Ding Shi Jie, 30, and Ding Ning Shan, 36 who were both from China. They told the police that they entered Vietnam through Mong Cai Border Gate at 11am on August 7

It won’t be easy to lure foreign capital in H2: experts

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Foreign portfolio investment (FPI) will no longer be the main driver to attract foreign capital to Vietnam in the second half of 2018 as it was in the first six months of the year.

The State Bank (SBV) Governor at the online government dialogue on July 2 said SBV bought over $11 billion in the first half of 2018, raising national total forex reserves to $63.5 billion.

The huge net purchase of $11 billion just in the first six months of the year, which was close to the $13 billion net purchase value in 2017, is believed to have upset the finance market.

The government bond yield has dropped to a record low, 3 percent per annum for 5-year bonds, nearly equal to that of the US government bond yield. This is attributed to high liquidity with cash surplus reaching VND300 trillion.

SBV had to lower the dollar buy price twice because of the high foreign currency supply. The huge foreign capital flow has led to the VN Index rising by 20 percent within the first quarter of 2018. With the growth rate of 48 percent in 2017, Vietnam is considered the fastest growing stock market in the world.

Analysts believe that FPI was the major driving force of the foreign capital flow. Foreign investors poured multi-billions of dollars into Vietnam businesses.

In May, Vinhomes sold $2 billion worth of shares to foreign investors. Another well-known investment deal was the one in which foreign investors spent $1.3 billion to acquire 257 million Techcombank shares.

According to the General Statistics Office (GSO), in the first six months of 2018, foreign investors invested $4.1 billion in Vietnam businesses, a sharp increase of 82.4 percent in comparison with the same period last year.

Vietnam could also attract foreign capital through foreign direct investment (FDI) with $8.4 billion worth of FDI pledged in the first half of the year. Vietnam’s trade balance saw a surplus of $3.3 billion during the same time.

However, analysts warned that though Vietnam’s total balance had a surplus of $9 billion in the first half of the year, the deficit may come back in the second half.

They also affirmed that FPI will no longer be the main driver to attract foreign capital in the second half. The anticipated interest rate hike in the US, plus the worry about the slowdown in the global economy, both have driven cash flow to the US.

In Vietnam, foreign investors continued to be net sellers in May, June and the first half of July. Meanwhile, the share sales planned by Genco 3, Binh Son Refinery, PV Oil and BIDV will not be organized in the near future.

Source: VNN

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