Pompeo mentions Vietnam as a model of improved relations

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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Monday extolled improved relations with Vietnam as a model for rapprochement with North Korea – AP reports.

Pompeo met with senior Vietnamese officials, including the prime minister and foreign minister in Hanoi, after weekend stops in Japan and North Korea, where he has been seeking progress in denuclearization negotiations with the North.

“In America we consider our relationship with Vietnam to be incredibly special,” Pompeo told Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh.

In Vietnam, Pompeo was looking for increased cooperation from Hanoi on enforcing sanctions on North Korea, which he said would not be lifted until it fully dismantled its nuclear weapons program in a transparent and verifiable way.

“We would like to thank you for your support with respect to our efforts in North Korea,” Pompeo told Pham.

Despite Pompeo characterizing his talks in Pyongyang as productive, North Korea reacted angrily to what it called “gangster-like” demands from the U.S. Pompeo brushed that rebuke aside, saying that if the demands were indeed gangster-like then the “world is a gangster” because the sanctions are not different from what the U.N. Security Council has demanded in several unanimous resolutions.

In Hanoi on Sunday, Pompeo appealed to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to replicate Vietnam’s dynamic economic growth by embracing normalized ties with the U.S. He says the evolution of post-conflict relations between the U.S. and Vietnam is proof that America’s foes need not remain enemies.

Pompeo is at the midpoint of a round-the-world trip that will take him to the United Arab Emirates and then Brussels, Belgium, where he will accompany President Donald Trump to a summit of NATO leaders.

Facebook to face a difficult future in Vietnam

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Faced with the possibility of a government crackdown in the name of cyber-security, many Vietnamese users are jumping ship to the new open-source social network Minds

Facebook Inc. has found itself in a difficult position in Vietnam, which is reportedly home of 53 million Facebook users, in the country of 93 million, as recent controversy has created negative perception of the platform among young Vietnamese internet users.

According to reports, many Vietnamese netizens are abandoning the platform altogether in favor of a new U.S. based social media network called Minds. The move is driven in part by negative publicity of Facebook in the country, and in part by fears of a coming internet crackdown once a new cyber security law goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2019.

Last week, a user on Facebook discovered a map used on the platform’s advertising tool that labeled the disputed Spratly and Paracel Islands in the South China Sea as parts of China, sparking outrage among many in Vietnam. But the map was only the latest instance of worsening public opinion in Vietnam towards the platform.

First, back in April 2018, Facebook was undergoing Congressional scrutiny over allegations that it had given extensive amounts of personal user data to a number of large data mining firms such as Cambridge Analytica for advertising purposes, and in the process, had possibly jeopardized sensitive information of private individuals across the globe.

Shortly before Zuckerberg’s Congressional hearing, 16 Vietnamese activists groups and media organizations advocating free speech on the platform sent a letter of protest to the Facebook company claiming that Facebook had inappropriately suspended accounts of political activists and journalists in Vietnam at the direction of the Vietnamese government.

The letter claimed that government agents working online as paid “trolls” had reported “abusive” content to Facebook, and then the company suspended or removed the profiles of the offenders, who were in most cases simply private citizens or journalists sharing opinions, news, and information critical of the Vietnamese government.

Buzzfeed reports that in April 2017, the head of Facebook’s global policy management office met with the Vietnamese Ministry of Communications and Information, where Vietnamese officials “emphasized the problem of “toxic” content on the platform, including content hostile to the state.”

Facebook came under fire in May 2017 for deleting an iconic image of the Vietnam War from the platform. Editor-in-chief of Norwegian paper Aftenposten accused Zuckerberg of threatening freedom of speech and abusing power. Read the story here. (Associated Press Image)

The letter claims that Facebook has made a “high profile agreement to coordinate with a government that is known for suppressing expression online and jailing activists.”

Since April, concern for the safety of Vietnam’s dissident users on the platform has only grown.

On June 12, the National Assembly passed a new cyber security law that would force major internet companies, like Facebook and Google to open domestic branch offices in Vietnam and store data on Vietnamese users within the country, which would have to be surrendered to the Vietnamese government upon request.

As Bloomberg notes, the Vietnamese government is forcing Facebook to choose between growth, and protecting the privacy of its users. The Vietnamese government is weary of the network as it provides a platform that may promote “wrongful views.”

President of Vietnam Tran Dai Quang has been quoted as saying that regulations must be enforced to maintain social order. He claims Facebook must take more responsibility to limit the reach and influence “hostile and reactionary forces.”

Going forward, what that will mean for Vietnam’s Facebook users, political activists, or Facebook’s role in the country’s digital infrastructure, remains to be seen.

However, many Vietnamese citizens are not taking the risk, and have chosen to migrate to a new digital home, providing an unexpected boost of new users for the up and coming Minds, an open-source platform.

Minds CEO Bill Ottman said more than 100,000 new Vietnamese users have registered Minds accounts in less than a week, and now account for about 10 percent of the entire user base of the platform.

A Vietnamese activist residing in Taiwan, Tran Vi, was quoted by AFP as saying “We want to keep our independent voice and we also want to make a point to Facebook that we’re not going to accept any censorship.”

Vietnamese users are understandably attracted to the platform, because users do not need to register a profile using personal data, such as a phone number, and all chats are encrypted.

Anyone  would like to keep up with current events in Vietnam is welcome to follow Vietnam Insider on https://Minds.com/VietnamInsider

Facebook agrees Premier League deal to livestream all games in Asia

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Facebook has agreed a £200million deal to exclusively broadcast Premier League matches in four Asian countries from next year.

It represents a major breakthrough for the social media behemoth after they saw off competition from television networks BeIn Sports and Fox Sports Asia in the auction for broadcast rights to Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.

The deal will commence at the beginning of the 2019-20 season and run until 2022 and means Facebook will livestream all 380 Premier League matches in those countries.

The social media network will show all 380 Premier League games in Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos from the start of 2019-2020

Facebook is trying to enhance its sports portfolio and bid unsuccessfully against Star India for the rights to the Indian Premier League cricket competition last year.

It has also covered some Major League Baseball, college basketball and the occasional Champions League fixture in the United States through its partnership with Fox Sports.

The deal represents another slight shift away from the traditional television networks towards online streaming after Amazon gained the rights last month to show 20 live Premier League matches per season from 2019-20.

It is believed the Premier League has also held discussions with YouTube and Netflix over rights deals in other parts of the world as the financial clout of streaming services grows ever stronger.

Source: Dailymail

Auto exports to Vietnam restart after 6 months stoppage

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Cars made in Thailand and Indonesia clear Hanoi’s tough import controls

Nikkei reports, automakers are resuming exports to Vietnam from production bases in Southeast Asia after clearing strict new rules that attest to the growing importance of the auto industry in the region.

The pressure from Hanoi comes as trade barriers within the region come down and countries vie to become the next hub for vehicle production.

Japanese automakers, a major force in the region, have been among the first to restart exports to Vietnam.

Toyota Motor shipped several hundred Thai-made Hilux pickup trucks and Hiace vans as well as Indonesian-made Fortuner sport utility vehicles to Vietnam earlier this month.

Mitsubishi Motors, meanwhile, resumed exports of its Triton pickup truck and other vehicles late last month and had shipped about 1,100 as of Friday. Ford Motor of the U.S. has reportedly resumed shipments to Vietnam, and Mazda Motor is preparing to do so as well.

The new Vietnamese regulations, known as Decree 116, went into effect on Jan. 1. They require certification that cars meet safety and emissions standards set by Hanoi, as well as inspections for each batch of imports. Faced with this unexpected hurdle, automakers were virtually forced to freeze exports by the end of 2017.

Thailand and Indonesia have begun to issue such certificates, which are normally issued by authorities in the importing country. The decree is unusual in that it amounts to a foreign government passing judgment on compliance with Vietnamese standards. It prompted an exceptional response by Thai and Indonesian authorities.

Customs clearance is still likely to take more time than usual, however, because each batch of imports must be inspected. Toyota expects vehicles from Thailand and Indonesia to arrive at dealers in August.

Vietnamese dealers are facing low stocks of imported vehicles. A Toyota dealership in Hanoi has only featured locally produced cars since imports were cut off. But it soon expects to get a shipment of Fortuners, of which it has already sold all but one before they even reach the showroom.

Although the resumptions of some exports will help bring Vietnam’s auto market closer to normal, shipments from countries like Japan will remain halted since authorities there are not issuing the required quality certificates.

Vietnam has Southeast Asia’s fifth-largest auto market, with about 270,000 new vehicles sold last year. Fully assembled imports account for just under 30% of the total. With imports held up, new-car sales from February to May fell 13% on the year.

There are high hopes for growth in the auto market in Vietnam, where there were just 23 cars for every 1,000 people in 2015, according to the International Organization of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers. This compares with 439 in Malaysia, 228 in Thailand and 145 in Singapore.

Although Vietnam has lowered trade barriers as it pursues free-trade agreements, joins the Trans-Pacific Partnership and further integrates its economy with other Association of Southeast Asian Nations members, it has remained protective of its auto industry, which Hanoi believes can spur job creation in supporting fields like parts and materials.

Automakers and neighboring countries see the Vietnam’s inspection rules as a non-tariff trade barrier designed to restrict imports following ASEAN’s elimination of auto tariffs in the bloc in January. “Regulations requiring certificates of quality should be repealed,” said Toru Kinoshita, president of Toyota Motor Vietnam.

Deputy Minister of Transport Nguyen Van Cong told a business forum in Hanoi on Wednesday that Decree 116 is necessary for both consumers and local automakers.

Vietnam produces just 190,000 cars a year, 10% of Thailand’s output, and most of this is limited to assembly of imported components. Excluding this so-called knock-down production, few Vietnamese companies are entering the auto industry besides local property developer Vingroup, which is constructing its own plant.

Each vehicle typically requires roughly 30,000 parts to assemble. Supporting industries in molding, metals processing, plastics and other components will develop if domestic auto production grows. The technology that goes into car components could also help improve Vietnam’s entire manufacturing sector.

The country’s main export is mobile phones, notably for South Korea’s Samsung Electronics. But smartphones only require around 1,000 parts per unit, many of which are difficult to procure domestically, limiting their economic benefits in comparison to cars. Hanoi is also concerned about its reliance on smartphones as global demand for them cools.

by HIROSHI KOTANI and ATSUSHI TOMIYAMA, Nikkei staff writers

Day 2: Thai cave rescue operation

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CHIANG RAI: An operation to evacuate 12 Thai boys and their football coach from the flooded Tham Luang cave complex in northern Thailand entered its second leg on Monday (Jul 9), after a pause overnight to replenish oxygen tanks.

Authorities on late Sunday declared their mission “more successful than (they had) hoped for”, with four of the 12 stranded boys making the perilous journey out with the aid of local and foreign divers.

Eight more boys and their 25-year-old coach remain in the cave complex, where they have been trapped since Jun 23.

10.20am: Gloomy skies in the vicinity of the cave – a reminder of a looming thunderstorm that might complicate the rescue effort. It rained overnight as well. The rescue mission chief had said to expect the replenishing of oxygen tanks to take anywhere between 10 and 20 hours, so it’s a waiting game right now for everyone following the events at Tham Luang.

Giving everyone heart is the first images of Sunday’s rescue operation. The four boys who were ferried out by up to 90 divers from Thailand and all over the world, are now in hospital.

10.40am: Meanwhile, netizens are sharing artwork to cheer the Wild Boars and the rescue team on.

WATCH: First video of the boys rescued from Tham Luang

Here’s a recap of the challenges rescuers face:

The boys and their coach will have to navigate narrow passages and mud-clogged water with almost zero visibility to get out of the cave complex.

Watch our explainer on conditions inside:

This September: The Finals of the World Supermodel scheduled to be held in Vietnam

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A wild card entrant to the Finals of the World Supermodel scheduled to be held in Vietnam on September 30, 2018 is hoping to make it big on the international stage.

She received her ‘World Supermodel Asia Pacific’ title at a glittering ceremony held on Saturday, July 7, 2018, at Naumi Hotel in Auckland.

Shaayal Gounden, who has been featured in Indian Newslink on more than one occasion (she was our Model of the Fortnight in our June 1, 2014 and November 15, 2017 issues) said that she feels extremely privileged to be representing not only her home country but also Fiji, her native country and those of the Asia Pacific.

Resilient and Resourceful

Describing the Asia Pacific region as ‘beautiful, exciting and filled with hopes and dreams,’ she said that it is also a region which has the strength to overcome and unite in times of difficulty.

“That is I chose to partake in the World Supermodel Competition. Winning the Title will help me create an influential platform to support charities close to my heart (such as ‘Make A wish Foundation’ and other little-known philanthropic organisation,” she said.

According to Shaayal, the Asia Pacific is a region where culture echoes, tradition speaks, beauty mesmerises and diversity delights.

“I am extremely proud to represent Asia Pacific Region,” she said.

Profession and Passion

Born and raised in Auckland, Shaayal earned her Bachelor’s degree in Applied Management with a Double Major in Event and Tourism Management.

While her passion for Event and Tourism Management encouraged the establishment of her own businesses, her love for show business led to the launch of ‘Auckland’s Top Model,’ a professional company to promote pageants, with Co-Director Shabeena Shaheen.

She is also Co-Director of Global Flight Centre New Zealand Limited.

Awards and Titles

Participating in pageants and winning titles is not new to Shaayal.

She was crowned ‘Miss Pre-Teen New Zealand’ when she was just 12 years old, and thereafter won other titles including ‘Miss Auckland 2014’, ‘Miss World New Zealand Beauty with a Mission 2014,’ 2014’ and the current title of ‘World Super Model Asia Pacific.’

Her hobbies include dancing, socialising with friends, catching up with family, shopping with her mother and most important of all, enjoying precious moments with her husband Yusuf and doting over her daughter Ariana.

Vietnam shout speed up economic to avoid getting Trumped

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Any search for sunshine in this gloomy moment for the global economy should turn to Vietnam.

The Southeast Asian nation boasts one of the fastest economic growth rates anywhere, a swelling and optimistic population and political stability. Big investments by multinationals from Samsung Electronics to Nestle are morphing Vietnam into a manufacturing powerhouse and raising living standards. In May, a sovereign upgrade from Fitch Ratings put the nation just two notches short of investment grade – Reported by Nikkei Asia.

Yet all the forward momentum in the world is no match for Donald Trump’s debilitating trade war.

Can a small, open and export-led Asian economy survive the U.S. president’s assault on global commerce and the retaliatory hits from China? Add in the U.S. Federal Reserve’s monetary tightening cycle and investors have every reason to suspect Hanoi’s 6.8% gross domestic product growth in the second quarter may prove fleeting.

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc recently ordered his ministries to redouble market surveillance and craft plans to minimize any fallout. Yet Trump’s tariffs are only the most obvious of threats to social and economic stability in Southeast Asia’s sixth-biggest economy. Two others: anger over Chinese encroachment and a harsh crackdown on cyberspace.

Trump’s levies are terribly timed for Phuc’s export-reliant economy. While enviable by global standards, Vietnam’s second-quarter pace marked a notable downshift from 7.5% in the previous three months. Behind the slowdown are reduced state investments and a slide in mining output. The trajectory of the all-important export sector is now very much in doubt.

Overseas shipments rose 16% from a year earlier between January and June. Big declines could be forthcoming as Trump’s levies on steel and aluminum — 25% and 10%, respectively — boost materials costs and slam trading partners. Like most Asian peers, Vietnam counts on China, Trump’s main target, as its No. 1 export destination.

South Korea, Vietnam’s second most important export market, also is in harm’s way. In the October-December quarter, growth there contracted for the first time in nine years. More recently, export growth came to a halt in June, dropping 0.1% following a 13.2% gain in May. The headwinds bearing down on Korea are a problem for another reason: it is Vietnam’s biggest long-term investor.

Samsung, LG Electronics and other Korea Inc. giants are pouring tens of billions of dollars into Vietnam to diversify away from China’s rising labor costs. Samsung alone has invested more than $17 billion there in eight factories that churn out the bulk of its smartphones. In 2017, Samsung shipped some $54 billion of goods from Vietnam, a figure equivalent to 28% of gross domestic product. As Washington’s trade war hits Korea Inc. and Seoul’s top-line growth, investment flows on which Hanoi relies could grow scarce.

An argument can be made that Trump’s tariffs could end up advantaging Vietnam in counterintuitive ways. Even before Washington announced tariffs, European, Japanese and Korean executives sought a Plan B as Chinese costs rise. The uncertainty and volatility plaguing China’s outlook could accelerate a shift of production bases out of China into Southeast Asia’s more stable and, in many cases, more competitive cost environment.

That makes it more vital than ever for Phuc’s team to accelerate structural reforms: strengthening financial institutions; replacing jaundiced state-owned enterprises with a vibrant private sector; curbing shadow banks; liberalizing the capital account; increasing transparency; and reducing graft. It also means investing more in human capital to build on Vietnam’s nascent startup boom.

Roughly 25% of Vietnam’s 92 million people are under 15. The trick is cultivating the entrepreneurial spirit coursing through the nation. Doing so is vital to accelerating gains in living standards. Average GDP growth of 6.3% over the last 12 years raised annual per capita income to $2,385 — a more than six-fold gain from 2000.

That leaves Vietnam a long way off from China’s $9,000 level. We also are some ways from knowing whether Vietnam can beat the middle-income trap that often ensnares nations around the $10,000 mark. To preserve those gains and reduce inequality, Phuc’s government must alter the basic dynamics of growth. One obvious target: reducing the reliance on monetary easing. Today’s 4.7% inflation rate, relative to the 4% level preferred by Hanoi policymakers, limits easing options. Any move to cut the 6.25% refinancing rate would add to overheating risks.

Upgrading the economy, and relying more on fiscal tweaks, would generate more organic and balanced growth. Vietnam too often veers from extreme optimism to extreme pessimism, and back. Today’s story, of course, is the latter as Vietnam rivals China’s growth rate. The risk, though, is that Trump’s trade war suddenly sends the pendulum in the other direction.

China is a growing concern on another front: proposed special economic zones offering 99-year leases. Fears Chinese investors will win most of the leases are provoking sizable demonstrations, some numbering in the thousands. The government, says Melinda Hoe of Eurasia Group, must “carefully manage dissent to avoid a repeat of the May 2014 anti-China protests that marred Vietnam’s image as a safe investment destination.”

The same goes for public anger over a social-media inquisition. In recent weeks, Hanoi began forcing Google, Facebook and other digital companies to choose between privacy or growth. A reasonable balance, perhaps. Yet a cybersecurity law approved last month compels Silicon Valley to store local data in the country. Activists worry that will compromise communications.

The law also goes much further to limit internet speech. Its vague language concerning dissent has Amnesty International decrying a “devastating blow” to freedom of expression. The state also can compel tech companies to turn over vast reams of personal data on users.

Industry group Asia Internet Coalition warns the legislation will impede Hanoi’s ambitions for GDP and regional competitiveness. That runs counter to Hanoi’s stated desire to foster greater innovation. Reduced transparency, meantime, will protect provincial governments and misbehaving companies from the public scrutiny needed to boost national competitiveness.

The good news is that Vietnam is enjoying a level of momentum few economies can match. The bad news: in the Trump era, Hanoi has its work cut out to keep the economy on the road toward greater riches.

By William Pesek

Mike Pompeo urges North Korea’s Kim to follow Vietnam’s example

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U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Sunday urged North Korea to follow the example of Vietnam, saying President Donald Trump believed Pyongyang could replicate Hanoi’s path to normal relations with Washington and to prosperity.

But for that to happen, its leader Kim Jong Un needed to seize the moment. Reuters reports.

Speaking to business executives in the Vietnamese capital Hanoi, Pompeo said he hoped the United States could one day share the same level of partnership with North Korea as it did with Vietnam, a long-time former enemy.

U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrives at Nom Bar International Airport in Hanoi, Vietnam, July 8, 2018. Andrew Harnik/Pool via REUTERS

His comments followed two days of frosty talks in Pyongyang aimed at persuading Kim to give up nuclear weapons, which prompted North Korean accusations he had used “gangster-like” diplomacy.

Pompeo said on Sunday that, on the heels of those talks, Trump believed North Korea could replicate the path taken by Vietnam, whose leaders had realized their country could reform and build relationships without threatening its sovereignty and form of government.

He said the key to Vietnam’s rise was post-Vietnam War engagement with the United States, which began in 1985, when the countries started working together to repatriate remains of U.S. service members lost in Vietnam.

As part of his talks with North Korea, Pompeo has been seeking the return of remains from the 1950-53 Korean War and officials from the two sides are due to meet next week to discuss details of this.

Pompeo said that in past two decades, U.S. bilateral trade with Vietnam had grown 8,000 percent, and American companies had poured in billions of dollars of investments.

“The fact that we’re co-operating – and not fighting – is proof that when a country decides to create a brighter future for itself alongside the United States, we follow through on American promises,” Pompeo said.

“The miracle could be your miracle,” Pompeo said of North Korea and its leader.

“The United States has been clear on what we seek from North Korea…,” Pompeo said. “The choice now lies with North Korea and its people.

“If they are able to do this, they will be remembered, and Chairman Kim will be remembered, as a hero of the Korean people.”

By David Brunnstrom

UOB’s annual Heartbeat event raises over S$1.25 million

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United Overseas Bank (UOB)’s annual UOB Heartbeat Run/Walk event has raised over S$1.25 million for children’s charities across Asia, the bank said on Sunday.

The event drew 17,000 of the bank’s customers, colleagues and their families in Vietnam, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand. UOB employees and customers were also able to use PayNow to make donations as part of UOB’s fundraising efforts. A report by Yunita Ong on Business Times.

Wee Ee Cheong, deputy chairman and group chief executive who completed the 10-kilometre run in Singapore, said: “At UOB, giving back to the community is very close to the hearts of our people. The UOB Heartbeat Run/Walk is one of the ways in which we unite as a bank across our key markets and do our part to help improve the lives of children and youth, especially those in need. We are happy that for the first time, our colleagues in Vietnam were able to join us in our day’s programme.”

The proceeds will go towards 13 beneficiaries that help underprivileged and special needs children and youth. Here in Singapore, the Autism Association (Singapore) Eden School, Association for Persons with Special Needs (APSN) Chaoyang School, Cerebral Palsy Alliance Singapore School and Dyslexia Association of Singapore will use the money raised for art and literacy programmes to help children with special needs acquire skills and confidence.

7-Eleven Aiming for 100 Stores in Three Years

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Brewing mini-mart battle is a signal of the economy’s boom
Stores luring customers with air-conditioning, Wi-Fi

For decades, Vietnamese have shopped, snacked and hung out at the country’s traditional markets: colorful, chaotic mazes of open air stalls where vendors hawk everything from fruits and vegetables, to sandwiches and sodas to the odd clucking chicken. Bloomberg reports

Seven-Eleven is pushing a different model. The Japanese-owned chain in August opened its first outlet in the country, an air-conditioned, Wi-Fi equipped oasis in downtown Ho Chi Minh City. Since then, it’s rolled out about two locations per month, with plans for 100 within the next three years. GS Retail Co., the giant South Korean mini-mart operator, opened its beachhead in January. Meanwhile, local chains have announced new plans to flood the country with thousands of their own stores.

The brewing battle among purveyors of climate-controlled convenience is a measure of how far Vietnam has come since it opened to more trade and investment a decade-and-a-half ago. Factory openings by multinationals like Samsung Electronics Co. have made Vietnam a manufacturing powerhouse and helped lift average annual incomes to $2,385 from about $400 back in 2000. In the first half of 2018 the economy grew 7.1 percent, its fastest pace in a decade.

“I see a domino effect,” said Willy Kruh, a convenience-store watcher who heads KPMG Canada’s global consumer consultancy. “As other retailers see the success of the foreign players that have come in, it’s only going to bring in more retail, more brands, more big players.”

Lured by one of the world’s youngest consumer markets — more than half of Vietnam’s 93 million people are under 35 — foreign investors are pouring money into the country. The Ho Chi Minh Stock Index rose to a record in April, although it’s since given up some gains.

“Growth has been phenomenal,” said Chua Hak Bin, a regional economist at Maybank Kim Eng Research in Singapore, who said he’d recently come back from a marketing trip in Europe, where clients peppered him with questions about Vietnam. “It’s definitely a rock star.”

The last few months have seen a string of record public equity offerings. In November, there was the $709 million raised by shopping mall operator Vincom Retail JSC. That record stood until April, when Techcombank brought in $922 million. A month after that, it was luxury property developer Vinhomes JSC raking in $1.4 billion.

“You now have a young, emerging middle class looking to consume–and as they do, it’ll invite more and more investment,” said Jeffrey Perlman, head of Southeast Asia at Warburg Pincus, the U.S.-based private equity firm which owns stakes in both Vincom Retail and Techcombank.

College student Vo Thi Hoai Ngan fits the target marketing profile. On a recent weekday afternoon in Ho Chi Minh City, she bypassed street vendors selling sugarcane and coconut drinks to buy bottled water at an air-conditioned mini-mart operated by Circle K Stores Inc.

“My classmates and I prefer to come here for a quick meal,” she said. “It offers free Wi-Fi, chairs and tables.”

Circle K, a chain owned by Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc., led the way for foreign convenience stores 10 years ago, when it open its first outlet in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam’s commercial capital. Tokyo-based FamilyMart UNY Holdings Co. followed in 2009.

But growth didn’t really take off until 2014 when the economy shrugged off its own mini debt-crisis and got inflation under control. That year, McDonald’s Corp. and Domino’s Pizza Inc. opened their first restaurants in the country.

Now a full-scale convenience-store flood is coming. The country’s biggest operator of gas stations, Vietnam National Petroleum Group, plans to add mini-marts at fillings stations across the country and property developer Vingroup JSC says it will add 4,000 mini-grocery stores by 2020.

Throughout Asia, where dense cities often make big box retailing impractical, convenience stores are expanding faster than every other type of business selling food and sundries, according to IGD, a grocery market researcher. In Indonesia, which is a few steps ahead of Vietnam on the development curve, Alfamart and Indomaret have been opening 1,000 mini-marts and convenience stores every year.

“Vietnam is at the start of that journey today,” said Nick Miles, IDG’s head of Asia-Pacific research. “It’s kind of at that point in per-capita income where modern trade starts to accelerate.”

No economist has actually done a formal study of the convenience store as a marker of development. But researchers have shown that consumption evolves in a predictable way as societies get richer. With annual incomes below $2,000, people buy things like bicycles and basic necessities. Between $2,000 and $6,000, where the average Vietnamese person is now, it’s scooters, refrigerators and beer. (Cars, laptops and cosmetics come next.)

Tu Vu, head of 7-Eleven’s Vietnam unit, is betting that new shopping trends will include frequent visits to his convenience stores. So far, Seven System Vietnam JSC has 19 franchise outlets in the country, all in Ho Chi Minh City. Vu says he’ll need hundreds of stores to become profitable, an expansion that will take several years.

“We are experiencing a transition from mom-and-pop stores to modern trade,” Vu said. “This is what Japan went through 40 years ago. People are working more and there are no grandmothers home to cook.”

— by Mai Ngoc Chau, With assistance by Jason Clenfield, Ailing Tan, and Cormac Mullen

Stock markets from Vietnam to Japan hit by trade war contagion

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In the US versus China trade conflict, China isn’t the only loser for equity investors.

Asian markets from Shanghai to Tokyo – and even Ho Chi Minh City – have been the biggest casualties ahead of American tariffs on US$34 billion of Chinese exports and retaliatory measures set to begin Friday. Bloomberg reports.

In total, nine out of the world’s 10 worst-performing stock indexes this week were from the region, with the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index and Shanghai Composite Index sinking 4 per cent or more through Thursday’s close. On the other side of the Pacific, the S&P 500 Index climbed 0.7 per cent.

More than US$2.7 trillion in Asian equity value has evaporated in the past month as Shanghai-listed shares entered a bear market and foreigners fled the region’s stock markets with trade-war worries intensifying. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index has taken its losses to 13 per cent from a January high, closing on Thursday at its lowest level since October.

Some are looking at the bright side, pointing to lower valuations as opportunities to buy shares. And then, who knows, markets may just soon stage a stellar rebound.

“There is a lot of negative sentiment driven by trade that could easily change should the situation not get any worse,” said Kerry Craig, global market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management in Melbourne. “We’ll find out about that in the next week or so.”

Saigon to develop waterway tourism

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Waterway tourism in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City is expected to receive about 450,000 tourists in 2018 and the figure is projected to increase 15 percent in the following years, Vietnam News Agency reported Saturday.

The city is working with neighboring provinces to create middle-range tourism products along the three rivers of Saigon, Dong Nai and Mekong.

The Ho Chi Minh City metropolitan area, downstream of the Dong Nai-Saigon river system, is surrounded and traversed by nearly 1,000 km of rivers and canals, with huge potential for waterway tourism plans in the future.

Last year, Vietnam launched its first water bus service in Ho Chi Minh City to help reduce traffic congestions and promote tourism on Saigon River.

Here’s why happy couples post less about their relationships on social media

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Once upon a time, you’d solidify your adolescent relationship with a shout-out in an AIM profile. Now that we’re in the era of “Facebook official” and selfie statuses, it’s pretty clear that the comfort we take in being able to definitively label our relationships— something which can often feel so uncertain and be communicated poorly.

Now, it’s becoming increasingly common to frequently post about your relationship (and life). If it’s not online, you don’t have proof that it happened.

If you think of social media as the modern equivalent of a town square, the place where announcements are made and information is posted and communities are bonded over shared experiences, then it only makes sense that you’d be inclined to share the bits and pieces of your life that you perceive to be worthy of documenting. The point is to post the highlight reel. The concept is to share the parts of our lives that those who aren’t immediately close to us otherwise wouldn’t be able to see — and there is nothing wrong with this.

Yet social media has an added layer of nuance, as it is a supplement (if not a projection) of our identity, connectedness, and self-worth. We can piece together an image of ourselves, quantify how loved and seen we are by others, and ultimately begin to gauge and compare where we stand socially.

It should come as no surprise that we end up addicted to the thrill that all the clicks and pixels give us, as those things that social media represents — personhood, connection, inherent worth — are struggles that are very deeply embedded in the human condition.

If you want to know how someone wants the world to see them, look no further than the patterns in their social media feeds. This is never more true (or interesting, to be honest) than when it comes to their most intimate relationships. While it’s normal and even healthy to be proud and public about who you’re dating, there is at the same time a clear connection between how genuinely content you are with your relationship and how often you post about it.

Here a few reasons for this.

You can make yourself feel better about a part of your life simply by thinking that other people see it differently

You can make yourself feel better about a part of your life simply by thinking that other people see it differently | Shutterstock

In other words, if we aren’t getting a “high” from the parts of our lives that we think are supposed to account for our emotional contentment, we seek that feeling elsewhere. Most commonly, this comes from how we think other people perceive the situation to be. (TL;DR: If we can convince ourselves that other people see our relationships happily, we feel happier about them, as we’re subconsciously shifting our point of view.)

When you’re happy with your life (or a relationship) you’re naturally more present for it

When you’re happy with your life (or a relationship) you’re naturally more present for it | Flickr / Jeroen Werkman

It occurs to you less to take photos or check your social media feeds. It’s not that you never do those things, but that your life is making you so happy, so why would you want to be distracted by it?

Any couple that keeps their intimate arguments or struggles offline is always better off | Shutterstock

On the flip side of oversharing is going public with posting the things you’re not so happy about. But no matter what the context, an issue has never been resolved well after someone aired the dirty laundry for all of their Facebook friends (and family) to see.

Their relationship validates them, so they don’t need to seek that feeling externally

Their relationship validates them, so they don’t need to seek that feeling externally | Reuters/Lucy Nicholson

In other words, there seems to be little appeal in constantly writing updates about the relationship. Their joy is in being together, not in posting about being together.

They don’t have anything to prove

They don’t have anything to prove | shutterstock

They are not using one another to prove to the world that they are happy and lovable and worthy and attractive. They’re together because they want to be, not because their deep-seated issues want them to be.

Research shows that people who use social media less are generally happier overall

Research shows that people who use social media less are generally happier overall | Shutterstock

People who go without Facebook for a week report being significantly happier. Depression is linked to excessive social media use, because of social comparison theory. Heavy social media use is also commonly associated with a lack of mental health. On and on it goes. The point is that the nature of the beast isn’t so great for us, mentally or emotionally. So it’s no surprise that it would also bleed into our interpersonal relationships.

Read the original article on Bustle.

16 things to know before you visit Vietnam for the first time

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I couldn’t recommend Vietnam any more as a destination.

You could do a few days or a few weeks there and enjoy yourself just as much.

Less touristy than other parts of south-east Asia but gradually becoming more westernised, its culture, history and the way of life combine to create a fascinating clash of east and west.

The food, scenery and buzz there also make it a serious place to visit.

Here are some things that I learned while visiting Vietnam.

Choose your destinations wisely

Whatever you’re into, Vietnam likely has it. Figure out what you want to hit before you get there to make the most of your time. During our two week trip, we visited Ho Chi Minh and Hanoi for the history and to experience city life, Da Lat for a quiet mountainside getaway and Hoi An for the old town and to hit the beach.

Looking back, I could have stayed longer in Ho Chi Minh as there’s so much to do there, while a few nights in Da Lat, Hoi An and Hanoi were just enough for me.

Try as much of the food as you can, especially street food

You might not like some of it (or even most of it) but keep trying new things anyway. You didn’t travel thousands of miles to eat the stuff you have at home all the time and there will be things you’ll enjoy.

Oh, and the street food is grand to eat.

Everything is so cheap

Like, so cheap. Depending on where you go, you could feed yourself well for a couple of euro every day. We ate and drank like kings for two weeks and spent less than we would have in a few days somewhere in Europe.

It’s not just food either – the cost of living is quite low so you’ll find that everything from hotel stays to days out are very reasonable.

It’s a stunning place

If you’re planning on travelling to Vietnam, you’ll probably know this already but I wasn’t prepared for just how incredible the sights would be.The city streets feel like Where’s Wally pictures that you could look at forever and the beaches and mountains are breathtaking.

You can’t put toilet paper down the toilet

Instead of wiping with paper when you use the loo, you’ll be spraying yourself down there with a shower head/ hose attached to the toilet, drying off with paper and then putting the paper in the bin. Don’t be the dick who puts paper down the toilet – it’ll flood.

There isn’t a huge drinking culture

Apart from the backpacker area of Ho Chi Minh, you’re unlikely to find a thriving bar scene in Vietnam like you would in neighbouring countries like Thailand.

Do your research on airlines 

You’ll find that flights don’t always take off when they’re supposed to, so if you’re flying somewhere internally or elsewhere in Asia, check out reviews of different airlines and give yourself plenty of time for layovers.

We took a number of internal flights with VietJet over the two weeks and most were delayed.

But is worth flying within the country if you can

If you’re not on a shoestring, flying place-to-place is the way to go. It’s actually pretty reasonable and convenient (aside from the delays) and will help you make more of your time there than if you were going by bus.

Don’t pet the dogs

The doctor who gives you your travel injections will tell you this and you won’t think it’ll be an issue but you’ll get there and meet SO many cute doggos.

There are dogs everywhere on the streets there and they are precious angels but you’ll have to resist petting them as there’s a risk of rabies.

Tipping is not necessary

Vietnamese people are incredibly kind and welcoming but there’s no expectation on you to leave a tip. It is always appreciated though so if you’ve a bit of change at the end of a meal or a taxi journey, may as well leave it with them.

The locals will want a chat

Vietnam isn’t a touristy as other parts of south-east Asia so you might find that you’re a bit of a novelty. Many young children learn English at school and so families may send their little ones over to say hello and practice their vocab.

There’s Wifi pretty much everywhere

Smartphone culture is big in Vietnam and even the most basic restaurants we ate at offered free internet access to customers.

But ATMs could be hard to come by

They’re not on every street like they are in Ireland so you plan what cash you’ll need in advance.

Have a go on a motorbike or scooter

When we arrived in Ho Chi Minh, the traffic was what we noticed first – thousands of bikes with multiple people on each weaving along through the city’s streets and breaking every possible traffic law you could think of.

It’s alarming but if you can get a lift with someone or have a go yourself, do it. It’s great craic and the fastest way to get around.

There are loads of Irish there

My friend Kate was living in Ho Chi Minh and working in an international school. Her housemates and wider friend group were mostly made up of other Irish people teaching and living out there.

You’ll hear more Shayne Ward there than you ever have before

Yes, the guy from X Factor and Corrie. His music was everywhere in bars, restaurants and shops. Westlife and Shayne Filan are also inexplicably popular in Vietnam.

By ANNA O’ROURKE, HER

VTV trying to recoup World Cup TV rights by hiking advertising prices

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Maybe due to not charging viewers, Vietnam Television (VTV) is trying to recover its capital spent on buying the 2018 World Cup’s TV rights by raising advertisement prices. A 30-second slot during the finals now goes for VND800 million ($35,242).

On June 28, VTV’s Television Advertising and Services Centre (TVAd) announced adjusting some advertising slots during the finals and the closing ceremony of the 2018 World Cup.

Accordingly, the price of a 10-second advertising slot increased from VND250 million ($11,013) to VND400 million ($17,621), a 15-second slot went from VND300 million ($13,215) to VND480 million ($21,145), a 20-second slot rose from VND375 million ($16,519) to VND600 million ($26,431), and a 30-second slot rose from VND500 million ($22,026) to VND800 million ($35,242).

In addition, advertising prices during football commentary programmes also fetch a decent price, even more than during the 2014 World Cup. The sums include VND375 million ($16,519) for a 10-second slot, VND450 million ($19,823) for a 15-second slot, VND562.5 million ($24,779) for a 20-second slot, and VND750 million ($33,039) for a 30-second slot.

Regarding the 2018 World Cup closing ceremony, prices are similar to football commentary programmes, but a 30-second slot will go for VND10 million ($440) less.

VTV’s price hike could be an attempt to recoup its expenses on buying the broadcasting rights. The exact price of the deal has not been revealed, but zing.vn stated that it is about $14-15 million, and Vingroup contributed $5 million.

In addition to recovering the capital via advertising, broatcasters in many countries have been charging viewers since the 2002 World Cup.

To watch the 2014 World Cup, Singaporean viewers paid S$112 ($82.08) per person to enjoy all 64 matches of the football league, while viewers in Hong Kong paid HK$380 ($48.03) each to enjoy the league.

As digital advertising steadily replaces television advertising as the dominant form of advertising due to its higher popularity and more reasonable prices, this could be VTV’s last World Cup that viewers can enjoy for free.

According to the survey of IPG Mediabrands, in 2017 spending on digital advertising reached $207 billion, equaling 41 per cent of the total value of the global advertising market, and spending on television advertising hit $178 billion, equalling 35 per cent of the total value.

Source: VIR

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