Despite huge revenues, Facebook and Google pay tiny tax in Vietnam

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Despite making billions of dollars in revenue, two giant technology brands Facebook and Google only paid miniscule taxes to the Vietnamese government.

Billions of dollars of revenue in this year’s first quarter

Facebook and Google’s revenue in this year’s first quarter increased sharply, despite being heavily affected by the scandals of data leakage at Facebook (late March) and YouTube (early April).

Google’s parent company Alphabet Inc.’s latest financial report stated that thanks to strong advertisement sales, Google’s profit in this year’s first quarter reached $9.4 billion, exceeding the $5.6 billion in the corresponding period last year.

Google’s first quarter revenue increased by 26 per cent, equaling $31 billion, including $26.6 billion in revenue from advertisements.

In addition, Alphabet has also benefited from the US tax reforms. Accordingly, instead of last year’s 20 per cent corporate income tax rate, this year’s rate dropped to 11 per cent.

Facebook in late April also announced its first quarter results. Specifically, Facebook’s total revenue in this quarter hit $12 billion, up 50 per cent on-year, thanks to advertisement sales.

Furthermore, despite being strongly affected by the March scandal of data leakage, 1.45 billion logged in to Facebook per day and 2.2 billion per month, up 13 per cent year-on-year.

Paying chump change in Vietnam

Slapping tax charges on Facebook and Google has been a difficulty for Vietnamese authorities in the past many years as the two technology companies have not established representative offices and branches in Vietnam.

According to the Ministry of Finance (MoF)’s report, in 2016-2017, Facebook and Google only paid VND120 billion ($5.28 million) in taxes in Vietnam via their partners, including advertising agencies and Vietnamese businesses directly purchasing their services.

The report stated that in 2016, domestic companies on behalf of Facebook and Google paid nearly VND46.9 billion ($2 million) in taxes, including value added tax (VAT) of VND25.3 billion ($1.1 million) and corporate income tax of VND21.6 billion ($951,541).

In 2017’s first nine months, these companies paid taxes of VND73.2 billion ($3.22 million), including VAT of VND39.1 billion ($1.72 million) and corporate income tax of VND34.1 billion ($1.5 million).

According to newswire doisongphapluat.com, one financial expert said that if MoF collected enough taxes via the two corporations’ partners in Vietnam, the state budget would be extended by thousands of billions of VND.

It seems that both Facebook and Google keep purposely forgetting their tax obligations in Vietnam. For instance, Google has employees in Vietnam, but maintains its representative office in Singapore, so they do not have to pay corporate income or personal income tax in Vietnam or social insurance for their employees in Vietnam. Therefore, they can easily afford paying their employees higher salaries.

Vo Do Thang, director of Athena Network Security Training Centre, said that cross-border technology companies do not want to be bound by Vietnamese law, so they do not establish any representative offices or branches in Vietnam. They only maintain a small personnel in Vietnam to communicate and provide information. Therefore, collecting taxes from them is really difficult.

Facebook and Google commonly use international credit cards to pay tax, causing difficulties for Vietnamese tax authorities to control and identify tax payers.

Furthermore, these companies are also researching cross-borders payment methods. For instance, Facebook has applied the Paypal payment system, which is an online payments system. Accordingly, consumers could easily buy Facebook’s advertisements by only paying fees for providers without having to pay tax.

By: Van Anh (VIR)

 

Risking one’s life to catch poisonous snakes

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T.V.L. in Kien Giang province is a “snake hunter” well known all over the Mekong Delta.

The Mekong Delta is the region in southwestern Vietnam where the Mekong River approaches and empties into the sea through a network of distributaries. It is dubbed as a “biological treasure trove” with thousands of animal and plant species.

He said he ‘was not born to be a snake hunter’, but decided to earn his living from finding snakes after a drinking bout with a man who taught him how to catch the animals.

During two months of his apprenticeship, L learned how to use bait and medicinal herbs to treat snake bites and what to do in emergencies.

“The most dangerous case is when you meet snakes in pairs. While female snakes are hooked, the male snake waits for you to come and then can bite you,” he said.

L’s instruments include a catching rod, bait and drugs. The rod is made of old bamboo branches, large nylon rope and a hook. He uses mice as bait, while drugs are used in emergencies.

Snakes can be sought all year round, but the high hunting season is in dry season, when snakes often go out to shores and bushes to expose themselves to the sun and seek food.

“You need to successfully guess the ‘houses’ of snakes. And you need to put the hook and bait in places the snakes can discover and go to eat. The places must be quiet and full of brush, because snakes like quiet areas,” he explained.

L works everywhere, from Dong Thap and Can Tho to Hau Giang and Bac Lieu to Ca Mau provinces. He walks at least dozens of kilometres a day.

However, the biggest concern is that he faces risks every day. All snake hunters have bitten by snakes, at least several times.

“I can earn VND5 million one day, but can get a terrible snake bite the next day,” he said. “I had to get poisoned blood out once and then take medication for a bite.”

As for L, the king cobra, or Ophiophagus Hannah, is the most difficult to catch because it is quick and has toxic venom. If the king cobra’s bites are not treated immediately, a person could die.

“But you cannot seek support from colleagues, because there’s a saying that if you help another treat snake bites, you will sustain misfortune instead of him,” he said.

Source: VNN

 

CanCham Vietnam announces 2nd Annual Canada Green Day

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The Canadian Chamber of Commerce in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam (CanCham) announces:

  • 2nd Annual Canada Green Day Saturday, May 19th at the Canadian International School Campus
  • 2nd Annual Get Green Competition for student sustainability initiatives
  • Get Green Competition will award 2 or more teams each with VND 22,500,000 funding to implement their initiatives in the local community

2nd Annual Canada Green Day
Canada Green Day is a fun, family-friendly event focused on building environmental awareness and sustainability in our communities. The event welcomes students, families, and organizations to enjoy food & beverage vendors, music, and games while learning more about what can be done to make Vietnam more Green. Organizations with Green products, services, or initiatives will be on-site promoting sustainable solutions to the environmentally conscious community in attendance. The showcase of Canada Green Day will be the 2nd Annual Get Green Competition for student sustainability initiatives.

2nd Annual Get Green Competition
The Get Green Competition challenges teams of 3-6 students to create viable sustainability initiatives for their local communities. Each team submits a proposal to the Get Green Competition judges panel and builds a poster to display at Canada Green Day outlining their sustainability initiative to the panel and Canada Green Day attendees. The judges panel will choose two or more teams as the winners of the competition based on the strength of an initiative’s concept, innovation, viability, and positive impact. Winning teams will be awarded VND 22,500,000 to implement their initiative in the teams’ local communities, with support from the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.

Successful implementation of 1st Annual Get Green Competition initiatives
Award winners of the 1st Annual Get Green Competition – The Light of Knowledge and EcoSSIStem – have successfully implemented their initiatives. The Light of Knowledge has increased its stock and sale of solar lanterns, and donated 50 personal solar lanterns to VinaCapital Foundation to provide families with sustainable lighting for social gatherings, for students to use during evening study, and for individuals to travel safely after dark. EcoSSIStem increased the capacity of their school composting initiative by building another customized, rotating composting bin. They used excess funds to help organize and market an environmental awareness event at their school.

Canadian Chamber of Commerce Vietnam on Canada Green Day
The Canadian Chamber of Commerce Vietnam believes that future of a sustainable Vietnam starts with today’s students – tomorrow’s thought leaders. We are proud of the accomplishments of the winners of the 1st Annual Get Green Competition and look forward to supporting grassroots student environmental sustainability initiatives with this year’s 2nd Annual Get Green Competition and for many years to come. We look forward to seeing HCMC’s green-minded community at Canada Green Day!

For more information on being part of Canada Green Day or the Get Green Competition, please visit canchamvietnam.org.

Source: Cancham Vietnam

Going Digital In Banking — DBS, Citi, BBVA, ING Lead The Way

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DBS, the Asian bank headquartered in Singapore, was the first to be named the world’s best digital bank by Euromoney in 2016. When just about every money center, regional, community bank and credit union promotes itself as a digital leader, Euromoney looked for more than talk.

“Leaders in digital banking talk about the difference between digitising aspects of a bank and creating a truly digital financial institution,” said Clive Horwood, editor of Euromoney magazine. “DBS is doing this better than any other bank. It is demonstrably the case that digital innovation pervades every part of DBS, from consumer to corporate, SMEs to transaction banking and even the DBS Foundation.” A report by , the contributor of Forbes.

In accepting the award, Piyush Gupta, CEO of DBS Bank, said “At DBS, we believe that banks tomorrow will look fundamentally different from banks today. That’s why we have spent the past three years deeply immersed in the digital agenda. This has been an all-encompassing journey, whether it is changing the culture and mindsets of our people, re-architecting our technology infrastructure, or leveraging Big Data, biometrics and AI to make banking simple and seamless for customers.”

The competition was fierce with BBVA, Citi and ING named as strong competitors.

Francisco González, CEO of BBVA, was named Banker of the Year in 2016. He has published commentary saying Amazon and Google are the competition of the future.

In 2017 Citi claimed the honor as the top digital bank for its global consumer bank.

A leading financial services group in Asia, with over 280 branches across 18 markets, DBS has a growing presence in Greater China, Southeast Asia and South Asia. But sheer size and even market penetration are not enough in today’s world. Indeed, this could be the last year a bank receives top digital banking honors, given some of the financial competition from China.

DBS was facing some serious competition from Chinese financial platforms such as Ant Financial’s Alipay and Tencent’s WeChat, said Sameer Gupta, the bank’s chief analytics officer.

“Startups were taking some of the profitable products out of the banks, so we had to disrupt ourselves. We set up a focus around digital.”

What has made DBS successful at digital?

“The CEO insists that digital pervades every part of the bank. A lot of banks focus on a digital front end so they have a fancy mobile interface but the rest of the bank’s operations are old technology.”

He described DBS as customer obsessed, data driven, willing to take risks and experiment, move from waterfall development to agile and become a learning organization. Customers don’t want a drill, they don’t want a perfect hole, they want a way to place a picture on the wall.

“We try to get under the skin of the customer and use ethnographic studies. For example, mortgage banks look at a mortgage as a product while customers want the perfect home, so they are interested in schools, amenities and are very emotionally involved in the process. So how can a bank help a customer in buying a home?”

DBS, which counts a large percentage of Singapore residents as customers, used its customer data along with government data to create DBS Home Connect, a resource for home buyers,, in 2013. Anybody using the app, not just DBS customers, can point a smartphone camera at a building and see information about prices, affordability, amenities and schools. It offers an augmented reality view of nearby properties and amenities. In addition, they can also save previous searches and viewed transactions for subsequent comparisons. The bank’s share of Singapore mortgages grew from 24% when it started offering the house information to 32% now.

From bottom in customer experience in 2009 DBS rose to tops in 2013. The bank said it saved 250 million customer hours and 1 million employee hours, in part through an initiative known as RED for Respectful, Easy to deal with and Dependable.

DBS has 400 people in its analytics team and it is growing, Gupta said. It uses data and analytics throughout the bank. In HR it has helped reduce employee attrition by spotting early indicators in time to address issues. Analytics has reduced cash-outs at ATMs from every three months to none in 2017.

Its greatest impact is in marketing where DBS is moving from sales to advice in its communications with customers.

To expand thinking, the bank has used hackathons, human centered design and customer journey thinking. It has redesigned workspaces to be collaborative while also offering private work spaces for people who have projects they need to focus on alone.

Development labs have always-on video to connect researchers across geographies. One result is fewer emails, fewer group meetings and more face-to-face engagement.

To engage employees, the bank offers a startup-fusion of energy, incubators and accelerators, universities and research centers. By now 70 percent of staff have participated in at least one of these, he said.

Gupta advises banks making the transition to digital to find some use cases, like reducing attrition, that can demonstrate the power of data and analytics.

Data is a key to being successful digitally, said Gupta and that means moving beyond customer services to learning how the bank can help customers do what they want, like making it easy to research a house purchase.

“To win at digital you have to win at analytics, using data to design new products and improving forecasts to make them more scientific.” The bank uses data and analytics for day-to-day decision making and to improve personalization.

“We focus on what problems are we trying to solve and what is the most efficient way,” Gupta added. “It’s not enough to hire a few data scientists, you need people to change their mindset.”

Like many banks, DBS had ample data, but it was in silos and just organizing it could take years with nothing to show for the effort.

“We did use cases, like attrition, and see if it works.”

Rather that keep an innovation in development for years to achieve perfection, DBS pushes out minimally viable products and looks for feedback from the market to refine them. Building digital capability has helped DBS expand. Building branches is a slow and expensive way to grow, he said, while digital has low customer acquisition costs and can scale quickly. DBS set out to eliminate paper and engage with customers through digital and data.

The bank launched Digibank India, the nation’s first all digital bank. Mobile usage was exploding in India, where landlines had reached only three percent penetration and took years to acquire, and the country had invested in biometrics — Aadhaar, a 12-digit biometric identity number, and KYC (Know Your Customer) which helped make digital banking possible.

DBS had developed a traditional banking operation in India which after 15 years had 12 branches and 14,000 customers and was restricted in the number it could operate.

“It was profitable, but it wasn’t scalable,” Gupta said.

The digital bank was designed to help customers attain their goals while saving the time it takes to go to a branch for banking.

Mobile-only, Digibank India lets customers open an account in 90 seconds and authenticate their identity by stopping in at a popular coffee chain. It has 1.8 million users with a goal to reach five million in three years.

Going into new markets with Digibank presented lots of unknowns, so the bank needed to move fast and have the ability to do weekly releases, Gledhill said. Gupta said one surprise is that while mobile was widely used in India, the systems weren’t very stable and often dropped calls, so transactions had to be designed to survive transmission breaks. The bank also tried introducing voice authentication for security, but the take-up was zero. Users preferred biometrics or passwords.

When DBS expanded Digibank into Indonesia, it was able to re-use 70 percent of the code, which helped it launch in half the time, Gupta said.

The bank is moving off mainframe applications to x86, “because most of the compute power on the cloud is x86,” according to David Gledhill, the bank’s CIO. DBS hasn’t built a new mainframe application in years, Gledhill said, and it has reduced the number of apps on the mainframe from 120 to 60. The goal is to have 50 percent of compute on the cloud by 2018 he added in an excellent, detailed presentation to investors.

DBS puts quotes from Alibaba’s Jack Ma and Gledhill side by side in the investor presentation.

Jack Ma (Alibaba) to Walmart:

“If you want 10,000 new customers, you have to build a new warehouse, hire people … for me? 2 servers.”

Dave Gledhill to Jack Ma: “You need 2 servers for 10,000 new customers …For me 50,000 new customers need just 1 server.”

In an interview with London-Based efinancialcareers, Soh Siew Choo, managing director and head of core systems technology at DBS, said that “by leveraging cloud-native architecture. We’re pursuing straight-through automation and getting rid of all our manual processes.”

By moving development in-house, DBS has built the skills to become an agile tech organization.

It has flipped from a heavy reliance on IBM and Accenture and other suppliers for 85 percent of development to 85 percent in-house development. Tech suppliers include CA, Micro Focus, Fortify, SonarQube, Zephyr and Mockito. The bank has used SAS analytical tools for 32 years and values its model governance.

“A lot of newer companies don’t have experience with model governance and model life cycles,” Gupta said.

by Tom Groenfeldt, Twitter @tomgroenfeldt

Vietnam Morning News – May 3

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Estimated Reading Time: 5 minutes

Vietnam’s trade revenue hit nearly US$145 billion
The country’s total import-export turnover in the first four months of this year rose 14.4 percent year-on-year to US$144.13 billion, the General Department of Customs reported.
— The Hanoi Times

Vietnam’s Vietjet Aviation Q1 net profit up sharply at $60mn
Vietnam’s budget airline Vietjet Aviation said on Wednesday net profit rose sharply in the first quarter, on strong revenue growth.
— Vietnam Insider

Petroleum, rice price hike pushes April’s inflation
Vietnam’s consumer price index (CPI) in the first four months of this year rose 2.8 percent year-on-year, mainly due to price hike of petroleum and food, the General Statistics Office (GSO) reported.
— The Hanoi Times

Real estate firms in a spin over condotel oversupply in Vietnam
Only 19 percent of the new holiday homes on the market sold in the first quarter of this year.
— VnExpress

SMEs’ access to credit: Better, but not enough
Small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) have been highly conducive to economic development in Viet Nam as they significantly contribute to job creation, export promotion, growth generation and poverty reduction.
— Bizhub

History of hustle drives Vietnam’s outbound startups
Communist ruled Vietnam makes no bones about capitalizing on technology and other entrepreneurial startups to speed its drive to reach middle-income status and close the economic gap with more developed regional rivals.
— Asia Times

HCM City needs $80 billion for development
The People’s Committee of Ho Chi Minh City said the city will need VND1,800 trillion (US$80 billion) for investment in 2018-2020 to ensure its growth.
— The Hanoi times

Gas trading violations affect businesses, consumers
The trading of low-quality gas, illegal extraction and failure to ensure the safety continue posing dangers to the health and rights of consumers.
— VietnamPlus

Challenges for the Belt and Road Initiative in Vietnam
Back in March, 2017, China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) was described by the international media as being broad and comprehensive, involving policy coordination, facilities connectivity, unimpeded trade, financial integration, and people-to-people connections.
— The Asean Post

Vietnam Airlines pilots grounded after landing on runway under construction
Vietnam’s Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam is investigating why a Vietnam Airlines jet carrying 203 passengers landed on a closed, still under construction runway.
— Travel Mole

FDI disbursement up, inflow of capital down
Viet Nam’s foreign direct investment (FDI) disbursement continued a positive trend in the first four months of 2018 while there was a reduction in the registered FDI capital.
— Bizhub

​Vietnam risks becoming ‘haven’ for card fraud with slow move to chip tech
Banks in Vietnam are reluctant to replace all magnetic stripe cards with chip cards by the end of 2020 because of tremendous costs, putting roughly 70 million card owners at risk of identity theft, despite a central bank requirement to make the transition.
— Tuoi Tre

HCM City pilots rental of public vehicles
A HCM City pilot car rental service for Government officials that began on Sunday is expected to save more than VND100 million (US$4,404) per month for the State budget.
— Bizhub

HCM City’s industrial production stalls in four months
Ho Chi Minh City’s industrial production index tended to stall, up only 6.07 percent in the four months this year compared to 7.09 percent one year earlier, said Deputy Director of the municipal Department of Industry and Trade Nguyen Huynh Trang.
— VietnamPlus

Experts call for corruption probe into cheap public land transaction
Several economic experts have raised doubts over possible corruption in the selling of 32 hectares of public land in HCM City.
— VietnamNet Bridge

Vietnamese leaves US startups behind for more meaningful venture in homeland
A Vietnamese man has been running an enterprise in his motherland in the quest for a more meaningful life after deciding to leave the United States, where he successfully co-launched several start-ups.
— Tuoi Tre

Vietnamese steel association seeks exemption from ‘absurd’ Trump tariff
Local firms are concerned they will be unable to compete with countries where the U.S. does not imposes the fees.
— VnExpress

Deputy PM chairs meeting on use of WB, ADB loans
Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Pham Binh Minh chaired a meeting in Hanoi on May 2 to review and accelerate the launch of 26 projects using loans from the World Bank (WB) and Asian Development Bank (ADB) for 2017-2018.
— VietnamPlus

Motorbike labelling debated
A new draft circular proposes that all new motorbikes imported into or manufactured in Vietnam must be stamped with energy certificates such as the ones found on most electronic appliances, leading to questions about whether the move will actually support regulators’ environmental goals or just create more paperwork.
— VietnamNet Bridge

Singapore edges out Vietnam as Asia’s top stock market
THERE’S been lots of competition for the title of Asia’s best-performing stock market this year. Among the major equity indexes in the region, eight have climbed to records in the first four months alone.
— Vietnam Insider

​Vietnam first joins World Free Zones Organization’s annual event
Vietnam attended for the first time the World Free Zones Organization’s yearly event held in Dubai between April 30 and May 1, in an effort to draw more international attention to the Southeast Asian country’s future free zones.
— Tuoi Tre

Exclusive: CyberAgent Ventures says has exited 10 investments to date in SE Asia
Tokyo-headquartered CyberAgent Ventures has exited more than 10 investments from its two Southeast Asia funds, a top executive has revealed.
— DealStreetAsia

Vietjet Aviation Q1 net profit up sharply at $60mn

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Vietnam’s budget airline Vietjet Aviation (VJC.HSX) said on Wednesday net profit rose sharply in the first quarter, on strong revenue growth.

The company said net profit in the January-March period rose over three-fold to 1.366 trillion dong ($60 million), while revenue more than doubled to 12.56 trillion dong from the year-ago period. Reuters reports

The company said last month it was targeting a pretax profit of 5.8 trillion dong this year, up 9.4 percent, and a 20.5 percent increase in revenue to 50.97 trillion.

Vietnam: Strong growth in fruit and veg exports to key markets

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Up to mid-April, exports of fruit and vegetables to key markets such as the US, Japan, China and Thailand saw an increase in their rates of growth compared to the same period last year.

The English version of VOV (Voice of Vietnam) reported, according to the General Department of Vietnam Customs, exports of the products reached US$176.9 million during the first half of this month, up 13.4% against the corresponding period of last year, bringing the total value of exports for three-and-a-half months to US$1.15 billion, a year-on-year rise of 33.8%. At that pace, the export value is expected to exceed US$1.3 billion by the end of this month.

In the first quarter of this year, China imported US$727 million worth of fruit and vegetables from Vietnam (up 42%), followed by the US with nearly US$29 million (up 19%), Japan with US$28.5 million (up 26.8%), the Republic of Korea with US$24 million (up 8.7%), and Thailand with US$18.1 million (up 23.8%).

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) forecast that China’s imports and consumption of fruit and vegetables will grow rapidly over the 2017-2020 period, accounting for 15.1% of global consumption. China’s burgeoning demand offers an excellent opportunity for Vietnam to boost its trade with the market.

The Vietnamese fruit and vegetable sector has recorded strong growth in its exports over recent years, hitting a record high of US$3.514 billion last year, up 43% over the previous year. Last year, China was the leading importer of Vietnam’s fruit and vegetables, making up 75% of Vietnam’s total export value, trailed by Japan, the US, the RoK, the Netherlands, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand, the UAE, and Russia.

Two foreigners praised for saving children in Da Nang

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Two foreigners have been praised by the local authority for their bravery in rescuing two children stuck at a guest house that caught fire in central city of Da Nang.

The 31-year-old Valeria, a Russian, and 46-year-old Jean Christophe, a French man, on Wednesday were granted the merit certificate at the city’s Lien Chieu District.

On Tuesday, at about 10:30am, local residents detected plumes of smoke rising from Bao Hoang Guest House located on Kinh Duong Vuong Street in Lien Chieu District.

When the fire broke out, the 12-storeyed guest house was closed for repairing, so no guests were present inside. However, two children of the owners were trapped in the house, which was locked from outside while their parents were away.

On hearing the screams for help from the local people, Valeria and Jean Christophe, who were residing in a house opposite the Bao Hoang guest house, dashed to the terrace of the next door house and then climbed into the guest house to rescue the two victims.

Valeria broke the door to avoid being choked by the smoke, but sustained injury to his hand and suffered suffocation and unconsciousness.

The fire was later extinguished completely, and Valeria was taken to the hospital for emergency treatment.

The two children were brought out to safety by Jean Christophe and the local firefighting force.

“At that time, like everybody else at the scene, I just wanted to do something to save the two little children before the fire spread quickly. We don’t do that to be rewarded or become famous. Fortunately, the two children are fine,” Jean Christophe was quoted by e-newspaper Zing as saying.

According to the initial investigation, the incident was caused by a short circuit in the air conditioner on the third floor of the house. — VNS

Source: VNS

Real estate firms in a spin over condotel oversupply in Vietnam

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Only 19 percent of the new holiday homes on the market sold in the first quarter of this year.

Real estate organizations in Vietnam are concerned that 2018 could be a difficult year for the local condotel market due to oversupply.

About 23,000 condotels were built last year in Vietnam, according to the Ho Chi Minh City Real Estate Association (HoREA). In the first quarter of this year alone, 2,078 new condotels were put on the market, the Ho Chi Minh based DKRA real estate firm estimated.

Despite the high number, only 387 were sold in the first three months of this year, DKRA reported. Last year, only 33 percent of new condotels were sold, just half of the number reported in 2016, the company said.

Condotel investments in Vietnam have not slowed since 2016, despite a warning of oversupply issued by HoREA in August 2017. The association estimated that from 2017 to 2019, around 29,000 new condotels would be put on the market.

One of the reasons for the low demand is the lack of a legal framework to manage them, as they are currently not clearly specified in Vietnamese law, said Nguyen Van Sinh, deputy minister of construction, at a condotel conference in March.

Subinvestors are concerned about the lack of ownership and management rights because authorities do not issue red books (documents that confirm ownership in Vietnam) for condotels.

However, despite these challenges, experts believe that condotels still have great potential in Vietnam, and that the oversupply is only temporary.

The number of international visitors arriving in Vietnam has been increasing by 30 percent for the last three years, so there will be growing demand for condotels in the years to come, said Nguyen Van Tuan, general director of tourism under the Ministry of Culture, Sports & Tourism.

Condotels are flying up around many famous tourist attractions. The central beach city of Nha Trang currently accounts for 52 percent of all condotels in Vietnam, while the rest can be found in tourist-friendly cities such as Binh Thuan and Da Nang in the central region, and Phu Quoc Island in the far south, HoREA reported.

Another reason for the booming condotel market is Vietnam’s rising middle class population, said Professor Dang Hung Vo, former deputy minister of natural resources and environment.

Condotels don’t cost as much as villas, so Vietnam’s growing middle class is more likely to be interested in this form of real estate investment, Vo said.

Vietnam’s middle class will reach 44 million by 2020, accounting for 46.3 percent of the population, according to Nielsen, a global information and measurement company.

Condotels still have great potential because of the 8 to 12 percent profit investors guarantee buyers. According to Vo, some real estate companies have already paid out this windfall.

Last month, the Ministry of Construction said condotels should be treated as residential properties so that owners are granted long-term ownership.

The ministry also suggested that Vietnam’s laws on housing, land and construction should be modified to clear the difficulties investors face with condotels.

Source: Vnexpress

​Public land abandoned in Ho Chi Minh City

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A recent inspection by competent authorities showed that multiple public land plots in Ho Chi Minh City have been left unused and wasted for years.

The city’s inspectorate has revealed that 26 pieces of public land, each covering tens of thousands of square meters, have been deserted for a long time.

These land plots, which belong to the state, had been leased to local businesses to carry out their operations, but some of the lessees eventually decided to stop using the land, or even leased them to other subtenants, which is against regulations.

One of such pieces of land is a 24,000 square meter area located on Kinh Duong Vuong Street in Binh Tan District, which Sinco JSC, a subsidiary of Saigon Industrial Corporation, has been authorized to manage and use.

According to H., a local resident, Sinco previously set up a workshop on the land, but eventually relocated the facility many years ago. The land has since been abandoned, which H. said is “a huge waste.”

Situated on the same road, a 9,000 square meter public land plot, managed by the Mekophar Chemical Pharmaceutical JSC, has also been deserted.

The land now only consists of an old and abandoned workshop, overseen by only one security guard.

The wastefulness of these land plots has been brought up during previous meetings between local authorities and residents, Trinh, who lives in the neighborhood, said, adding that no changes have been made.

“These areas could have been used to establish schools and playgrounds for our children,” Trinh remarked.

This piece of public land on Kinh Duong Vuong Street in Binh Tan District has been abandoned for years. Photo. Tuoi Tre

Subleasing

At another land plot on Nguyen Thi Dinh Street in District 2, a factory of An Phu Animal Feed Company has been left unused for years.

A man claiming to be an employee of the firm has been tasked with supervising the old facility as well as dealing with potential customers who want to lease the factory.

The facility is available for lease at VND110,000 (US$4.84) per square meter, under a contract term of at least six months, according to the man.

A similar situation happened at a land plot in Thu Duc District, which is managed by Saigontourist Company.

The 1,600 square meter area has been leased to multiple diners over the past years.

Saigontourist also manages another land parcel in Binh Thanh District.

According local residents, the area was previously home to the headquarters of a Saigontourist subsidiary.

After the travel company was relocated five years ago, many people have been interested in leasing the lot, but no deal has ever been made, they added.

The municipal Department of Natural Resources and Environment is set to conduct a comprehensive examination of public land plots across the city to see whether they are being wasted or used for wrong purposes.

Violations will be reported to the city’s administration, the Ministry of Finance, and the central government before the final decision is made.

By Duy Khang (Tuoi Tre News)

HCM City welcomes more than 2.6 million foreign visitors over 4 months

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More than 2.6 million foreigners visited Ho Chi Minh City during the first four months of this year, reaching 34.85% of this year’s plan, according to a report from the municipal People’s Committee.

In April alone, the total number of foreign arrivals to the City was estimated to be 615,406, up 25% against the corresponding period last year. The tourism revenue for April was around VND10,243 billion, a year-on-year rise of 17.46%, bringing the total revenue for the four months to VND42,258 billion, reaching 30.62% of this year’s plan.

The city has conducted several surveys as part of its recent efforts to develop new tourism products, programs, and tours to boost tourism development. It has also organized tourism promotion programs overseas with events such as HCM City Days in Aichi, Japan, a Tourism Youth Ambassador of Greater Mekong Sub-region action program, and an exchange program in Laos.

To make the city more attractive to international friends, the municipal People’s Committee has asked the Department of Tourism to continue to improve the quality of tourism products and services, focusing on the development of waterway tourism, organizing art performances to serve visitors, and implementing the HCM City – 100 interesting things program and a standard tourism service program.

Source: VOV

​Vietnamese care more about edibility of wild animals than protection: seminar

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When it comes to wildlife, many Vietnamese people only care if an animal fits to be eaten, rather than how to protect them, an activist said at a conservation exhibition in Ho Chi Minh City late last month.

Mzung, a filmmaker and environment activist, told other young conservationists at the talk held on the sidelines of the exhibition titled “The Scream – Call of the Wild” that the conceptions about wildlife many Vietnamese still hold need to be changed.

“In other developed countries, when talking about porcupines, deer, pheasants, people will ask what the animals look like, where they live, what they eat,” Mzung said at the April 23 talk.

“Meanwhile, in Vietnam, the first thing many Vietnamese people want to know is if they are good to eat.”

Mzung said the popular misconception that wild animals, which only eat plants in the forests, will produce nutritious meat is to blame for the fact that Vietnamese people have a liking for wild animal consumption.

“Many people are willing to pour money into rhino horn, bear bile, pythons or snakes, and it is challenging to change that notion,” she underlined.

Vietnamese conservationists discuss at a talk in Ho Chi Minh City on April 23, 2018. Photo: Tuoi Tre

Alarming facts

The April 23 event was hosted by young Vietnamese conservationists, with the desire to bring the most honest view to the public as well as calling for action from the community.

The young organizers come from a variety of backgrounds.

Joining Mzung on the stage were Trang Nguyen, an international social activist on fighting wildlife trade since 2013, and Dao Van Hoang, an amateur painter who chooses wildlife conservation as the main theme of his works.

During the almost five-hour talk, the conservationists and people fascinated by nature openly discussed the disappointing state of wildlife conservation in Vietnam.

Humans are largely involved, either directly or indirectly, in wildlife hunting, trading and consumption activities, according to the speakers.

“People hunt and kill animals in Africa to get ivory, horn and feather, or use them to make wine, due to huge market demand in Asia, particularly Vietnam,” Trang Nguyen, an independent artist who is pursuing her doctoral studies in the UK, said.

The activists reminded the audience of such alarming facts as the current rate of extinction of animals has become increasingly faster, with three to four rhinos and 96 elephants killed in Africa every day, or the world’s last surviving male northern white rhino already died in Kenya on March 20.

It is also predicted that the number of mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and many other animals in the world will decline by about two-thirds by 2020.

Sudan, the world’s last male northern white rhino, is seen at the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya. Photo: Ol Pejeta Conservancy

Vietnam has recently confirmed that no wild tigers are left in the country, whereas an elephant in the Yok Don National Park in the Central Highlands province of Dak Lak is in a crucial condition with the necrosis foot, and two-thirds of its trunk and ivory cut.

Mzung said that there are too few pioneers in wildlife conservation in Vietnam, as the work of conservationists is not flashy and praised.

Both Trang Nguyen and Mzung are working on projects for children “to have a generation of love and a sense of nature protection,” they shared at the event.

A dead young elephant is seen at Yok Don National Park in Vietnam’s Central Highlands. Photo: Tuoi Tre
Mzung has produced many documentaries on wildlife, human connections and interactions both in urban areas and around protected regions.

Trang Nguyen has worked on many animal conservation projects and left her footprint in a series of national parks and wildlife sanctuaries in South Africa and Kenya.

Dao Van Hoang has traveled to more than 25 countries to paint in nature reserves, taking animals and endangered species that need to be protected as the main subject of his works.

By Bao Anh ( Tuoi Tre News)

History of hustle drives Vietnam’s outbound startups

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Communist country capitalizing on state-supported technology firms to close economic gaps and quickly reach middle-income status.

Communist ruled Vietnam makes no bones about capitalizing on technology and other entrepreneurial startups to speed its drive to reach middle-income status and close the economic gap with more developed regional rivals.

Communist Party cadres are now reaching globally in that centrally planned pursuit, signing deals with nations ranging from Finland to Thailand in what planners see as the next leap forward in the transition from a command to market economy.

Vietnam’s government has established several technology accelerators, including a so-called “Vietnam Silicon Valley” under the tutelage of the Ministry of Science and Technology, and the Saigon Innovation Hub (Sihub) managed by Ho Chi Minh City’s Department of Science and Technology.

State managers say government support is needed to secure profitable niches in an increasingly competitive marketplace, particularly in the technology sector.

“Vietnam’s innovation and startup ranking is still lower than other regional countries like Singapore or Malaysia,” Sihub managing director Huynh Kim Tuoc said. “Most local startups are of a small scale, at their seed stage, with limited ability to make a breakthrough and need further incubation.”

Tuoc’s agency is now partnering with more than a dozen countries on everything from tech consulting to entrepreneur exchange programs to achieve such breakthroughs.

The mythology around successful startups folds neatly into Vietnam’s own origin myth and the way others view the nation. It’s a hard-driving history Hanoi hopes to harness and guide despite still strict state controls on expression and openness.

An internet user browses through the Vietnamese government’s new Facebook page in Hanoi in a file photo. Photo: Reuters

From a small colony with upstart guerrillas who routed France at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, to the tropical backwater that somehow overcame America’s powerful military in 1975, Vietnam is known for overcoming huge odds.

Today, its brainy programmers are aiming to code Vietnam’s way to prosperity despite a slow start. Some observers perceive Vietnam has already leapfrogged certain regional rivals, including Thailand and Indonesia, countries which Vietnam competes with for foreign direct investment (FDI).

“The world is moving fast and in order not to be left behind, Vietnam has to strive to be part of the global innovative economy,” said Nguyen Phi Van, founder of Retail & Franchise Asia, a business advisory that works across the region.

Van says she has used her own cross-border success as a platform to mentor young Vietnamese up-and-comers. That entrepreneurial vibrancy can be seen in mushrooming co-working spaces across Ho Chi Minh City, formerly Saigon, and to a lesser extent in more staid Hanoi.

The groundwork for building a so-called startup nation has been well-laid. The government gives tax breaks to new innovative companies while also offering modest capital infusions. Increasingly those incentives, observers say, are being translated into something more concrete and sustainable.

A young Vietnamese man working on a laptop on a Hanoi balcony. Photo: iStock/Getty Images

Foreign linkages have helped. The government’s so-called “Sihub 2020” strategy includes several prongs, including annual exchange programs with Canada, Germany, and South Korea; consultations on commercialization, market research, and expansion abroad; yearly events with foreign embassies that help facilitate doing business overseas; and a board of advisers that counts representatives from multinationals like Alibaba, Deloitte and Boston Consulting Group.

“We aim to facilitate the process of deepening international integration focusing on building intellectual and innovative properties,” Tuoc said.

Large Vietnamese technology companies already have taken their shows on the road. Software giant FPT, for example, is building up its business in Japan, while telecommunication giant Viettel has built networks all over Africa, from Burundi to Cameroon.

Now newer corporate names are starting to branch out, too. Ticketbox, for example, has become the country’s go-to online vendor that has set up deals with event planners and payment companies and made forays into Thailand and Singapore.

Topica, meanwhile, is expanding regionally in education services, leveraging into the fact that Vietnam beats most of its regional peers in international math and science tests. Its online tutoring and degree services have so far been rolled out in the Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand.

Others are developing locally innovative concepts and products with an eye on eventual regional expansion. Toong, another local startup, bills itself as Vietnam’s first chain of co-working spaces, leveraging into the country’s real estate boom by offering techies an affordable place to code and collaborate.

Vietnam’s Ticketbox online vendor has expanded across Southeast Asia. Photo: Twitter

It recently announced a partnership with the local Wink Hotels group to shake up the traditional business centers at hotels. The idea, company executives say, is to have a place where business travelers, digital nomads, and locals all can work.

“When business centers are designed with the fashionable and inspirational mindset of a co-working space,” Toong founder Do Duong said, “they will better meet the expectations of this modern working style.”

Toong’s expansion plans will start in Laos, where it is opening the smaller country’s first co-working space before expanding across the rest of Indochina.

Technology controversies and challenges in other parts of the globe, ranging from Facebook’s data sharing scandal with Cambridge Analytica, to the Big Brother-like face scanning to social scores used by China, have only amounted to cautionary tales so far for Vietnam.

That said, too much state intervention can also inhibit entrepreneurial drive. Hanoi’s main concern has been to prevent digital companies from dodging taxes and to prevent the “fake news” that has caused global ripples from stirring trouble at home.

A local flyer for Vietnamese educational services company Topica. Photo: Facebook

Tight internet controls, global experience shows, can inhibit technology sector investments. But while the Southeast Asian country’s startup success is far from guaranteed, it does have a number of things going for it.

One is a huge diaspora, known as Viet Kieu, many of them driven out of the country by the Vietnam War, who settled in places like California’s Silicon Valley and are now interested in bringing their capital and knowledge back to Vietnam.

Another is a highly-educated and driven work place, with students and graduates who regularly beat rich-nation peers on the key international test rankings for science and math.

Perhaps just as important is a history of hustle: Vietnam has been home to entrepreneurs looking for ways to make a buck — or a dong — for centuries, dating to the once vibrant trading port of Hoi An to the busy shipping routes along the Mekong River.

Now as then, there is no shortage of outward-looking entrepreneurs seeking Vietnam’s next big break in the new global economy.

By: Ma Nguyen

Source: ATimes

Backed by distribution giant, could Nokia threaten Apple in Vietnam?

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With support of The Gioi Di Dong, the largest mobile phone distribution chain in Vietnam, Nokia is expected to make things happen again in Vietnam.

At a ceremony launching Nokia 7 Plus and Nokia 6 in Hanoi on April 18, The Gioi Di Dong pledged to sell 500,000 Nokia smartphone products in 2018. The retailer has committed to sell 41,600 smartphones for HMD Global.

The models have manufacturer’s suggested retail prices of at least VND5.99 million.

Nokia will list its name among the top four smartphone brands in Vietnam and will have opportunities to compete with Apple for the third position in the list of best sellers.

If the sales by The Gioi Di Dong account for 65 percent of total smartphones Nokia sells in the market, about 64,000 Nokia products would be sold each month. The figure could be even higher if The Gioi Di Dong can fulfill its commitment.

A report from GfK, a market analysis firm, showed that in February 2018, Nokia was the fourth to Samsung, Oppo and Apple in the sales of smartphones in Vietnam with 50,313 products sold. The fifth position belonged to Vivo with 48,795 products sold.

However, in January 2018, also according to GfK, Nokia, with 46,604 products sold, Nokia was in a lower position than Vivo which sold 54,739 products.

Vivo and Nokia have been fighting for the fourth position in recent months. The positions changed regularly depending on the manufacturers’ launch of new models and the retailers’ sales promotion programs.

Though the fourth position is still uncertain for Nokia, analysts believe that the brand, which is among the world’s top 5, has greater advantages than Vivo.

The biggest advantage is that Nokia products were favored in Vietnam, while Vivo is a completely new brand.

The Gioi Di Dong’s chair Nguyen Duc Tai also commented that Nokia is a familiar name to the majority of Vietnamese. The second big advantage is that Nokia has a big partner in charge of distributing its products.

Some analysts think that Nokia may even be a threat to Apple, which has been in the third position over many years.

In 2017, Apple’s products held 9 percent of Vietnam’s smartphone market share with 122,000 products sold each month, while the total number of smartphones sold in Vietnam was 13.5 million.

Apple’s average number of sold products doubles that of Nokia’s.

US$1=VND22,000

By: Chi Mai, Source: VietNamNet

2018 AFF Suzuki Cup: All the fixtures

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The draw for the 2018 AFF Suzuki Cup was made on Wednesday and has thrown up its fair share of enticing encounters between ASEAN football’s finest.

While both groups are fairly evenly-matched, Group B has arguably emerged as the proverbial “Group of Death”, featuring defending champions Thailand, 2016 runners-up Indonesia, four-time winners Singapore and emerging Philippines, along with the winner of the qualifying playoff between Brunei Darussalam and Timor-Leste.

Meanwhile, Group A pits 2008 winners Vietnam, 2010 champions Malaysia, Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos against one another.

Here, FOX Sports Asia brings to you the full list of fixtures for the upcoming edition of Southeast Asia’s premier international tournament.

November 8 (Group A)
Cambodia v Malaysia
Laos v Vietnam

November 9 (Group B)
Singapore v Indonesia
QF Playoff winner v Thailand

November 12 (Group A)
Malaysia v Laos
Myanmar v Cambodia

November 13 (Group B)
Indonesia v QF Playoff winner
Philippines v Singapore

November 16 (Group A)
Laos v Myanmar
Vietnam v Malaysia

November 17 (Group B)
QF Playoff winner v Philippines
Thailand v Indonesia

November 20 (Group A)
Myanmar v Vietnam
Cambodia v Laos

November 21 (Group B)
Philippines v Thailand
Singapore v QF Playoff winner

November 24 (Group A)
Vietnam v Cambodia
Malaysia v Myanmar

November 25 (Group B)
Thailand v Singapore
Indonesia v Philippines

December 1 (Semi-finals 1st leg)
Group A runners-up v Group B winners *Match 21

December 2 (Semi-finals 1st leg)
Group B runners-up v Group A winners *Match 22

December 5 (Semi-finals 2nd leg)
Group B winners v Group A runners-up *Match 23

December 6 (Semi-finals 2nd leg)
Group A winners v Group B runners-up *Match 24

December 11 (Final 1st leg)
Winner of Match 21 & 23 v Winner of Match 22 & 24

December 15 (Final 2nd leg)
Winner of Match 22 & 24 v Winner of Match 21 & 23

 

Source: Foxsports Asia
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