Steve Jobs’ pre-Apple job application could fetch $50,000 at auction

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The auction will also include a love letter from the late British singer Amy Winehouse to her husband Blake Fielder-Civil. 

A job application filled out by Steve Jobs more than four decades ago that reflects the Apple founder’s aspirations to work in technology and design will go up for auction next month.

With an estimated value of about $50,000, the one-page application from 1973, complete with spelling and punctuation errors, lists his name as “Steven jobs” and address as “reed college,” the Oregon college he attended briefly, Boston auction house RR Auction said on Thursday.

Under a section titled “Special Abilities,” Jobs wrote “tech or design engineer. digital.—from Bay near Hewitt-Packard,” a reference to pioneering California technology company Hewlett-Packard.

The document but does not state what position Jobs was applying for. Jobs and friend Steve Wozniak founded Apple about three years later. Jobs died of cancer in 2011 at the age of 56.

Though Jobs responded on the form that he had a driver’s license, he said his access to transportation was “possible, but not probable.” Next to “Phone:” he wrote “none.”

The document will be part of a pop culture sale by RR Auction that will take place between March 8 and 15.

Two other Jobs items will appear in the same auction – a Mac OS X technical manual signed by Jobs in 2001, valued at $25,000, and a signed 2008 newspaper clipping, valued at $15,000, with a photo of Jobs and a headline that reads “New, faster iPhone will sell for $199.”

The auction will also feature an original fingerprint card from Jimi Hendrix’s 1969 arrest in Toronto on drug charges, signed by the late rock musician, which is valued at $15,000.

It will include a love letter from the late British singer Amy Winehouse to her husband Blake Fielder-Civil. In addition to the text, the one-page Winehouse letter features a sketch of a baby crocodile surrounded by hearts.

Late British pop singer Amy Winehouse performs during the Glastonbury music festival in Somerset, south-west England June 22, 2007. Photo by Reuters/Dylan Martinez

“Do nothing ’til you hear from me handsome, I need your arms around me so I can inhale, open my eyes, breathe my heart’s breathe out,” the letter reads, in part. It is valued at about $4,000.

Winehouse died of alcohol poisoning in London in 2011 at age of 27.

 

 

Source: Reuters

Report: Positive outlook for Vietnam’s FMCG sector

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Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) are expected to have another year of strong growth in 2018 and rise by 6-7 percent over the previous year, according to a Kantar Worldpanel report on Vietnam’s FMCG market.

The report pointed out that the FMCG market showed improvement in four large cities (Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Da Nang and Can Tho) and in rural areas in the fourth quarter of last year.

For all of 2017, the urban market strengthened its performance while the rural market picked up but is not stable just yet.

Positive growth has been seen across the personal care category, with facial moisturiser and make-up items being the most outstanding categories, gaining consumer spending in urban and rural markets.

The growth of facial moisturisers was largely attributed to more consumers starting to focus on beauty care in rural areas.

The snack market is now the main source of growth for packaged foods in both urban and rural markets. More innovations and the increase in convenient indulgence in food consumption are driving the growth of snack foods. Brands can leverage this trend by creating and capturing additional snacking occasions.

According to the report, in the short term, the beverage sector remains the growth driver of the urban market. Personal care continues developing very well in both urban and rural markets as consumers increasingly adopt a diverse repertoire of products.

Regarding the retail landscape, wet markets continue to lose share to other channels while minimarket/convenience stores accelerate their expansion in urban key cities.

Modern trade increased 15 percent in the last quarter, outpacing traditional channels. The retail market is expected to heat up further in 2018 with new entrants and new retail models.

Awakening the beauty of Vietnam’s largest volcanic cave

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The beauty of Vietnam’s first-ever volcanic cave system, Chu B’Luk in the Central Highlands region, which is also the longest in Southeast Asia, has been awakened by Nguyen Thanh Tung who always has a great passion for exploring new things.

Over the past years, Tung volunteered to collect information and images of the cave system and send them to scientists to seek recognition of Chu B’Luk as a volcanic geological park.
The legends of ancients

Many village patriarchs of E De ethnic minority community in Krong No District, Dak Nong Province told legends related to the mysterious Chu B’Luk volcano.

Legend has it that, thousands of years ago, the ancestors of the E De people lived deep underground in the area’s caves. They called the sacred mountain Chu B’Luk which was the origin of the cave system. ‘Chu’ means ‘mountain’ and ‘B’Luk’ means ‘origin’. One day, a man from the community was expelled from Chu B’Luk Cave for his violation of the precepts. Over the years, he practiced hunting, gathering, and farming. Then, they gathered together and set up their village above the ground.

Nguyen Thanh Tung was born in 1975 in Duc Lap village, Dak So commune, Krong No District. When he was young, Tung and his friends often travelled along the banks of the Serepok River to fish. They came near the Chu B’Luk caves, but no one dared to enter the dark hollows except Tung. With a burning torch, he was impressed by the mysterious vegetation. He tried to remember the location and distance between caves to avoid losing his bearings.

In 2007, Tung returned to his hometown as a tour guide after many years of living and working in the southern region. Realising the potential of the cave system in the district, he collected all the images and documents he could find and presented them to Dak Nong province’s cultural sector.

In late 2007, he met Dr La The Phuc, former Director of the Geological Museum and principal researcher of the Vietnam Museum of Nature, who was studying geological forms in the Central Highland provinces. “I brought Dr Phuc to the caves and he was the first scientist in Vietnam to affirm that it was the largest volcanic cave system,” Tung recalled.

Dak Nong province has submitted a dossier for recognition of Krong No volcanic geological park as a national relic site.

Awakened caves

After the project on ‘researching and investigating and assessing the geological heritage and building a geological park in Krong No District, Dak Nong Province’ of Dr La The Phuc was published in domestic and foreign magazines, scientists from the General Department of Geology and Minerals of Vietnam (GDGM) and the Japan Caving Association (JCA) suggested a study of the remaining cave systems in the District under Tung’s guidance. Nearly seven years later, the expedition made an announcement to the pride of Vietnam that the Central Highlands are home to the longest volcanic cave system in Southeast Asia. Chu B’Luk is a unique natural heritage formed by volcanic eruptions millions of years ago.

Tung shared that during the time hew was discovering the caves, he and the expedition team had to live and work in difficult conditions and faced numerous dangers. However, all people overcame the difficulties to enter the deep caves. He said that it is a miniature world of jagged basalt rock surfaces and cool air. Exploring some unknown caves, the expedition’s members found many archaeological relics that date from the Palaeolithic Era (Old Stone Age – 6,000 years ago) to the late Neolithic Era (New Stone Age) and the Early Metal Age (4,000 – 3,000 years ago). They were considered as valid proof of the caves being a habitat of prehistoric humans, which is consistent with the legends told by E De ethnic people.

Scientists also discovered that the Chu B’Luk cave system is connected to the large waterfall complex on the Serepok River, so they have a huge tourism potential. Tung and his friends are still exploring the unknown caves. Tung also emphasised that with the knowledge that he has accumulated over the past years, he is willing to introduce the wonders of the caves in the locality to visitors.

The rick vegetation in Chu B’Luk cave system.

The 2,000 square kilometre volcanic cave system extends from Krong No District to some neighbouring communes of the Cu Giut, Dak Min, Dak Song, and Dak Glong District and Gia Nghia town. According to researchers, the park has seven out of the ten types of geological heritage as classified by UNESCO, so it was assessed as the longest and most beautiful lava cave in Southeast Asia.
Source: Nhandan

Opportunities for newcomers

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The real estate market is often full of grand visions of luxurious urban areas. However, industry experts say real opportunities often lie in the affordable segment that reaches more homebuyers.

Debuting small businesses

In the last few days of 2017, Midland Real Estate Services & Investment JSC signed a partnership agreement with Truong Giang Sapa Group, according to which Midland will be the distributor of Mercure Sapa Jade Hill in the northern province of Lao Cai. The founder of Midland is Nguyen Van Cong, a businessman still in his twenties with leadership experience at major real estate agents.

Cong said that he received full support from previous employers when he expressed his wish to set up his own firm. Seasoned businessmen, some of whom are in their 40s and 50s, suggested Cong to be an entrepreneur before reaching his 30th birthday to take advantage of his youthful energy. Cong himself also felt assured that he had garnered sufficient capital for his business, which was the money he saved up from his years of working at the real estate agents.

Nguyen Hong Minh, director of the Ministry of Planning and Investment’s (MPI) Business Registration Management Agency, said that Midland is a good example of new businesses springing up in 2017. The market is not only reserved for big players anymore, and many opportunities are there to grab for small businesses.

According to Minh, real estate has attracted a great deal of investment capital in 2017, more than any other sector in Vietnam. In terms of the number of new businesses, real estate has recorded the most impressive growth rate with 62 per cent.

“In 2017, real estate was the sector with the highest number of newly registered businesses. The total charter capital of new firms reached VND388 trillion ($17 billion), which is also the highest among all business sectors,” she said.

Affordable housing is still in high demand

New foreign players on stage

According to statistics released by MPI’s Foreign Investment Agency, real estate continued to be among Vietnam’s top three foreign direct investment (FDI) magnets in 2017. The amount of registered inbound capital in real estate was $3.05 billion, including direct investments and share purchases.

2017’s major deals include SonKim Land raising $100 million for its real estate projects. This is the second time SonKim Land has collected capital through EXS Capital Ltd., an independent investment corporation in Asia, ACA Investments Pte. Ltd., a major fund from Japan, and Lemongrass Master Fund.

At the same time, Nam Long Group has collaborated with two Japanese partners Hankyu Realty and Nishi Nippon Railroad to raise half of the $350-million capital required for the 40-hectare Mizuki Park project in Binh Chanh District, Ho Chi Minh City. Nam Long previously raised capital to invest in two projects called Kikyo Residence and Fuji Residence in Ho Chi Minh City’s District 9.

Partnerships and share offers were the two most popular methods to raise more than $10 million of capital for property developers. Besides the two projects mentioned above, other notable deals include Vinaland divesting from the $50-million Times Square project in South Tu Liem District, Hanoi. The buyer in this deal was Elite Capital Resources Limited.

In 2017, Ho Chi Minh City Infrastructure Investment JSC (CII) also partnered up with Hongkong Land to develop a 9.6-ha project in Ho Chi Minh City’s Thu Thiem New Urban Area.

Sustainable profit

According to CBRE Vietnam, there were 35,000 apartments available for sale in Hanoi in 2017, a three-fold increase in four years. In 2018 and 2019, the market will welcome another 70,000 apartments.

For low-rise buildings, the market welcomed 1,055 new houses in the third quarter of 2017, 84 per cent of which were terraced houses. Four projects that made their debut were Louis City (South Tu Liem District), The Eden Rose (Thanh Tri District), the third phase of The Mansions ParkCity (Hadong District), and the third phase of Iris Homes-Gamuda Gardens (Hoang Mai District).

Together with other projects, such as Vinhomes Gardenia My Dinh or Vinhomes The Harmony, it is obvious that Hanoi now has a wide range of low-rise buildings available for potential homebuyers.

Savills Vietnam recently quoted Richard Florida, editor-in-chief of CityLab magazine (Finland), as saying that the real estate market is full of opportunities, yet too much attention is on grand schemes to build luxurious urban areas. The real diamonds, according to Florida, are mid-end projects that the majority of the population can afford.

This comment is in line with recent developments in Vietnam, where affordable real estate projects took up the bulk of transactions. According to the Vietnam Real Estate Association (VNREA), in the third quarter of 2017 Hanoi recorded 4,955 transactions for apartments, down 8.5 per cent on-quarter. Among these, premium apartments only took up 5.4 per cent, mid-end projects accounted for 36.4 per cent, and low-end segment at 58.2 per cent.

Meanwhile, in Ho Chi Minh City, there were 7,494 apartment transactions during the same period, down 24 per cent. In Vietnam’s largest city, premium apartments took up 39 per cent of the deals, behind mid-end projects that accounted for 51 per cent. Less than 10 per cent of the deals were in the low-end segment due to low supply.

Nguyen Van Phuc of VNREA believes that the real estate market should pay more attention to mid-end projects, meeting the increasing demand of mid- to-low income earners.

“If companies continue to invest in high-end projects, there can be a mismatch in supply and demand. The oversupply crisis of 2012-2013 may very well return,” said Phuc.

Meanwhile, economist Nguyen Tri Hieu painted a positive outlook for the real estate market in 2018. The market will continue on its path to recovery and embark on a sustainable growth cycle. However, Hieu emphasised that too many projects nowadays cater to major urban areas, while there are still many opportunities in more remote regions for low-income buyers. Moreover, some developers are pouring a lot of capital into hospitality projects although the legal framework is still not complete, while ignoring the highly promising low-income segment. This is a big mistake, according to Hieu.

“There should be more projects for low-income buyers as there is growing demand in the lower segment. This is also very important for the economy as a whole, as workers need a place to live and settle down before they can fully focus on contributing to the economy. As a result, I strongly suggest a bigger focus on mid-to-low-end segments,” said Hieu.

 

Source: Ha Quang

Hanoi to become a smart city by 2030

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Hanoi set the target to turn into a smart city by 2030 in accordance to the capital’s revised information and technology strategy in the 2016-2020 period.

Foundations established

Phan Lan Tu, director general of the Hanoi Department of Information and Communications, said that the four priority sectors chosen to build the smart city are health, education, transport, and tourism. Since 2017, all four of these sectors have been developed in combination with the development of e-government and administrative reforms to lay the foundations of a smart city.

Regarding urban transportation, Hanoi has applied iparking to search for parking lots and pay for parking through mobile devices. This application will soon be deployed in all districts of Hanoi. Hanoi’s digital traffic map will be deployed to provide information on traffic status and manage public passenger transport in the city.

Regarding education, electronic school reports and family-to-school contacts as well as an online enrollment system has been put in use by 2,700 schools and universities, with the participation of 250,000 families and 6.3 million page views. The rate of online applications at the three levels of primary, secondary, and high school hit 70.68 per cent.

Regarding health management, Hanoi is the first locality to implement e-documents in its health management system, with 900,000 records so far.

Besides, a database of 7.5 million people has been built to set up an application to serve people, enterprises, and city management.

Committee confirmed that becoming a smart city is the essential orientation of Hanoi.

Core elements of a smart city

Based on smart cities established over the world, experts have concluded the core tasks Hanoi needs to complete. First, the city needs to be built on modern information technology and communication (ICT) infrastructure utilising the Internet of Things. People will be connected to their houses, as well as equipment, traffic, and vehicles, among others. Thereby, it is necessary to set up modern infrastructure in transport, healthcare, and education.

Second, citizens the city boasts very low levels of unemployment and relatively high incomes. This is the most important element in building a smart city.

Third, they need dedicated expert teams to manage and operate the technical system of the new smart city.

As a result, the process of building Hanoi as a smart city will include three phases. The first phase (2016-2020) will form the infrastructural foundations and build smart applications on traffic, tourism, environmental management, and security.

The second phase (2020-2025), people will be the stage to take smart city solutions into operation, and form the digital economy. In the third phase (2025-2030), Hanoi will become a functioning smart city.

Challenges along the way

Hanoi is in a good position as it is easy to mobilise investment from domestic corporations such as Viettel, VNPT, FPT, and CMC, and foreign ones like Microsoft.

Various countries with experience in smart city development expressed a wish to co-operate with Hanoi in this sector.

At a meeting with leaders of Hanoi, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said that Singapore wants to invest and develop hi-tech parks and software industrial zones in Hanoi, strengthening co-operation in smart city development. Singapore is ready to welcome officers from Hanoi in particular and Vietnam in general to participate in training courses in Singapore, especially at Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy.

Nearly 80 per cent of professors and associate professors, over 80 per cent of leading experts, and more than 35 per cent of universities and research institutes are working and located in Hanoi.

However, Hanoi still has to face many difficulties and challenges to become a smart city, such as ICT infrastructure, general technical infrastructure, traffic jams, water shortages, waterlogging, wastewater treatment, and environmental pollution.

Hanoi still has to face many difficulties and challenges to become a smart city, such as ICT infrastructure, general technical infrastructure, traffic jams, water shortages, waterlogging, wastewater treatment, and environmental pollution.

Besides, Hoang Trung Hai, Secretary of the Hanoi Party Committee, said that it is very difficult to ensure enough qualified human resources for smart city development and operating the e-government. Technology, which is an important foundation of a smart city, will connect the government to businesses and people, but human resources are key.

Despite the difficulties and challenges ahead, Hanoi has prepared well for smart city development. The Hanoi People’s Council has just approved the resolution adjusting the city’s programme on applying information technology in the operations of Hanoi’s state agencies until 2020. The programme’s budget has been adjusted from VND1.252 trillion ($55.2 million) to VND3 trillion ($132 million) to develop e-government and socioeconomic sectors.

Hai also required to synchronously develop urban and rural infrastructure, promote administrative reforms, as well as improve the investment climate and quality of human resources.

 

Source: Nguyen Huong

Real estate market in spotlight of international attention

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The Vietnamese property market is witnessing a significant number and value of transactions made by foreign investors, adding to an already impressive performance made over the years since Vietnam opened for global integration. Particularly, hosting the year-long APEC Vietnam 2017 meetings and events, the country has availed itself of a great opportunity to showcase its investment potential not only in 2017, but over the years to come.

Booming residential, hotel, office market and what else?

The market remains healthy going into 2018, with strong demand from owner occupiers as well as a strengthening buy-to-let market, supported by some of the highest rental yields in the region.

Savills is also particularly pleased with the performance of the landed property market, which has performed in line with our forecasts made at the end of 2016 with very strong absorption rates that are driven by the completion of new infrastructure and the rapidly growing middle class.

The residential market is evolving towards more owner occupiers and less speculation, which are all healthy and positive signs for the market going forward.

Although the formation of a significant affluent class is creating opportunities for mid- and high-end products, the mass market is benefiting from the rapid growth of the middle class.

In 2017, the number of apartment transactions reached more than 47,000 units, higher than the figure for 2016. The demand for affordable housing continues to increase rapidly in megacities like Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi. The availability of bank finance for the growing middle class, accompanied by a stable mortgage rate, will encourage the continued rise of the affordable segment in 2018 and beyond.

In addition to the strength of the residential market, we have seen excellent performance in the office market, with occupancy rates reaching over 95 per cent in Ho Chi Minh City and accelerating rental growth, particularly for Grade A products. The lion’s share of potential tenants are from the F.I.R.E. (finance, insurance, and real estate-related) sector, followed by manufacturing-related demand.

The hotel segment has also performed well, particularly in Hanoi, driven by strong international visitor growth numbers of 26 per cent in 2016 and nearly 30 per cent year-to-date in 2017.

In 2018, we are anticipating new excitement around the various integrated resorts that are being developed, notably Hoiana which is located only moments from the historic town of Hoi An and will boast of Vietnam’s largest casino when it opens in 2019.

We are also seeing growing investor interest in the industrial market, not only in direct investment into industrial zones, but also those seeking income-producing industrial assets, build-to-suit opportunities, as well as warehousing opportunities to service logistics. Savills expanded our industrial services team in 2017 to specifically cater to this segment.

M&A: Transparency and patience

As the Vietnamese economy thrives, whilst other parts of the region are slowing down, the market will continue to see further interest in all real estate segments, with a focus on office and hospitality, driven by the increasing foreign direct investment (FDI) and booming tourism, and more recently, industrial and logistics real estate developments.

According to the Ministry of Planning and Investment’s statistics, Vietnam’s 2017 newly-registered FDI reached approximately $35.88 billion by December 20, an increase of 44.4 per cent against 2016, while FDI disbursement gained $17.5 billion, increasing 10.8 per cent against 2016. Country-wise, Japan led the list with more than $9.11 billion in newly-registered capital, followed by South Korea and Singapore at $8.49 billion and $5.3 billion, respectively.

Sector-wise, real estate has always been among the sectors attracting the most FDI in Vietnam. This has confirmed the interest of foreign investors in investment and business opportunities in the Vietnamese real estate market. With increasing government incentives, better legal framework, and stronger competitive advantages, the Vietnamese real estate market has attracted a significant influx of capital from both local and foreign investors in recent years. South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, and Hong Kong have been leading the way in foreign investment and are member economies of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC), proving the importance of this forum to Vietnam. They have brought to Vietnam not only capital but also expertise, knowledge, and global experience. Their investment and business expansion has played a key role in helping Vietnam become one of the fastest growing economies in the region.

Singaporean investors were among the first to recognise Vietnam’s market potential.

CapitaLand, who has been present in Vietnam for over 20 years with many residential projects, have set up their $500-million fund targeting commercial assets in the country and made disbursement to close one of the most significant deals of the year: the acquisition of a 0.6-hectare site in a prime location within Ho Chi Minh City’s central business districts to build its first Grade A commercial project in Vietnam.

Keppel Land, another Singapore-based developer, has been launching many successful projects over the past few years.

Japanese investors, with a long presence in Vietnam, have also been very active recently. In 2016, Creed Group entered into a $500-million deal to form a partnership with Phat Dat Real Estate Development Corporation and An Gia Investment to develop River City, a large-scale residential project in District 7. Early last year, together with An Gia Investment, they acquired five apartment blocks of the La Casa project also in District 7 from Van Phat Hung Corporation for approximately $40 million.

Nishi Nippon Railroad and Hankyu Realty have joined hands with well-known listed local developer Nam Long Group to develop the 26-ha Mizuki Park, a residential project in Ho Chi Minh City with the total estimated investment size of approximately $350 million.

AEON Mall, the renowned Japanese shopping mall developer, is operating four shopping malls in Vietnam and have entered into a joint venture with local partner BIM Group to develop its second mall in Hanoi on a 16.7-ha site.

Foreign investors entering Vietnam, it is important that they are able to make clear comparisons between the Vietnamese market and other countries such as Indonesia or more developed markets like Singapore and Hong Kong. To make this comparison, transparent information is essential and becomes a key part of the decision-making process. This is where leading agents like Savills can come in and assist local developers to prepare their projects for marketing to foreign investors in a clear and transparent manner. Through thorough preparation, local developers will achieve far more attractive pricing for their projects and will dramatically increase the chance of successfully closing a deal.

Savills’ experience has shown that Asian investors are much more familiar with the emerging Vietnamese M&A market. For example, many South Korean developers have been through the same evolution in their home market over the last 40 years or so that Vietnam is going through today. Similarly, Japanese investors are attracted by the Vietnamese young population, whilst their population at home is aging fast.

More than ever, opportunities are abundant, waiting to be grasped and acted upon strategically, with a stronger legal framework and a rapidly growing economy set to support investors in their decisions. Vietnam should take full advantage of all the international attention that it has seen on the back of the APEC Vietnam 2017 and realise the potential of tourism, as well as socioeconomic development. We hope that the Vietnamese government will support investors by creating a healthy business environment, with clear and transparent investment policies so that the real estate market can grow sustainably over the years to come.

By Neil MacGregor, VIR

Vietnamese banker flees overseas after stealing $10 mln from customer: police

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Eximbank says it cannot reimburse the customer until a court orders it to do so.

An Eximbank exec has fled overseas after appropriating VND245 billion ($10.8 million) from a customer using forged documents, the bank said on Thursday.

Bank representatives told reporters that the fraud committed by Le Nguyen Hung, former deputy director of the lender’s Ho Chi Minh City branch, had been confirmed by police, but any compensation would have to wait for a court ruling.

According to the police investigation, Chu Thi Binh, a seafood businesswoman, had been making major deposits at the branch since 2007.

Her huge savings granted her VIP status, which meant she did not have to visit the bank every time she wanted to check her accounts, but this also opened up loopholes.

Hung paid multiple visits to Binh’s house to provide updates of her accounts, and she trusted him completely.

Only after Hung left the bank in 2017 did she check her accounts again and found that a huge sum had gone missing.

Police said that Hung had been stealing her money since at least 2014 using forged papers. An international arrest warrant has been issued for him.

Bank executives said Hung had worked at the bank for more than 20 years without scandal. He raised little suspicion despite the fact that he usually handled Binh’s papers singlehandedly, they said.

Binh has asked the bank to reimburse her, but she has been asked to wait.

“Once a court decides that Eximbank is responsible for returning the money, we will do it immediately,” the bank’s CEO Le Van Quyet said.

“We really want to solve this quickly and save us from bad publicity. But without a trial, it will be hard for us to explain to our shareholders,” he said.

It’s not clear when such trial will be held.

By: Thanh Le, VNExpress

Dragon Capital spends over $37 million to double PNJ holdings

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A group of funds run by Dragon Capital bought an additional 5.22 million PNJ shares to raise ownership to approximately 11.4 million shares, equivalent to 10.49 per cent.

The Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange (HSX) has just announced the changes of foreign ownership at Phu Nhuan Jewelry JSC (HoSE: PNJ). Particularly, a group of funds run by Dragon Capital, including Vietnam Enterprise Investments Ltd. (VEIL), Wareham Group Limited, Norges Bank, KB Vietnam Focus Balanced Fund, and Hanoi Investments Holdings Limited, has just spent over VND841 billion ($37 million) to buy 5.22 million PNJ shares.

According to HSX, PNJ’s revenue hit VND3.221 trillion ($141.6 million) in the fourth quarter of 2017. Accumulated revenue in 2017 hit VND10.976 trillion ($0.5 billion), up 28 per cent on-year, equivalent to 115 per cent of the yearly plan.

Up to the end of 2017, PNJ’s total amount hit VND335 billion ($14.7 million), rising VND180 billion ($8 million) compared to the beginning of the year. The value of inventory increased by VND564 billion ($24.8 million) to VND3.4 trillion ($150 million). The total value of property gained over VND900 billion ($40 million) to nearly VND4.5 trillion ($197.5 million).

Besides, PNJ has set aside VND395.3 billion ($17.4 million) for a long-term investment into 38.5 million shares of DongA Bank.

Locals still struggle with adapting to Industry 4.0

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The Fourth Industrial Revolution has become a buzzword in Vietnam, but locals rarely regard it as a technology that helps them make more money online and improve their daily lives. What many are most concerned about is that they could lose their jobs, as robots might be capable of handling the position they are in.

Farmer Nguyen Thi Hue has been making a living by planting banana trees under Long Bien bridge in Hanoi for the past two decades. Her daily work is to take care of the banana orchard and harvest bananas for sale at the end of the day. She is fond of surfing the internet on her five-inch Asus smartphone. She is also a Facebook user, with an account opened for her by her nephew.

Instead of enjoying the South Korean films she used to love, Hue is now keen on logging into her Facebook account in order to read the posts of joy, anger, and love from her children, nephews, and relatives. Such posts make her smile and, on occasion, tear up. That is why she prefers Facebook.

Aside from going online, she often joins in idle talk with her friends, including vendors selling iced tea on Long Bien bridge and workers doing repairs on the historical bridge. It seems that the Fourth Industrial Revolution or Industry 4.0 has yet to affect Hue and her friends. They just own a smartphone to take selfies and souvenir photos for their relatives, and then share them on their Facebook accounts.

They do not know what deep impacts Industry 4.0 has on the world economy. A lot of industries have seen fundamental changes with newly-emerged business models. Cutting-edge technologies enable startups to gain advantages over those using now-obsolete solutions.

They cannot make sense of the cloud, driverless automobiles, robots, and cryptocurrencies like bitcoin. In their eyes, cutting-edge technology is associated with the appearance of Grab and Uber drivers in green and blue clothes. “Grab and Uber bikers work just like traditional motorbike taxi drivers who normally cool off their heels here, but they look somewhat posh in their uniforms,” says Hue.

26-year-old Phan Phuong Duc, a maths teacher at the combined primary and secondary Ngoi Sao Hanoi School, is not well-grounded in Industry 4.0 either. He felt the changes in technology when his colleagues began to use powerpoint presentations in their lectures instead of writing on the blackboard. But working as an online tutor with the mobile app GotIt! has enabled him to ‘touch’ technology and change his life over the past two years. The app was designed by Tran Viet Hung in the US tech capital Silicon Valley.

Duc graduated from the University of Science under the Hanoi-based Vietnam National University. He studied maths in English. Working for the online app helps him reinforce his knowledge in maths and English. Duc maintains a tutorship to earn $100 per month.

According to founder and CEO Tran Viet Hung, Vietnam now has some 300 Vietnamese experts registered for the GotIt! system. Like Uber and Grab apps, GotIt! brings potential job opportunities to hundreds of thousands of experts. Tens of thousands work very actively on the system, half of them reported making their main income from GotIt!.

GotIt! inspires people all over the world to earn more money by sharing their knowledge on the system, regardless of where they are.

Learning about technology platforms in Industry 4.0 costs Hue, Tuan, and others a lot of time and effort. Currently, not every Industry 4.0 platform can become useful in Vietnam. For instance, self-driving vehicles would become powerless in the face of heavy traffic congestions in Vietnam’s big cities. Miners seem to pay no attention to cloud computing services and the development of a sharing economy, while tailors are not concerned with how Industry 4.0 benefits the fast fashion boom. What they pay the most attention to is the risk of losing their jobs.

Instead of thinking about the products they want to buy for the Lunar New Year or the destinations they want to visit, workers at Canon Vietnam in the northern province of Bac Ninh raised inconclusive discussions about the factory’s installation of new automated machines and robots for production. “We could lose our jobs,” Le Anh Tung, a Canon worker, said and turned his eyes to his two sleeping children. Both Tung and his wife work for Canon Vietnam. The couple plans to return to their hometown to open a small-scale business once the automated machines and robots take their current jobs.

Canon Vietnam has been accelerating the automation process of its production in the past years. As a result, automation helped slash the firm’s total number of labourers from 13,000 recorded seven years ago to the existing figure of 8,000. Various positions and jobs are now being undertaken by robots.

Canon Vietnam often purchases only specialised equipment, not expensive completely-built robots. Canon engineers then assemble the specialised equipment with others to create finished machines for production, thus helping to save on the total costs, a Canon Vietnam representative said.

Apart from Canon, other firms, especially those in the sectors of garments, textiles, and footwear, are considering the installation of automated equipment and robots. As many as 86 per cent of workers in the sector of garments and textiles will be replaced by automated production lines and robots in the upcoming decades, according to a recent ILO report.

In countries with an abun dant labour supply like Vietnam, technological applications could make a number of manual labourers jobless. In the wake of the movement of of applications and technologies toward Industry 4.0, Vietnam needs to set forth employee support policies in a timely manner, to aid those vulnerable to the adverse impacts of Industry 4.0.

Running a small-scale business in the homeland is a final solution for Canon worker Tung. He now desires to benefit from Industry 4.0 by learning to improve his technical skills. “But where I can learn to better my skills remains a problem,” Tung said.

Google Trends show that Industry 4.0 has become the most searched-for keyword in Vietnam in the recent past. It can be said that Industry 4.0 urges enterprises to think about ways to satisfy customer demand, better productivity and quality, reduce production costs, and further meet environmental requirements. For intellectuals, Industry 4.0 means a tool to enjoy a better and convenient life and ease their access to and information gathering on the internet.

Technology is changing lives. This rings true, at least for Uber and Grab drivers. Technology not only changed their business, but also brought in a main source of income. Interestingly, Vietnam quickly acknowledged the value of applications like Uber and Grab and approved the pilot execution. This could help facilitate co-operation opportunities between local and foreign firms, while encouraging local technology startups to deal with social issues.

GotIt! set a goal of establishing a system of thousands of experts, including tens of thousands from Vietnam, but it failed to reach the goal for Vietnam. Just 5 per cent of Vietnamese experts applying for jobs on GotIt! met the requirements.

“It seems that local youths are not ready for Industry 4.0, while those in other countries are keen on the global trend thanks to their advantages in qualification, foreign language skills, and industriousness,” said the founder of GotIt!, elaborating that younger Vietnamese generations should not put high hopes on opportunities emerging from Industry 4.0.

Source: Anh Hoa

2018 promising for foreign property investors

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Last year saw a lot of merger and acquisition (M&A) activities in the Vietnamese property sector, with transactions totalling US$1.5 billion and the participation of many major foreign players.

One of the biggest locations was Thu Thiêm, the new urban development area in HCM City, that saw a number of high-profile deals including one jointly by Hongkong Land (HKL) and Ho Chi Minh City Infrastructure Investment Joint Stock Company (CII).

In December last year they signed a contract to jointly develop Thủ Thiêm River Park in the Thu Thiem New Urban Township, District 2.

The project will provide around 1,140 units including luxury apartments, sky villas and garden apartments; designed with a variety of unit sizes ranging from one to four bedrooms, and enjoying the scenic Saigon River and surrounding green area.

Further amenities include swimming pools, public green areas, supermarkets and more; ensuring a comfortable, convenient, modern living environment. The gross development value of the joint venture project is expected to be more than $400 million.

Last quarter also saw CapitaLand Limited acquire a 1.45ha site in District 4 for S$53.5 million (around $40 million), making it its ninth residential development in HCM City and 11th in the country.

Another transaction saw VinaLand Limited, one of the real estate arms of Vina Capital, sell its entire stake in the Vina Square project, a 3ha land development project in District 5, HCM City, to Trí Duc Real Estate Company for around $41.2 million.

When completed, this mixed-use development will have over 1,000 apartments besides retail and office space.

The US-based Warburg Pincus has signed a $300 million deal with VinaCapital for building a hotel. Mapletree from Singapore took over Kumho Asiana Plaza Saigon, and Keppel Land plans to develop land plots in the Thu Thiem Urban Area.

The real estate and investment management firm JLL expects Viet Nam to remain one of the most attractive destinations for foreign investment in Southeast Asia.

Many experts concur with this and explain that this is due to Viet Nam’s strong economic performance.

Last year, the economy grew at 6.8 per cent, outstripping the Government’s target of 6.7 per cent and higher than the annual rates in 2011-16.

FDI hit a new record last year of nearly $35.9 billion after rising by a whopping 44.4 per cent.

They also said the global economy too had many positive factors, enabling the Vietnamese economy, especially the real estate sector, to grow.

Foreign investors injected $2.5 billion into the real estate sector, giving it a sharp upward push.

Most of the investments came through M&A deals.

Last year, the overall M&A market was estimated at $8 billion, of which the property sector accounted for the largest proportion.

The investors came from many different countries such as Japan, South Korea, Singapore and, increasingly, mainland China.

Joint ventures are popular among foreign developers since they are strong financially and have a track record in property development while local developers have land and close links with the local community.

Experts said the real estate market has embarked on a second wave of M&A since 2015 thanks to the rapid privatisation of State-owned enterprises and foreign investors’ increasing interest.

Indeed, the Government’s strong push to equitise major State-owned enterprises, many of which have huge parcels of land in prime locations, is a key reason why foreign property companies are keen on Viet Nam.

After initially capping the maximum stake foreign companies can acquire in local firms, the Government did an about-turn, allowing even 100 per cent ownership in many sectors, only having restrictive caps in some critical sectors.

Thus, a foreign property company can buy out a small State-owned company just to use its lands.

Another reason is Viet Nam’s rapid global integration and investor-friendly policies that have had a big impact on the market and encouraged foreign businesses to invest in Việt Nam, especially its real estate sector.

The real estate market is also fuelled by the improvement in market transparency and simplification of procedures.

The banking sector’s efforts to settle bad debts have been a big factor in stimulating M&A deals in the property sector.

Market observers said foreign investors are always interested in projects with prime locations and the ability to return 7-8 per cent on investment such as grade A office buildings.

Rent for office space in Viet Nam is much higher than in neighbouring countries.

Analysts said M&A are an inevitable trend in a market economy, and collaboration between domestic and foreign investors helps create a perfect partnership thanks to the different skills they bring.

The Ministry of Construction plans to amend some provisions of the Housing Law and Law on Real Estate Business and this is expected to attract more foreign investors to the real estate market.

Experts from JLL believe hundreds of millions of dollars are waiting to enter most segments including residential, office, retail, hospitality and industrial.

Other analysts too said that huge sums are likely to be ploughed into the real estate market through M&A deals in 2018 and beyond, particularly by foreign investors.

Many mega deals are likely, mainly in the apartment, office space, tourism and urban land segments, they said.

Hotel could pay much less for power

The Viet Nam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) has objected to the Electricity Regulatory Authority of Viet Nam (ERAV)’s plan to reduce the electricity tariff for hotels, saying it betrays a lack of fairness.

Under to a draft decision by EARV that has to be approved by the Government, hotels will get a big cut in prices. In the draft, which has been put out for feedback from relevant agencies, ERAV wants to categorise hotels as production instead of service businesses.

Production firms are entitled to 15 per cent lower than average power prices, while service providers pay 36 per cent higher than average.

ERAV expects the policy to help develop the tourism sector since hotels could cut room rates if they have lower electricity bills.

But according to the VCCI, if the electricity prices are reduced for hotels, the Government would lose VNĐ1 trillion ($44.2 million) a year, or much higher than the likely increase in tourism revenues.

Foreign products make strong push in local market

Though domestic products have a dominant share of the market, foreign products, especially those from Thailand, South Korea and Japan, have begun to make inroads by attracting consumer interest, a trend that could strengthen.

According to a survey by the Association of High-Quality Vietnamese Goods Producers, their effective strategies have helped Thai, Korean and Japanese firms enter the Vietnamese market, and their products are becoming increasingly popular.

The proportion of products imported from Thailand, South Korea and Japan increased from below 3 per cent in 2016 to 8-10 per cent last year, and 12-17 per cent in the case of confectionary and beverage products.

The popularity of Thai, Korean and Japanese products is also thanks to active support from their retailers here.

Thai firms currently own four big supermarket chains in Viet Nam and thus there are 19 Mega Market stores, 32 Big C stores, 75 B’s Mart convenience stores and Robinson super markets. Thailand’s Central Group has also acquired a 49 per cent stake in Nguyễn Kim Trading Company, a major electronic and electrical appliances retailer.

Japanese products are distributed through Aeon Mall outlets and Family Mart and 7-Eleven convenience stores.

Koran firms have launched Lotte and Emart supermarkets and GS25 convenience stores.

Aeon and Lotte are keen to expand in Việt Nam with plans to open more stores around the country. The former expects to have 29 malls by 2020 while the latter plans to open around six new supermarkets by then.

 

Source: VNS

Stocks set to rise further after Tet

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Viet Nam’s stock market is expected to rise further after the Tet (Lunar New Year) holiday and even throughout 2018, boosted by positive macro economic development as well as support of foreign traders.

The benchmark VN-Index on the HCM Stock Exchange (HOSE) was up 1.7 per cent to close on February 13 at 1,059.73 points, totalling a two-day increase of 5.47 per cent.

The HNX Index on the Ha Noi Stock Exchange (HNX) edged up 1.88 per cent to end at 124.31 points on Tuesday, making a two-day surge of 4.47 per cent.

The UPCOM Index on the Unlisted Public Company Market (UPCoM) inched up 1.83 per cent to finish at 58.5 points.

During the last trading day of the lunar year (January 13), the market rebounded strongly and remained positive throughout the trading day.

The market leaders were large-cap stocks of PetroVietnam Gas (GAS) (4.4 per cent), Vingroup Joint Stock Company (VIC) (3 per cent), Viet Nam Joint Stock Commercial Bank for Industry and Trade (CTG) (3.8 per cent), JSC Bank For Investment And Development Of Viet Nam (BID) (2.6 per cent) and Hoa Phat Group Joint Stock Company (HPG) (3.1 per cent).

The laggards were Ho Chi Minh City Securities Corporation (HCM) (3.39 per cent), Bank for Investment & Development of Viet Nam Securities Company (BSI) (7 per cent), Pharmaceutical Joint Stock Company (DHG) (4.8 per cent) and PetroVietNam Low Pressure Gas Distribution JSC (PGD) (2.4 per cent).

Foreign investors on Tuesday were net sellers with VND636.4 billion (US$28 million) on HOSE, focusing on HPG (VND164.8 billion), VRE (VND140.5 billion) and VRE (VND105.7 billion). In addition, they sold a net of VND33 billion on the HNX.

According to Tran Van Dung, Chairman of the State Securities Commission (SSC), in 2017, Viet Nam recorded impressive economic growth with many macro-economic indicators set by the Government were achieved.

It can be said the stable macroeconomic status is significantly supporting the stock market and will improve further thanks to the determination of the Government to act on many issues such as GDP growth, curbing inflation, accelerating equitisation and divestment, increasing foreign exchange reserves, Dung said.

The performance of listed companies also improved over 2016, he added.

Last year the Government issued Resolution 42/2017/QH14 on the settlement of non-performing loans to pilot the settling of the bad debt of credit institutions, demonstrating the determination of Viet Nam’s Government to resolve the long-standing NPL issue.

This resulted in stable liquidity and interest rates, helping listed bankers improve significantly their financial quality, strongly dragging up the stock market.

Foreign investment inflows into Viet Nam in 2017 surged sharply from 2016, which significantly contributed to drive up the stock market, Dung said, with net capital inflows of $2.9 billion, up 130 per cent over 2016.

He also added that foreign investors were net buyers of VND9.6 trillion in January and over VND5 trillion in early February this year, strongly focusing on the sessions right before the Tet holiday.

According to BIDV Securities (BSC), the market’s recovery during the last two sessions has created good sentiment for the post-holiday period, causing investors to release new capital into the market.

Source: BIZHUB

Burning Paper Money: A Vietnamese Tet Tradition

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Multi-storied houses, luxury cars, motorbikes, laptops, toilets, servants, passports, rice cookers, TVs, other valuable items and of course, tons and tons of Benjamins go up in flames on the sidewalks of Vietnam. Not real ones, but paper models made from bamboo, collectively locally called hang ma (paper offerings). What does this signify?

Hell money/ghost money/spirit money…call it what ever you want. These are a form of joss paper resembling legal tender bank notes burnt as offerings to the deceased. It is essentially a way of showing respect to the dead that has become an important part of the culture.

The practice of ancestor worship is largely religious, stemming from the belief that the spirits of the deceased are still interested in the affairs of the world. This practice is common throughout countries in East Asia, specifically China and Vietnam. The idea is that the more offerings one burns for their dead relatives, the better their afterlives will be.

Many shops lining up the streets of Vietnam have stacks of fake $100 US Dollar bills among other types of hang ma for sale. People buy them in packages of various sizes. Some spend from as low as VND$200,000 (US$10.00) to even over VND$4,000,000, which is about US$200.00, on fake paper models of modern conveniences and spirit money. Some locals believe that spending so much will bring them prosperity, good luck and good health in return for their generosity. For others, this is a bit of a superstitious solution to resolve their ancestor’s financial problems. The spirit money is burned as a repayment of debt the deceased had accrued during life and had never been able to pay back. Another belief is that this money is given as a tribute to the God of Death in return for a short stay or to escape punishment. These are few of the many reasons joss paper is burned.

How did this even begin?

It may have all started from a scam. The tale is about a man who lived during the period of the Six Dynasties in China. His name was Cai Lun and he had a business selling paper. Back then, paper was not a popular commodity as the literary rates were low, so the people did not have reason to buy them. Cai Lun thought of a cunning way to boost the public demand for paper. He plotted with his wife and faked his own death. When the wife arranged a grand funeral for him, it attracted many people. The wife then started burning paper as an offering. Cai Lun’s coffin suddenly opened and voila, he was alive again. To the shocked attendees, he proclaimed that the paper burnt was transformed into money in the underworld which he used to bribe the King of the Underworld to let him escape. You can imagine his sales skyrocketed. Whether Cai Lun actually died or not — we will never know. Ultimately this is but one of the many legends floating around the origins of spirit money.

Spirit money and Tet (Vietnamese Lunar New Year)

The burning of spirit money occurs on the first and 15th of every month based on the lunar calendar. These rituals are also performed at funerals and on death anniversaries of loved ones throughout the years. This practice is rather grand during the Vietnamese Lunar New Year, called Tet by the locals. There is also a surge in this spiritual spending during Vietnamese Lunar New Year. They wish for their ancestors to start their new year with plenty of money in their spiritual bank.

The future?

Unfortunately, many studies have shown that burning large quantities of this paper emits a cocktail or harmful substances into the air including carcinogenic chemicals such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, carbonyls and benzene — similar to the smoke emitted from incense, also widely used in religious rituals.

It’s hard to tell what the fate of the endearing practice will be, as it is rather deeply rooted in Asian culture.

By: Piumi Rajapaksha

Source: theculturetrip.com

Grab makes takeover bid for Uber’s Southeast Asia operations, including Vietnam: reports

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Uber has been unable to turn a profit in Asian markets, making it a prime target for rivals.

Southeast Asian ride-hailing firm Grab has been in talks with rival Uber to acquire its regional operations in a bid to tighten its grip on the rapidly growing shared transportation sector, Kr-Asia quoted people familiar with the matter as saying.

As the world’s fourth-largest internet market, Southeast Asia has a mushrooming young population with more disposal income.

Uber has reportedly been unable to turn a profit in its Asian markets, where it faces fierce competition from homegrown players like Grab in Southeast Asia, Go-Jek in Indonesia and Ola in India.

Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi has acknowledged the challenges Uber faces in Southeast Asia, saying the market is “over-capitalized at this point.”

“We’re going in, and we’re leaning forward. But I’m not optimistic that market is going to be profitable any time soon,” he said.

Shutting down Uber’s Southeast Asia operations to cut losses would enable the firm to “print money”, making for a much more palatable IPO, Reuters quoted one Uber investor, who declined to be named, as saying. Uber says it plans a stock market listing in 2019.

While many tech firms go public without a profit, Uber’s level of loss – $645 million in the second quarter of 2017 – could be alarming to some investors, according to Reuters.

A Reuters report said that Rajeev Misra, chief executive of the Vision Fund of SoftBank, which became Uber’s largest shareholder following a stake purchase last month, wants Uber to focus on growing in the United States, Europe, Latin America and Australia, and not Asia.

Asia has been among the most costly and competitive regions for the ride-services firm, the report said, citing an unnamed source.

Observers have suggested that for Southeast Asia, the U.S. company might take the same route it did in China and Russia, where it effectively exited the market and left it to local players.

China’s ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing acquired Uber’s China unit in a deal worth $35 billion in 2016.

Grab last year claimed that it had taken a market share of 95 percent in third-party taxi-hailing and 71 percent in private vehicle hailing in Southeast Asia have completed 1 billion rides.

Uber hasn’t announced its market share in Southeast Asia, but it did declare last June that it had crossed the 5 billion trips milestone. Yet the company, which has a presence in more than 80 countries, didn’t offer a breakdown of the figure.

Starting out in Malaysia, Grab now offers wide-ranging services in more than 160 cities across Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, India, Thailand, the Philippines, Vietnam, Myanmar and Cambodia, while Uber operates in just around 60 cities in the region.

Grab and Uber arrived in Vietnam in 2014 and operate both car and motorbike taxi services. The two services have been running on a trial basis since early 2016, but have been caught up in a turf war with traditional taxi drivers.

Many taxi firms have accused Grab and Uber of “unfair competition” that has hit their businesses and caused thousands of drivers to quit.

Last September, Hanoi Taxi Association said Uber and Grab had been transferring around $150 million overseas every year to evade taxes. Grab denied the accusation.

 

By Ngan Anh, VNExpress

​‘The dog that hates everyone’ featured in flower street in southern Vietnam

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The statue of what appears to be a three-member family of dogs erected at a flower street in Vietnam’s Mekong Delta has left visitors confused and sparked instant Internet meme, as none of them really looks like a canine.

Besides the iconic Nguyen Hue Flower Street, which opened in Ho Chi Minh City on Tuesday night, many localities across Vietnam also held similar events to celebrate Tet, or the Lunar New Year festival. All venues feature canines and hounds as their main themes, with 2018 being the Year of the Dog in lunar calendar.

At the Hung Vuong Flower Street in My Tho, the capital of Tien Giang Province, many visitors find a ‘parent dogs’ as depicted by the decoration look more like a pair of pigs, foxes or weasels than dogs.

Even worse, their ‘son’, despite its recognizable design, features a sorrowful face as if it is in grief or “hates everyone,” according to local netizens.

The design has left visitors bewildered as it apparently does not come with the joy and happy theme of Tet.

A visitor jokingly told a reporter at the scene that the dog looks like it is being “prompted to pay its debt.”

Visitors also took to social media to give the sad-faced canine different nicknames, including “the dog that hates the whole world” or “the dog that loves no one in My Tho.”

Many memes and cartoons mocking the bizarre ‘family of dogs’ quickly went viral on social media on Tuesday night, prompting Tien Giang administration to ask My Tho authorities to look into the case.

Tran Minh Duc, head of the urban management office of My Tho, confirmed that his agency is working to figure out a way to fix the controversial installation.

Duc said the Hung Vuong flower street, inaugurated on Monday night, cost some VND3 billion (US$132,000) to set up, with VND990 million ($39,600) from the private sector.

The sad-faced dog that broke the Internet was designed by one of the sponsors, according to the official.

Duc said without elaboration that it is impossible to repair, replace or remove the ‘dog that hates everyone’ at the flower street.

“The most feasible solution is to ‘correct’ his eyes so that he looks more joyful, which we will start doing on Wednesday morning,” he said.

Source: Tuoitrenews

CBA eyes sale of Indonesian life insurance business after selling its branch in Vietnam

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Commonwealth Bank of Australia, or CBA, will consider selling its majority stake in an Indonesian insurance venture, with any deal likely valuing the insurer at up to $250 million, people familiar with the matter said.

Australia’s biggest lender is in talks with some investment banks and is expected to hire a financial adviser soon to help it decide on its 80 percent stake in Commonwealth Life, the people said.

According to two of them, the review of the stake forms part of CBA’s move to exit non-core areas and a sale could value Commonwealth Life at about $200 million to $250 million.ce of Asian banks exiting the insurance sector to free up capital and focus on their core banking businesses amid tougher regulatory capital buffer requirements.

Malaysia’s AMMB Holdings (AmBank) is weighing a sale of its general insurance business as part of a move to exit non-core businesses and focus on its main banking operations, Reuters reported in December.

CBA itself in September agreed to sell insurance businesses in Australia and New Zealand to AIA Group for $3.1 billion, as Australian lenders struggle to cope with growing competition from large foreign firms in insurance.

There is no certainty that CBA would proceed with the stake sale plan even after the review is completed, the people said. It was not immediately clear if there was a timeline for the review to be completed.

One of the people said the insurance stake sale process was expected to be launched in the first half of this year.

A spokeswoman for CBA in Sydney said that it was business as usual and the bank would not comment on rumor or speculation. Representatives at Commonwealth Life could not be immediately reached for a comment.

All the people spoke to Reuters on condition that they are not named, as the plans are not public yet.

Commonwealth Life is present in 20 Indonesian cities with more than 5,000 sales staff and over 500,000 individuals and group customers, its website showed. Its premium income rose 4 percent in 2016 to Rp 1.9 trillion ($141 million).

Given the relatively small size of the business, the potential bidders for CBA’s stake are mostly expected to be foreign insurers already present in Indonesia and looking to bolster their footprint in the country, the sources said.

They said the venture is expected to be valued at about two times its book, the average for recent Indonesian insurance M&A deals.

CBA raised its holding in Commonwealth Life to 80 percent in 2007 in what was then a 50:50 joint venture. The remaining 20 percent is owned by an Indonesian firm, Gala Arta Jaya, according to the insurer’s website.

Besides the insurance joint venture, CBA also has a retail and business banking presence in Indonesia.

Low insurance penetration in Indonesia, at about 2.3 percent of gross domestic product, and a rapidly growing middle-class population in the Southeast Asian nation has made it an attractive market for foreign insurers.

Major overseas insurers in Indonesia include Prudential, German insurer Allianz and French insurer AXA, Canada’s Manulife Financial, and AIA.

 

- by Paulina Duran, Reuters
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