More international air routes to be launched to Phu Quoc Island

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Phu Quoc International Airport will launch several new international air routes in the coming months which aims to attract more visitors to the southern island.

The information has just been announced by a representative of Kien Giang Provincial People’s Committee at a Wednesday meeting with the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism.

According to the committee, Bangkok Airway will launched a Bangkok – Phu Quoc route beginning October 29 on Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday.

On November 1st, TUI IK Airway will open a charter flight connecting England and Phu Quoc.

More international flights will be launched at Phu Quoc International Airport

From December 19th till the end of April, 2018, Italy’s Neos Airline will launch charter flights between Milan and Phu Quoc on Tuesday and Wednesday using 250-seated Boeing 767.

“It is expected that Noes Airlines will bring some 4,000 visitors to the beautiful southern island of Vietnam during those five months,” the committee said, adding that this would be a good opportunity for Phu Quoc to show its potentials.

Source: NLD

Sinking oil output should make Vietnam focus on tourism for economic growth

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‘It is better to welcome 1 million tourists than trying to find 1 million tons of crude oil.’

Vietnam needs to stop relying on crude oil and focus on tourism to ensure its economic growth, Deputy Prime Minister Vuong Dinh Hue said at an ongoing meeting of the legislative National Assembly on Tuesday.

Hue said that mining output of fossil fuels has been falling for the past two years, local media reported.

Data from the General Statistics Office (GSO) showed that the mining sector slowed by 8 percent on-year in the first nine months, and crude oil output during that period fell 10.3 percent to 11.7 million tons.

In a bid to reach its economic growth target of 6.7 percent for 2017, the government in early June floated fresh plans to tap more oil and gas, despite warnings from lawmakers of becoming over-reliant on the mining industry to fuel growth. The government had planned to exploit 13.28 million tons of crude oil this year, down 3 million tons compared to last year,

“But even when we want to exploit more crude oil to ensure growth, we can’t,” Hue said on Tuesday. “This means we have to move our oil rigs further out to sea where there is less crude oil. There is just no way we can depend on crude oil to boost economic growth,” he said.

“It is better to welcome 1 million tourists than trying to find 1 million tons of crude oil because tourism is more eco-friendly and safe for the economy.”

To prove his point, Hue said tourism played a key role in the country’s economic growth of 6.41 percent during the first three quarters of the year.

According to the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism, the country earned VND376 trillion ($16.5 billion) in tourism revenue in the first nine months, a 26.5 percent increase from last year, after welcoming 9.45 million foreign visitors and 57.9 million local tourists, up 28.4 percent and 10.3 percent respectively.

The deputy PM said that tourism has a direct impact on the service sector, so more tourists means higher growth.

The service industry expanded 7.25 percent in the first three quarters, the strongest growth recorded across all sectors, according to the General Statistics Office.

Late last month, the Asian Development Bank cut Vietnam’s growth forecast this year to 6.3 percent from its previous projection of 6.5 percent.

The Manila-based lender said it had trimmed the projection due to weak mining output.

Growth prospects are likely to hold up fairly well in the second half, though continued contraction in mining will drag on the economy, it said in its Asian Development Outlook Update 2017.

Foreign direct investment, exports, credit growth, agriculture and government efforts to speed up the implementation of public infrastructure projects are the main factors that will drive economic growth in the last six months, the report said.

The ADB’s latest growth forecast matches the projections made by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. In July, HSBC lowered Vietnam’s economic expansion forecast this year to only 6 percent from its previous estimate of 6.4 percent.

All of them are below the government’s target of 6.7 percent, a goal that some experts have said is unrealistic.

However, the country has been working hard to realize this target.

Earlier last month, the government instructed the Ministry of Finance to put on hold a series of proposed tax hikes to make life easier for local businesses and the growth target more achievable. The ministry had been planning to increase a number of different taxes and fees, including raising VAT from 10 percent to 12 percent.

The central bank in July reduced its lending interest rate by 0.25 percent to 6.25 percent for the first time in three years to boost economic growth, as many Vietnamese companies still rely heavily on bank loans.

Source: Minh Nga

Vietnam in Group D of AFC U23 Championship 2018 finals

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A draw for the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) U23 Championship 2018’s final round took place in China on October 24.

Vietnam’s U23 squad is placed in Group D with Syria, Australia, and the Republic of Korea.
The host China is in Group A together with Oman, Uzbekistan, and Qatar.

Palestine, Thailand, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, and Japan are in Group B.

Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and Iraq make up Group C.

The final round of the AFC U23 Championship 2018 is set to take place from January 6-27, 2018 in China.

For the Southeast Asian region, this is the second time Vietnam and Thailand have been competing in the AFC U23 Championship’s final round, while it is the first time for Malaysia.

In the AFC U23 Championship 2016’s final round in Qatar, U23 Japan was the winner. U23 Republic of Korea, Iraq, and Qatar came second, third, and fourth, respectively.

Source: VOV

What does Samsung plan to do in the telecom sector?

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The Vietnamese telecommunications market is shaped by the dominance of three big players – VinaPhone, MobiFone and Viettel. But now Samsung may join forces with businesses to develop IT.

Samsung Group leaders recently expressed their willingness to invest in the telecom sector in Vietnam.

Vu Tri Dung from the Marketing Faculty of the Hanoi Economics University said this is Samsung’s backward vertical integration development strategy. When the lead market develops well, it will make backward vertical integration, not only to provide terminal devices, but also strive to become a network service provider.

However, the expert thinks Samsung wouldn’t do this alone, but may join the telecom sector in Vietnam by teaming up with some businesses, possibly one of the three big telecom players, or Beeline, the telecom brand which left Vietnam some years ago, or any other business.

“No one would build a network from A to Z because it would be very costly to develop. I don’t think Samsung will develop a network, but it would specialize in providing terminal devices,” Dung said.

“The telecom market is saturated, but information technology has been developing very rapidly. Samsung will jump into the telecom sector and develop IT,” Dung said

The expert said Beeline, a brand of Russian VimpelCom, once put high hopes on its investment in Vietnam, but it could not compete with the three big Vietnamese players.

Before leaving Vietnam, Beeline had 187,000 subscribers, accounting for 0.17 percent of the market share. Its ARPU was $0.7-0.9 per subscriber, which meant revenue of less than $2 million a year.

The cost to maintain 4,000 BTS throughout the country alone was $40 million ($10,000 per station per annum). In addition, it also had to pay other expenses on marketing, operation and maintenance. Beeline incurred heavy losses.
“Samsung must have learned the lesson and it will have other calculations,” Dung commented.

The biggest strength of Samsung is the strong brand. It also has powerful financial capability and terminal devices. It understands Vietnamese customers as it has been in Vietnam now for a long time.

However, a telecom expert said there was no need to worry about Samsung’s competitiveness if the South Korean conglomerates make investments in telecom. The three Vietnamese mobile network operators are dominating the market and Samsung won’t be able to change the situation.

He believes that telecom sector is not the major goal for Samsung, because the sector, which requires huge investment in infrastructure, is no longer attractive, and that Samsung may eye the IT sector.

Source: VietNamNet

Experts object to fees on cars entering downtown

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Experts and car owners have objected to a long-planned yet highly controversial scheme to impose a fee on cars entering HCMC’s central business district.

The HCMC government suspended the scheme five years ago to conduct a review due to strong opposition.

Director of the HCMC Department of Transport Bui Quoc Cuong said the city has refloated the scheme in a bid to restrict cars from traveling to the city center to reduce worsening traffic congestion.

The scheme has been passed to relevant agencies for comment, but what an alternative means of transport is and how effective the plan is remain unanswered.

Under the current circumstances, motorbikes and commuter buses can be used to enter the city center. However, a sudden spike in motorcycle traffic in the downtown area would not help solve the traffic congestion issue.

Meanwhile, public bus transit remains inconvenient and uncomfortable.

Worse still, the city has no metro line. The city’s first mass rapid transit line, Metro Line No.1 connecting Ben Thanh Market in District 1 and Suoi Tien Park in District 9, is still under construction and will not be up and running until 2020.

The only metro line would serve people travelling from districts 2, 9 and Thu Duc to the city center only.

People travelling from districts 7 and 8 to Tan Son Nhat International Airport or from Binh Thanh and Thu Duc districts to districts 5 and 10 will have to go through the downtown area. It would take a longer time if they use ring roads, so car owners would have no other choice but to go through the downtown and willingly pay a fee.

Instead of imposing a fee on cars entering the central business district, the city government should weigh relocating schools and hospitals out of the downtown area, develop a public transit system and suspend the licensing of new high-rise residential blocks in the central districts.

Source: SGT

Foreign ownership in Techcombank officially at 0%

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Foreign ownership in the Vietnam Technological and Commercial Joint Stock Bank (Techcombank) is officially at zero per cent, the bank announced late last week.

Previously, in its announcement to shareholders on August 30, the bank requested shareholders to approve the zero foreign ownership temporarily, following HSBC Bank’s divestment in July. It also expressed its intention to raise the level of foreign ownership later, but not higher than 30 per cent of its charter capital.

Following HSBC’s departure, Techcombank intends to actively seek a capable strategic investor in the near future.
Back in mid August, HSBC sold all 172 million shares to Techcombank, to be used as treasury stocks at VND23,445 (US$1.04) per share, according to the bank’s board of directors.

The shares previously amounted to 19.4 per cent of Techcombank’s charter capital, and are currently priced at a total of some VND4 trillion ($178.1 million).

Besides Techcombank, other banks such as VPBank and LienVietPostBank have also recently reduced the foreign ownership ratio. VPBank has lowered the rate to 22.378 per cent from the earlier 25 per cent, while the rate at LienVietPostBank is at just 5 per cent.

According to LienVietPostBank, the move is aimed setting aside the ownership of strategic foreign partners and restricting purchase by individual foreign investors.

Source: VNS

Alibaba and Tencent eye Vietnamese e-payment sector

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Technology giants Alibaba and Tencent are trying to penetrate the Vietnamese e-payment market.

On November 6, 2017, Jack Ma, CEO of Alibaba Group, will attend a briefing of developing e-commerce and mobile payment at Vietnam Electronic Payment Forum 2017, which will take place in Hanoi. Afterwards, Jack Ma will attend the 2017 APEC Economic Leaders’ Meeting Week in Danang.

According to business circles, Jack Ma is probably looking for a way to enter the Vietnamese fintech and electronic payments market, which holds great potential.

In China, electronic or online payment methods are completely replacing cash payments as most people to use their phones to pay for their daily shopping needs.

According to a report conducted by Analysis International—a Beijing-based consulting company—in the second quarter of 2017, the total value of third-party mobile payment transactions reached $3.460 billion in China.

In particular, the two giants, Alibaba and Tencent, are making up 92 per cent of the mobile payment market in China. Of this, Alipay, Alibaba’s mobile payment service, takes the lead with 53.7 per cent of the market, while Tencent Finance’s Wechat Pay accounts for 39.1 per cent.

Yuebao, a mobile deposit and investment platform developed by Jack Ma, has become the world’s largest monetary fund with a total capital surpassing $170 billion. It has become a direct threat to the traditional Chinese banking industry.

Yuebao receives money from Alipay accounts, paying higher interest rates than the banks’ average lending rates, making Alipay a huge idle fund with more than 300 million users allowing customers to easily transfer and withdraw any amount of money at any time in a few steps.

Yuebao has attracted 100 billion yuan from more than 29 million customers in just six months after its launch. It then offered loans to both businesses and individuals with attractive negotiable interest rates.

Prior to this, Alibaba spent US$1 billion acquiring Lazada, a leading online shopping channel currently operating in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam.

Exactly one year later, in April 2014, HelloPay—Lazada’s online payment service—was successfully merged with Ant Financial, Alibaba’s online mobile payment platform. After that, HelloPay changed its name to Alipay Singapore, Alipay Malaysia, Alipay Indonesia, and Alipay Philippines, according to the markets where Lazada operates.

In another move, Jack Ma now plans to spend $1.5 billion investing in Grab, which is “stirring up” the Vietnamese market. Previously, Alipay has cooperated with Grab by allowing Chinese tourists visiting Singapore and Thailand to pay for Grab via Alipay since June 2016.

According to Grab, this allows Chinese travelers to freely pay in yuan without having to worry about foreign exchange rates.

Alipay is shaking up the market and is becoming a real threat to the financial industry in Southeast Asia. Alibaba’s ambition to penetrate the Vietnamese market has also become very clear.

A subsidiary of Alibaba is said to have applied for payment authorisation in Vietnam, but has not been granted one yet. According to Vietnamese laws, payment intermediaries are conditional business lines, subject to strict conditions as assessed and licensed by the State Bank of Vietnam.

As committed to the World Trade Organization (WTO), regarding intermediary payment services, Vietnam has no commitments to expand or open up the market for foreign investors.

On the other hand, with respect to conditional business lines, the ownership ratio of foreign investors in the telecommunications sector ranges from 49 to 65 per cent (with or without network infrastructure). Meanwhile, since the banking sector is a sensitive industry, the government is limiting foreign ownership in banks to 30 per cent.

Yet, it seems Alipay is trying to enter Vietnam through the backdoor. To date, the group has tried to acquire Lazada and Grab to penetrate the Vietnamese market in particular and the ASEAN in general.

Tencent hunting for acquisitions

Meanwhile, Alibaba’s main rival Tencent has also made quite a few fierce moves. The strategy Tencent is pursuing is the acquisition of e-commerce platforms to set foot in the electronic payments market by its main service Wechat Pay.

Wechat now has 938 million users each month and its payment platform has been launched in Europe, Southeast Asia, and Africa.

In Vietnam, Garena, a subsidiary of Tencent, now occupies a large market share in the gaming industry and is turning to e-commerce. Most recently, Sea (Garena renamed) bought an 82 per cent stake in Foody.vn for $64 million. Sea has also expanded its e-commerce and online payment services with the introduction of Shopee and AirPay.

At present, Shopee receives around 2.7-3.6 million orders every month, equivalent to 100,000 orders per day and is on the way to catch up with Alibaba’s Lazada Vietnam.

Many believe that Tencent’s payment application seeks to penetrate Vietnam through the e-commerce channel and will expand into the financial sector after securing a firm position. Particularly, Wechat Pay will follow millions of Chinese tourists to Vietnam each year.

This strategy of Chinese tech giants penetrating Vietnam, given the realities in China, Europe, ASEAN countries, and Africa, has seriously depressed Vietnam’s corporate banks as they are afraid that Alibaba and Tencent will seize and manipulate the Vietnamese financial market in the coming time.

“Let’s imagine Wechat or Alibaba or even both of them pouring tens of millions of dollars into the Vietnamese financial market, accepting massive losses to launch attractive promotion programmes, even willing to forego service charges in the first two to three years. Then, what will be the future of the payment sector in Vietnam? $10 million or $100 million is clearly not a big deal for Wechat or Alibaba to increase market share,” said Tran Cong Quynh Lan, VietinBank’s deputy general director.

Source: VIR

Best destinations in Vietnam to visit in autumn

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This is an ideal destination for tourists from late September till March next year. Phu Quoc island is famous for beautiful beaches such as Bai Sao, Bai Khem, and a variety of coral reefs.

The capital city of Hanoi in autumn is popular for ancient streets with yellow leaves, beautiful Hoan Kiem lake and delicious food such as Pho Ly Quoc Su (Vietnamese noodle soup in Ly Quoc Su str), Hang Buom spring rolls, and Cha Ca La Vong (fish dish)

Terraced fields and a carpet of clouds are stunning scenes in Sapa.

Da Lat city in the Central Highlands province of Lam Dong attracts tourists to its cool climate, beautiful flower gardens and cathedrals as well as romantic destinations such as Valley of Love, Lang Biang Plateau, Cam Ly waterfalls and Xuan Huong Lake.

Floating markets and orchards in the Mekong Delta region are must-see destinations for tourists.

Source: VOV

IDG Ventures Vietnam vice president dies at 40

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Nguyen Hong Truong, deputy head of IDG Ventures Vietnam and one of the founders of Vietnam’s start-up community, died on October 22 from a stroke.

IDG Ventures Vietnam is the first technology venture capital fund in Vietnam and has funded various successful start-up projects including YanTV, Vietnam Communications Corporation and Vat Gia online shopping website.

Before joining IDG Ventures Vietnam, Truong managed the Vietnam Software/ICT Cluster, a nationwide network of ICT CEOs and other stakeholders to promote the development of ICT industry in Vietnam.

While working at IDG Ventures Vietnam, Truong had shared much valuable knowledge and advice to the start-up community. He was still enthusiastic about helping people start their projects and shared many lessons he learned.

He had a bachelor degrees from Hanoi Law University and Hanoi National Economics University and graduated with an MBA degree in Management Information Systems and Computer Resource Management from Webster University.

Truong had also worked at Development Alternatives Inc, J.E. Austin Associates and Procter and Gamble in Vietnam. Besides fostering start-up projects, he was also a member of various associations including Hanoi Bar Association.

Many entrepreneurs in the communication and technology sector, as well as founders of start-up community in Vietnam, have expressed their shock and offered their condolences to Truong’s family.

Source: VietNamNet

Experts come up with new idea to cure gridlock near Saigon airport: monorails

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The idea came as the city is grappling with funds to complete its first metro line.
A proposal to build two monorails into Saigon’s international airport Tan Son Nhat has met with doubt as experts said the plan is financially unfeasible.

The Institute of Transport Science and Technology at the transport ministry has suggested that the megacity build two monorails from two parks that are around two kilometers, or 1.2 miles, from the airport to reduce the regular traffic jams in the area.

Gia Dinh Park is to the west of the city and Hoang Van Thu is to the south.

The monorails are expected to cost VND9.15 trilllion ($402.8 million), the institute said.

That is not to mention parking lots with space for 2,000 cars at each park.

Bui Xuan Cuong of the city’s transport department said the proposal is just an idea, and any next step will depend on whether it is deemed practical or suitable to the city’s urban planning.

The idea has so far received a lot of jeers.

Ha Trong Truong, vice chairman of the city’s Road, Bridge and Port Association, said the project is hardly practical.

Truong said the cost estimate is around 40 percent higher than the average market price, he said.

Also, the city has already planned a $250-million metro line between Hoang Van Thu Park and the airport, he said.

That would be the fourth line in the metro system planned for the city, although the first line connecting Districts 1 with 2 has hit several delays and the city is grappling with funding to meet its planned completion in 2020.

Some experts in the field have also suggested an elevated road and cable cars as an answer to traffic jams around the country’s largest airport.

In January, a company in the city proposed to build a one-kilometer cable car system which would cost only $24.3 million and take 10 months.

But the company withdrew the proposal in July, after experts questioned the safety of having cable cars flying over crowded roads.

Heavy traffic jams have occurred regularly around Tan Son Nhat airport in recent years. Sometimes vehicles are stuck for hours and travelers could be seen abandoning their taxis and running to the airport to catch their flights.

Vietnam’s airline market is growing at the third fastest pace in Asia-Pacific and the country is grappling with an acute dearth of airport capacity.

Aviation authorities estimated that the number of passengers on domestic flights soared 35 percent to 28 million in 2016, accounting for more than half of the total air travel in the country.

Vietnam Airlines, Jetstar Pacific, VietJet and the newly founded Vietstar are planning to expand their fleets to a total of 263 aircraft in the next four years. Vietstar has not even been licensed to fly yet.

The country is working on a design for a massive airport in Dong Nai Province to share some of the heavy load for Tan Son Nhat, but construction can take years.

Source: Huu Cong

VN’s central bank to keep currency stable: Official

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Record-high foreign reserves will enable Viet Nam’s central bank to keep the dong, the local currency, stable for the rest of the year, Bloomberg quoted a central bank official as saying.

With reserve levels at US$45 billion, “we are confident we will be able to maintain the dong’s value,” in 2017, Nguyen Thi Hong, deputy governor of State Bank of Viet Nam (SBV), said on the sidelines of a meeting in Hoi An last Saturday. “Such a high level of foreign reserves will allow us to step in to stabilise the money market when needed,” she added.

According to Bloomberg, the dong has been one of the most stable currencies in Asia this year.

An increase in remittances from Vietnamese living abroad has helped boost foreign reserves this year, which allows the central bank to continue focusing on policies to support economic growth, Nguyen Hoang Minh, deputy head of SBV in HCM City, said in an interview last month.

The central bank will ensure lenders have enough liquidity “so that they can lend at lower interest rates,” Hong said. “By helping banks with more cash availability, we will be able to bring down lending interest rates at banks without having to cut our policy rates,” she added.

Viet Nam was one of only a handful of Asian nations, whose central bank eased monetary policy this year, unexpectedly cutting benchmark interest rate for the first time in three years in July.

Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc said on Monday morning that Viet Nam is expected to meet the GDP growth target of 6.7 per cent this year. If it can reach the target, it will be the fastest pace since 2007. The economy grew 6.41 per cent in the nine months through September.

Source: VNS

Entry of foreign fuel: a game changer?

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Earlier this month Idemitsu Q8 Petroleum LLC opened its first retail outlet in Ha Noi’s Thang Long Industrial Park, marking the first time a wholly foreign-owned company has entered the fuel retail sector.

Idemitsu Q8 is a joint venture between Japan’s Idemitsu and Kuwait Petroleum International Ltd.

It was the first to benefit from a landmark government decision last year to allow foreign businesses to distribute fuel in Viet Nam if they invest in oil refining in the country.

The entrance of Idemitsu Q8 has been welcomed as a positive change for the petroleum retail sector.

The modern new petrol pump has the best equipment from Japan, the latest management software and international standard service by well- trained staff.

Idemitsu Q8 is soon expected to expand its retail network along Highway No.5, which links Hai Phong and Ha Noi.
Market observers said the newcomer is like a breath of fresh air in the Vietnamese fuel retail market.

Its modern and service-oriented operation would benefit consumers and put pressure on domestic players to improve to keep up.

Some even fear that Idemitsu Q8 would soon take over the local market.

Thanks to the two partners’ 35.1 per cent stake each in the Nghi Sơn Refinery, the joint venture has an opportunity to establish a large fuel retail network in future.

But others do not agree with this assessment, saying it would not be easy for foreign retailers here.

They point out that major domestic retailers such as Petrolimex, PVOil and Sài Gòn Petro have a nation-wide network of outlets.

Petrolimex for instance has more than 2,500 pumps, many in prime locations around the country.

Besides, foreign players, despite their deep pockets, cannot compete on price like they do in other sectors, confident they can absorb possible losses, to undercut local competition. The fuel prices are still fixed by the Government.

Viet Nam National Petroleum Group (Petrolimex) is the country’s biggest petroleum retailer.

Its deputy director, Nguyen Quang Dung, told the media that his company has been preparing for the entry of foreign retailers for dozens of years.

With its nation-wide retail network and 50-year experience, Petrolimex is ready for a fair and transparent competition, he said.

To create a retail network similar to Petrolimex’s, time, location and opportunity are also needed rather than just plenty of resources, he said.

Analysts said for many years foreign companies have been eyeing the Vietnamese petroleum retail market because they believe it is still very promising.

The entry of major foreign energy retailers is expected to make the market more transparent and fair.

VN shipping, logistics attract foreign investors
On the first day of October Gemadept Corporation completed a sale of majority stakes in its two subsidiary firms to Korea’s CJ Logistics Corporation.

The company said it sold 50.9 per cent in Gemadept Shipping Holding Co Ltd and Gemadept Logistics Holding Co Ltd, reducing its holdings to 49.1 per cent in each.

The divestment is part of Gemadept’s restructuring plan and was approved at its annual shareholders meeting in May.

The proceeds will be used to pay dividends to shareholders.

CJ Logistics, previously known as CJ Korea Express Corp, is looking for opportunities to acquire logistics firms in Southeast Asia and become one of five largest logistics firms, especially in Việt Nam.

In the last two years, it has bought major stakes in logistics firms in Malaysia, China, Dubai, and India.

Early last year another South Korean company, Samsung SDS, an information and communications technology and logistics firm belonging to the Korean conglomerate, entered the Vietnamese market through a joint venture with Aviation Logistics Service.

The Samsung SDS website last week said it plans to establish a joint venture in Việt Nam and boost its presence in the Southeast Asian logistics market.

This is the second joint venture in Southeast Asia for Samsung SDS following one it established last month with Thailand’s leading customs clearance company, ACUTECH.

The acquisitions by foreign companies in the Vietnamese shipping and logistics market come at a time when many local firms are struggling and making losses.

For instance, the Viet Nam Ocean Shipping Joint Stock Company (Vosco) used to be the country’s leading shipping company, but it has piled up losses of VND974.3 billion over 10 consecutive quarters up to the second quarter of this year.

The Orient Shipping Service and Trading Joint Stock Company has been deep in debt since 2012.

Analysts attribute these to the sharp decline in freight charges, of up to 90 per cent, and a scarcity of cargo.

A simultaneous oversupply of vessels has led to fierce competition between shipping companies, causing freight charges to fall by 30 per cent, and even 50 per cent in some cases, from a few years ago.

According to the Viet Nam Maritime Administration, last year the country’s shipping fleet of 1,840 ships with a total tonnage of 7.3 million DWT transported a total of 54.2 million tonnes of cargo, a year-on-year fall of 4 per cent.

The fleet has been transporting about 90 per cent of cargo domestically, but only 10-12 per cent of imports and exports.

The vessels lack the technical capability to carry certain cargo, offer a high standard of services or for long voyages and so do not ply on high-priced routes.

The domestic fleet only has a 20 per cent market share as a result.

But the domestic shipping and logistics sectors also have certain advantages, which make them attractive to foreign investors.

Despite the problems, the shipping registered 4 per cent growth last year.

The results are expected to be better this year and in the coming years thanks to opportunities in the domestic market with more and more thermal power plants going on stream, industrial parks and processing zones being built and construction booming on Phu Quoc Island.

The logistics market is expected to grow by 15-20 by 2025 and contribute 8-10 per cent of GDP.

The rapid growth in Viet Nam’s export-oriented manufacturing sector has boosted demand for logistics services but local players have largely failed to meet this demand and foreign enterprises are therefore see big opportunities in the sector.

Besides, growth in the shipping and logistics industries reply much on trade, and Việt Nam’s trade is expected to do well in 2017-20 thanks to the raft of free trade agreements it has signed and will take effect.

Foreign shipping and logistics companies are keen to take advantage of this, analysts said.

Source: VNS

Vietnamese dance crew enters Asia’s Got Talent Season 2

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Viet Nam’s 218 Dance Crew qualified for Asia’s Got Talent Season 2 last Saturday, with the qualifying round airing at 8pm on national channel HTV3 – DreamsTV.

To qualify for the show, the crew produced a performance combining the traditional and contemporary, receiving praise from the audience and judges.

The show was filmed at Singapore’s Marina Bay Sands hotel.

The crew was praised for directly taking three judges and the audience to Việt Nam through its dancing performance with LED lights on the background of Trong Com (rice drum, a traditional bongo-shaped Vietnamese drum) music.

The ao dai (traditional long dress), ao ba ba (Vietnamese silk ensemble garment), conical hat, boatman, cau ho (Hue chantey) were introduced by the crew, with its fully made combination of music and dance move.

Anggun Cipta Sasmi, an Indonesian and French singer-songwriter, one of the three judges, said it was an impressive and unique performance, with every move performed well.

David Foster, Canadian musician, record producer, composer, songwriter, and arranger who has won 16 Grammy Awards and one Emmy, the second judge, said “You have shown us a bit of flavour of Việt Nam with a modern style, a style of 2017 and I am really into this performance.”

Jay Park, the last judge, American singer, songwriter, rapper, dancer, record producer, entrepreneur and actor, was dazzled by the performance, “I love the way you show Vietnamese culture through the popular images of conical hat, boatman and others. It was so awesome and I like it so much!”

Lead dancer of the crew, Nguyen Chan Tin, said they were flattered to be chosen by the judges to bring Vietnamese culture to an international competition, “We hope Vietnamese audience will share this victory with us!”

Asia’s Got Talent is the regional version of the Got Talent franchise, airing on AXN Asia. It is a talent show that features singers, dancers, magicians, comedians, and other performers of all ages competing for a prize of US$100,000 and an opportunity to perform at Marina Bay Sands.

The show began airing on March 12, 2015 across 15 countries in Asia. The show has been aired from October 14 with Vietnamese subtitles on HTV3 – DreamsTV at 8pm every Saturday.

Source: VNS

Ly Hoang Nam faces tough challenge at Vietnam Open 2017

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Vietnam’s no. 1 tennis player, Ly Hoang Nam, has been drawn against Go Soeda of Japan, who ranks 387 places higher than Nam in the ATP rankings, in the first round of the Vietnam Open 2017, scheduled to take place in Ho Chi Minh City from October 23 to 29.

The Vietnam Open 2017 is part of the 2017 ATP Challenger Tour, offering a total cash prize of up to US$50,000 and 90 ATP rating points for the champions in both the singles and doubles categories.

The week-long competition will bring together 32 competitors, including 26 main draw entrants and six wildcard earners, among whom are the former Junior Grand Slam champions, Taylor Fritz from the US (world no. 99, seed no. 1), Yuki Bhambri from India (world no. 146, seed no. 4) and Max Purcell; former world no. 8, Mikhail Youzhny from Russia (world no. 126, seed no. 2) and the 2015 Vietnam Open winner, Saketh Myneni.

World no. 159 and seed no. 5, Go Soeda, is considered as a tough challenge for Vietnamese star Ly Hoang Nam. The Japanese player once stood at 47th in the world and has competed in all four Grand Slam tournaments. During his career, Soeda has claimed 18 championship titles at the ATP Challenger Tour level and he is also among the title favourites in HCM City this year.

In the doubles event, Hoang Nam will resume his partnership with Sumit Nagal from India. Two years ago, Nam coupled with Nagal to win the Junior Wimbledon doubles crown, thus becoming Vietnam’s first-ever Grand Slam junior champion.

At the Vietnam Open 2016, Hoang Nam was stopped in the men’s singles first round after losing 0-2 to Ito Tatsuma of Japan, whilst pairing with teammate Nguyen Hoang Thien to make the doubles quarterfinals, in which the two Vietnamese representatives were defeated by the Thai twins, Sanchai and Sonchat Ratiwatana.

Vietnamese wildcard earners, Minh Tuan and Linh Giang, will play former world no. 50, Robert Stephane of France, and former world no. 39, Matosevic Marinko of Serbia, respectively, in the first round.

Source: Nhan Dan

Vietnam through Japanese artist’s paintings

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The works of Japanese Katazome artist Toba Mika are on display at the Museum of Cham Sculpture in the central city of Danang, featuring Vietnamese landscapes.

Running from October 20 to November 12, the event depicting Vietnamese landscapes such as Hue, Danang and Hoi An is being hosted in conjunction with the upcoming Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC) in Danang City.

Visiting Vietnam for the first time in 1994, Toba Mika was impressed by the country’s nature and people. It was that trip that inspired her to create countless paintings of the Vietnamese landscape during its period of urbanisation.

Toba Mika has to date drawn more than 120 paintings on different localities in Vietnam such as Hue, Danang, Hoi An, Hanoi and HCM City.

She has organised seven exhibitions in Vietnam since 2001 and has been granted the Vietnamese government’s cultural testimonial award.

Katazome is a Japanese stencil dyeing technique that dates back thousands of years. It was originally used to decorate traditional Japanese costumes.

The technique includes the use of several ingredients, such as handmade Japanese paper and colour-resistant rice paste.

Some photos by Toba Mika displayed in Danang

Source: TTVH

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