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First smartphone produced by Viet Nam (Viettel Corp), price is $1.5 million Dong. This is how Viet Nam is working to displace foreign electronic companies out of Viet Nam (probably in the 2020's)

It is extremely difficult to displace foreign electronic companies. Look how strong Japan's electronics industry is yet the Korean companies are slowly getting a bigger share out of that market. Same goes for Taiwan its has a very strong tech sector yet there are tons of foreign companies that compete with it.
 
It is extremely difficult to displace foreign electronic companies. Look how strong Japan's electronics industry is yet the Korean companies are slowly getting a bigger share out of that market. Same goes for Taiwan its has a very strong tech sector yet there are tons of foreign companies that compete with it.
In Japan, hardly any electronic product is non-Japanese, in Korea, hardly anything is non-Korean, and the same thing for Taiwan.

Viet Nam will want the same thing for Viet Nam; we might be able to do it in the 2020's. Viet Nam has one more advantage and that is the electronic industry is being developed by the military. The Vietnamese military wield so much power and has already shown how easily they could displace South Korea's SK Telecom out of Viet Nam in a matter of a few years.

Foreign investors have failed and bit ch so much about Viet Nam, because they had thought that if they invested a few bucks and created a dozen jobs in Vietnam, they could use that as a bridge to penetrate the local market and use Vietnam's 90 million market as a dumping ground for their products and services. We have shattered their dreams and continue to do so. Viet Nam will never go the same way as other ASEAN states: serving as a dumping ground to consume industrial products for foriegners.
 
Updated : 10/26/2012 6:46:33 PM
Vietnam – a rising star among rapid growth markets

(VOV) - Vietnam is expected to grow by almost 6 percent over the next 25 years, making it the world’s third fastest developing economy, according to Ernst & Young’s latest report on rapid growth markets (RGMs).

Ernst & Young, a leading global auditing group, said that wages in the Vietnamese manufacturing sector are currently estimated at nearly half those paid in China and Thailand, encouraging manufacturers to move operations to diversify production and capitalise on lower costs.
“This has enabled Vietnam to attract more than US$6.5 billion in FDI in each of the last five years,” it reported.

Alexis Karlins-Marchay, Co-Director of the Ernst & Young Emerging Markets Centre, highlighted Vietnam’s young and well-educated population of almost 88 million, its modest labour costs, its 6 percent targeted growth in 2013 and its scope for future economic restructuring.

Ernst & Young quoted the World Bank as saying that over the last few years, mobile phones and related accessories have become the second-largest Vietnamese export item, accounting for 10.5 percent of total exports. The World Bank expects this category to have overtaken garments as Vietnam’s largest source of export revenue in 2013.

The report added that the ability to attract and retain foreign firms in high-value manufacturing products such as electronics, computers, and phones is a potentially lucrative advantage for Vietnam, particularly as some of its neighbours have found it harder to move up the value chain.

The World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report 2011-2012 recently revealed that Vietnam had advanced 20 places in terms of its macroeconomic environment.

In June, Standard and Poor’s upgraded the country’s outlook from negative to stable, stressing all the while that price stabilization must remain a priority. The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) has already cut interest rates five times this year to support activity but must take care to avoid excessively loosening monetary policy.

Ernst & Young also praised Vietnam’s success in improving its trade and current account balances, saying that the country’s current account moved into surplus in 2011 from a deficit of 12 percent of GDP in 2008.

Vietnam
 
More pics from Hanoi overpass

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Very strange design. any photos taken under the overpass?what is the ground under the over pass used for?

This new overpass costs about 263 million USD and only for autos (max. 80km/h). The old roads are left and right. Actually what you see on the pics did not exist 10 years ago.

DSC_3142-0917d.JPG

Under the overpass
 
Coca-Cola to further invest $300 million in Vietnam
| vir.com.vn | Oct 27, 2012 11:04 am

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Muhtar Kent is Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of The Coca-Cola Company
photo source:
internet

The Coca-Cola Company yesterday announced a new system investment of $300 million over the next three years in Vietnam to further capture growth opportunities in one of the world’s major emerging consumer markets.

The stepped-up investment, to be commenced from 2013, will ramp up to the total investment of $500 million that Coca-Cola and its bottling partners have committed to Vietnam until 2015.

“Vietnam is an important growth market in the Asia Pacific region as we work to achieve our 2020 Vision goal of doubling system revenues this decade,” said Muhtar Kent, chairman and CEO, The Coca-Cola Company, during a visit to Hanoi.

Through completed investments during the last three years, The Coca-Cola Vietnam system has increased local manufacturing and distribution capacity with new filling lines and the installation of new cold-drink coolers with local customers, helping local businesses boost beverage sales.

The company’s most popular beverages in Vietnam include sparkling brands Coca-Cola, Coke Light, Fanta and Sprite, and still brands Minute Maid Teppy, Minute Maid Nutriboost, Samurai, Real Leaf and Dasani.

Coca-Cola is one of the most well-known international brands in Vietnam. The Coca-Cola system in Vietnam employs approximately 2,000 people, of which 99 per cent are local hires, at its three plants in Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang and Hanoi.
 
This new overpass costs about 263 million USD and only for autos (max. 80km/h). The old roads are left and right. Actually what you see on the pics did not exist 10 years ago.

DSC_3142-0917d.JPG

Under the overpass

This practice does not save the land.Every city has its own situation,maybe it is good for vietnam .but in China we would either increase height of overpass and make the old roads under it ,or cancel the overpass and set up dedicated lanes.
 
This practice does not save the land.Every city has its own situation,maybe it is good for vietnam .but in China we would either increase height of overpass and make the old roads under it ,or cancel the overpass and set up dedicated lanes.

Yes, it cuts across several of other important highways, so it is called "overpass", although the length of 9km. So ground under is not used as a road.
 
Vietnam coffee exports set new record
VNA Updated : Fri, November 2, 2012

Coffee exports in the first 10 months of this year set a new record at 1.41 million tons, earning more than US$3 billion, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development has reported.

The coffee exports showed increases of 37.7 percent in volume and 32.7 percent in value over the same period last year.

The demand of two biggest coffee import markets, the US which accounts for 12.11 percent of Vietnam's export value and Germany with 12.09 percent continued to grow.

Also, coffee exported to Indonesia increased 9.4 times in volume and 8.8 times in value, compared to last year's period.

The national turnover for the previous full year was $2.7 billion.

Vietnam now has surpassed Brazil to become the biggest coffee exporter since the beginning of the third quarter this year, International Coffee Organization statistics show.

Coffee exports were forecast to reach 1.6-1.7 million tons this year.

Vietnam coffee exports set new record - Latest Business, economy, stocks, finance news from Vietnam on TuoiTreNews
 
ADB to champion middle-income status
Kieu Linh | vir.com.vn | Nov 05, 2012 08:00 am


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Asian Development Bank has shown its solid commitment to support Vietnam’s shift of gear into middle-income status.

ADB launched Country Partnership Strategy 2012-2015 in Hanoi last week with an aim to support Vietnam’s goal of rising to upper middle income status.

Tomoyuki Kimura, ADB country director for Vietnam, said the country partnership strategy, or CPS, would support Vietnam through three pillars - inclusive growth, enhancing economic efficiency and environmental sustainability.

In order to implement the proposed strategy and respond to Vietnam’s dynamic needs as a middle income country, ADB offers a wide range of financing resources and assistance modalities, including loans, equity investments, technical assistance and other knowledge products, and policy advice.

Under the new CPS, the indicated ordinary capital resources planning figures are $943 million per year for 2013-2014 and $760 million for 2015. The indicated Asian Development Fund (ADF) planning figures are $385 million per year for 2013-2014 and $395 million for 2015. In addition, the estimated technical assistance resources are about $8 million each year.

“Actual ADF allocations to Vietnam for 2013-2014 will depend on country performance assessments under performance-based allocation,” said Kimura.

During the CPS 2012-2015 in Vietnam, ADB will prioritise six sectors, including agriculture, natural resources and environment; education; energy, finance, transport, and water and urban.

“Support to improve public sector management will be crosscutting and strengthen sector operations,” said Yumiko Tamura, principal country specialist. “ADB will focus engagement in health on sector management issues including improving human resources and the quality of service delivery and supporting disadvantaged areas to ensure inclusive growth. Meanwhile, ADB will phase out operations in the industry and trade sector.”
 
Vietnam's coffee plan: the next prestige global brand
Thu Nov 8, 2012 7:04am EST | REUTERS.com

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Vietnam's coffee king, Dang Le Nguyen Vu / Photo credit: Catherine Karnow


LUCERNE, Switzerland, Nov 8 (Reuters) - Vietnam's "Coffee King" sips tea as he appraises the crowded tables at a Swiss branch of Starbucks.

Dang Le Nguyen Vu may not rate the coffee, preferring the brand from Vietnam's top processor which he heads, earning him the regal epithet. But the U.S. chain is in his sights as a marketing model for Vietnam, the world's second largest coffee grower, to multiply income by putting its brew and not just its beans on the map.

"Our ambition is to become a global brand," the chairman of privately-owned Trung Nguyen May told Reuters.

"They are great at implanting a story in consumers' minds but if we look into the core elements of Starbucks, what they are doing is terrible. They are not selling coffee, they are selling coffee-flavoured water with sugar in it," he said.

Trung Nguyen also runs Vietnam's biggest chain of coffee houses, and Vu has his pitch ready for the Western market.

"American consumers don't need another product. They need another story," he said, adding that his company aimed to improve the lives of people in Vietnam's coffee-growing highland region, a link he sees lacking in larger rivals.

"They sing great songs about sustainable development but at the end of the day, the return on investment is what they care about. They don't grow coffee, do they? We do."

Trung Nguyen says all its beans come from smaller farms certified for sustainable growing practices, with growers receiving guaranteed prices. Vu was in Lucerne to tout what he calls "r e sponsible creativity for harmony and sustainability".

GRASSHOPPER VERSUS ELEPHANT

Vietnam is the world's top exporter of cheaper robusta beans - mainly used for making instant coffee - and the second biggest exporter of coffee overall after Brazil, which is the world leader in exporting pricier arabica beans.

However, like many nations that produce soft commodities coffee, cocoa and sugar, Vietnam only earns a fraction of the income ultimately generated by its crops once they are processed, packaged and marketed abroad.

"Vietnam currently exports 90 percent of beans raw. These beans carry no brands. That needs to be changed," said Vu.

He said Vietnam should be able to earn $20 billion from coffee within the next 15 years, up from less than $3 billion now, if it boosts agricultural productivity and does more to add value to its coffee by roasting, blending and packaging beans.

Trung Nguyen hopes to quadruple revenues to $1 billion by 2015 from $250 million in 2011 as Vu seeks to take on big global brands like Nestle's Nescafe and Starbucks.

"We are like a grasshopper fighting against a giant elephant. In terms of technology, marketing, Nestle is way ahead of us," Vu said. "Our strategy is to be smarter and more focused," he said, noting that his G7 brand is the country's top selling instant coffee ahead of Nescafe and local rival Vinacafe.

"For the consumer, Vietnam was closed for a long, long time so they would always prefer the foreign brand versus the local brand so for G7 to win this race it took extra effort from us."

Trung Nguyen already exports to 60 countries, but plans a big new push into the United States next year, hoping to eventually reverse the split in its sales of 70 percent for the domestic market and 30 percent for export.

Trung Nguyen also expects to benefit from the fast-growing popularity of coffee in the traditional tea-drinking countries of Asia. Vu hopes to lift Vietnamese coffee consumption from a current 1 kilogram per head per year to the 5 kgs of Brazil.

"We are running our factories at up to 110 percent of capacity and still we cannot provide enough to the Chinese market," said Vu, who says he drinks 10 cups a day himself.

"If crude oil is the energy of the industrial economy then coffee is the energy of the knowledge-based economy."

Nestle noted recently the huge potential of the Chinese market with only three cups per person currently drunk per year compared with 168 cups in Hong Kong and 99 in Taiwan.


Vietnam's coffee plan: the next prestige global brand | Reuters
 
Vietnam Moves on Oil Refinery and Nuclear Plant
The Wall Street Journal
November 7, 2012


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Vietnam said it agreed with foreign investors to begin construction of a long-delayed oil refinery, while also stepping up plans to build the country's first nuclear-power plant jointly with Russia.

Until recently the developing Asian nation was favored by global investors, but they're increasingly uneasy as confidence is undermined by surging inflation, corruption scandals and a banking sector threatened by bad debts, mostly owed by the vast state-owned sector. Economic growth is expected to slow this year to 5.2%, the weakest in 13 years.

Plans to build Vietnam's second oil refinery, with a price tag of $8 billion to $10 billion, have been held up for years by financing issues between the Vietnamese government and the two main partners, Japan's Idemitsu Kosan Co. 5019.TO -1.17% and Kuwait Petroleum Corp. Banks had been unwilling to lend without underwriting from the Vietnamese government; talks intensified after the government agreed in August to help underwrite some of the project.

"We have completed talks and all the remaining issues have been solved," Phung Dinh Thuc, chairman of state-run Vietnam Oil and Gas Group, or PetroVietnam, said Wednesday. An Idemitsu Kosan spokesman confirmed the deal. Kuwait Petroleum wasn't immediately able to comment.

The Asian-Pacific region is experiencing a refining boom to satisfy growing demand for oil products. Asia is seen as the main driver of global growth in oil consumption in coming years, and is set to receive more crude from the Middle East and Africa as demand slows in Europe and North America becomes less dependent on imports.

The 200,000 barrel-a-day Nghi Son refinery will mainly process crude supplied by Kuwait Petroleum. Vietnam's sole existing refinery, Dung Quat, processes mainly domestic crude. It has a capacity of 130,000 barrels a day but has been suffering operational problems and unexpected shutdowns.

Operations at the Nghi Son refinery, to be built 180 kilometers south of Hanoi, were initially planned to begin in 2014. Under a new plan, Mr. Thuc said, the partners will sign a deal with foreign contractors in December with operations slated to begin in the second quarter of 2016.

Idemitsu Kosan and Kuwait Petroleum each hold a 35.1% stake in the planned refinery, while PetroVietnam and Mitsui Chemicals Inc. 4183.TO -1.82% own 25.1% and 4.7%, respectively.

Mr. Thuc declined to say which companies had contracts to build the project, though local media earlier quoted Dinh La Thang, then chairman of PetroVietnam, naming a consortium of three foreign companies and PetroVietnam Construction JSC.

In separate news, Vietnam and Russia will begin negotiating a free-trade agreement early next year and will encourage more joint investment among the countries' energy companies, Russian Prime Minister said Wednesday. The two countries also agreed to speed up construction of Vietnam's first nuclear power plant.

Vietnam last year signed a deal to borrow $8 billion from Russia for the Ninh Thuan 1 plant, to be built by Russian utility and atomic-energy company Rosatom. Construction is slated to begin in 2014 and operations in 2020.

Relations between the two Soviet-era allies have warmed over the past decade, since they upgraded relations to strategic from diplomatic in 2001. Russia mainly exports oil products and machinery to Vietnam, and imports mainly farm produce, seafood, clothing and electronic products.

Bilateral trade is likely to reach $7 billion by 2015, said Mr. Medvedev after meeting with his Vietnamese counterpart Nguyen Tan Dung in Hanoi, during a two-day visit to the country. Vietnamese estimates put trade at $3.5 billion to $3.7 billion for 2012, and $3 billion in 2011.

http://nuclearexportcontrols.blogspot.de/2012/11/vietnam-moves-on-oil-refinery-and.html
 
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