| Vietnam — A case of better late than early? |
| Commentary | |||||
| Written by The Edge Financial Daily | |||||
| Friday, 27 January 2012 10:57 | |||||
|
KUALA LUMPUR: WCT Bhd is a latecomer to the Vietnam property market — and that may be a very good thing. In the Vietnam property market game, it is the unusual case of better late than early, rather than the other way round, as many players who flocked there earlier have found out. While Vietnam forms only a small part of the first three companies’ assets and focus, the same cannot be said of ASPL, which was listed in April 2007 by Ireka with a mandate to invest purely in Vietnamese and Malaysian real estate. The London-listed property fund had an initial asset base of US$212.5 million (RM646 million), but has seen its shares slump 65% since its IPO nearly five years ago. But after several painful years of restructuring of the Vietnamese economy to address its inflation and trade deficit problems, analysts say the worst could be over. “This will be an important transitional year for Vietnam to implement its plan on restructuring the economy, with the main focus on the state-owned enterprises,” Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai told the Vietnamese media at a conference in Hanoi last week. According to local press reports, Hai said although the country’s economy still has inflation and a wide trade deficit, the Vietnamese government has gradually stabilised it. Vietnam also enjoyed a balance of payment surplus of US$2.5 billion to US$3 billion, and foreign reserves increased against the narrowed trade gap, he said. Hai said the government will create more effective measures to further narrow the trade deficit, while promising that the top priority is macro-economic stabilisation, rather than economic growth.
Vietnam’s central bank has also signalled it may cut interest rates as inflation eases, although it warned of yet another difficult year. Inflation, which stood at 18.3% in December, may range between 8.5% and less than 12% at worst in 2012, central bank governor Nguyen Van Binh said yesterday. The current economic picture is a stark contrast from some five or six years ago, when Vietnam attracted developers from Malaysia, Singapore and other parts of the world. Those reforms started bearing fruit in the early 2000s, turning the country of 87 million people into a favourite for foreign direct investment. Touted as the next China, investors saw Vietnam as a low-cost industrial base or an exciting consumer story. The euphoria reached its peak in 2008, but since then, the Vietnam fairy tale has turned into a nightmare as investors have been caught in a period of economic uncertainty. After the global credit crisis that struck at the end of 2008, the country has been struggling to regain a sound footing as foreign investments fell, inflation soared, and its trade deficit widened. As a result, interest rates rose to over 20% while the dong was devalued by 7% in 2011, in a year that saw the government take more drastic steps to tackle the problems. This year, ASPL plans to launch its maiden project — the Phuoc Long B Residential Development in Ho Chi Minh City, Monica Lai, chief financial officer of Ireka Development Management, told The Edge Financial Daily. Ireka Development Management is the manager of ASPL. The development comprises 37 luxury villas and 450 apartments. The villas will be launched first. The low-density project is located on the border between District 2 and 9 of Ho Chi Minh City, with river views. It is being undertaken as a joint venture with Nam Long Investment Corp. Elsewhere in Ho Chi Minh City, ASPL is currently constructing a hospital to anchor the International Hi-Tech Healthcare Park, a 37.5ha healthcare themed development with a gross development value (GDV) of US$770 million over nine years. However, earlier plans to launch residential units have been postponed.
|
|||||
|
|