Business
Price ceiling hike for air tickets will not hit inflation
Published
11 months agoon

HÀ NỘI — A modest hike in the price ceiling for air tickets would not have a significant impact on the consumer price index in 2022 and hurt customers, said the director of the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam (CAAV) Đinh Việt Thắng.
Earlier, the CAAV proposed raising the price ceiling for airfares, citing a surge in petrol prices as a reason. It noted geopolitical tensions, especially the Russia-Ukraine conflict, have pushed the jet fuel price of Jet A1 to a new height since the beginning of 2022.
Thắng said during a conference late last week that the jet fuel price of Jet A1 has risen to US$130 per barrel, nearly double that of 2021, so the CAAV’s proposal was made to partially remove difficulties for Vietnamese airlines that had been suffering huge losses.
The proposed price, which would see an average increase of 3.7 per cent, would equal the ceiling price applied in 2015, Thắng said, adding that the CAAV had also calculated the ceiling price to protect the interests of passengers while ensuring the State’s policies to combat inflation and increase prices.
Talking about the possibility that airlines would increase ticket prices during the upcoming peak season April 30 to May 1 after a hike in the ceiling price, Thắng said during the peak season, the average ticket price could not reach the ceiling, and would be only equivalent to 60 per cent of this figure.
Meanwhile, airlines had many ranges of fares, no airline only sold tickets at a ceiling price. Therefore, in order to access affordable air tickets, passengers should purchase early instead of booking close to the departure date, resulting in higher ticket prices, he added.
Under its proposal, the ceiling prices of tickets would be increased to VNĐ2.25 million ($97) from the current VNĐ2.2 million for flight distances between 500km and 850km, up 2.2 per cent, while that for flight distances between 850km and 1,000km would be raised to VNĐ2.89 million from the current VNĐ2.79 million, up 3.5 per cent.
For flights between 1,000km and 1,280km and above, passengers were expected to pay up to VNĐ3.4 million, up 6.2 per cent, and VNĐ4 million, up 6.6 per cent, respectively.
Air ticket prices for flights below 500km would stay the same.
Punctuality of Vietnamese airlines reaches 95.5% in Q1
The overall punctuality of the local aviation industry was 95.5 per cent in the first quarter of this year, the latest statistics from the CAAV showed.
In the period, Việt Nam’s six airlines operated 58,302 flights, a reduction of nearly 25 per cent compared to last year’s figure.
Bamboo Airways took the lead with 96.6 per cent of its flights on time; Vietnam Airlines and Pacific Airlines ranked second and third with on-time performance (OTP) of 96 per cent and 95.7 per cent, respectively; and the OTP rate of Vietjet was 94.4 per cent.
According to CAAV, Bamboo Airways is also the carrier with the lowest rate of flight delays among Việt Nam’s three big airlines with 3.4 per cent, a year-on-year decrease of 1.2 per cent, while that of Vietnam Airlines and Vietjet was 4 per cent and 5.6 per cent, respectively.
The overall rate of flight delays in the sector was 4.5 per cent in the first three months of 2021, a decline of 7.3 per cent compared with the same period. Meanwhile, the cancellation rate of the domestic aviation industry in the period was 1.3 per cent, a year-on-year increase of 1.1 per cent. Vietnam Airlines led the industry with 2.7 per cent of the flights cancelled.
The main reasons leading to flight delays of airlines include late return flights, poor management as well as equipment and services at the airport.
In the first quarter of this year, domestic and international routes have been gradually restored to meet the increasing travel demand. Since regular international flights were resumed and the country was opened to international tourists in mid-March, airlines have raised the frequency of their operation on many routes.
From the end of March, Vietnam Airlines plans to increase international flights every week and expand its exploitation to markets such as Singapore, mainland China, Japan, South Korea as well as domestic routes to meet market demand.
Vietjet is striving to increase the frequency of many international routes connecting Việt Nam with South Korea, Taipei (China), Japan, Singapore, and Thailand.
A representative of Bamboo Airways said that in order to meet the increasing travel needs of customers in the new normal, the airline is developing a network of flights to many countries in the world. —
Source: https://vietnamnews.vn/economy/1174080/price-ceiling-hike-for-air-tickets-will-not-hit-inflation.html
You may like
-
Chinese airlines to increase flight frequency to Vietnam
-
Many localities welcome first foreign tourists of Lunar New Year
-
Korean Air allowed to fly to Lam Dong
-
One more foreign airline opens Taipei – Da Nang direct air route
-
5 airports cease operations in response to Typhoon Noru in Vietnam
-
Man misses flight as bag of alum mistaken for drugs at northern Vietnamese airport
Business
20 largest investors hold 80% of Vinamilk’s charter capital
Published
7 hours agoon
March 29, 2023The corporation’s 20 largest shareholders hold more than 1.65 billion Vinamilk shares, equivalent to about 79.11% of the company’s chartered capital.
Of which, the State Capital Investment Corporation (SCIC) is the largest shareholder with 36%, followed by F&N Group with 20.39% (including F&N Dairy Investments Pte with 17.69% and F&N BEV Manufacturing Pte.Ltd with 2.7%), and Platinum Victory Pte.Ltd with 10.62%.
The ownership ratio of domestic investors is 44.35%, while foreign investors account for 55.6%, according to its annual report for 2022.
Vinamilk, listed on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (HoSE) as VNM, posted net revenue of VND59.96 trillion ($2.56 billion) in 2022, down 1.58% year-on-year, and after-tax profit of VND8.578 trillion ($365.8 million), down 19.3%.
According to the firm, Vietnam’s dynamic dairy industry is worth $5 billion. Dairy consumption hit 21.8 kilograms per capita in 2019, below the regional average of 26.7 kilograms. It quoted data from market researcher AC Nielsen as saying that the country’s dairy industry grew 5% in value in the first 11 months of last year, while volume remained unchanged, attributing these changes to higher prices amid rising production costs.
Last year, the company opened nearly 40 new Vinamilk stores in a move to ensure sustainable distribution solutions. As of end-2022, Vinamilk’s distribution system reached more than 230,000 points nationwide, including nearly 650 Vinamilk stores.
Early this month, Vinamilk and Japanese company Sojitz broke ground on a $500-million complex for raising cows and supplying beef in northern Vietnam, a project expected to advance Vietnam’s livestock industry. The project, a 49-51 joint venture between Sojitz and Vinamilk subsidiary Vilico, will cover almost 76 hectares in Tam Dao district of Vinh Phuc province bordering Hanoi.
On the Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange, the VNM share price hit VND74,400 ($3.16) at Wednesday’s close.
Source: The Investor
Source: https://e.nhipcaudautu.vn/companies/20-largest-investors-hold-80-of-vinamilks-charter-capital-3351498/
Business
Biggest-ever US business delegation comes to Vietnam to seek investment opportunities
Published
9 hours agoon
March 29, 2023A mission, including 52 businesses from the U.S., is scheduled to visit Vietnam this week to learn about the local market and seek business and investment opportunities.
This is the largest-ever U.S. business mission to Vietnam.
Ted Osius, president and CEO of the U.S.-ASEAN Business Council (USABC), told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper on Monday that these U.S. firms will meet with the Vietnamese prime minister, National Assembly chairman, and ministers.
|
Amazon is among the U.S. enterprises coming to Vietnam this week. Photo: Reuters |
Learning about Vietnam’s digital, green transformation potential
According to Osius, USABC members stressed at a meeting with Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh during his visit to the U.S. on the occasion of the ASEAN-U.S. Special Summit in May 2022 that they considered Vietnam a strategic market in the region and were committed to making investments in Vietnam and cooperating with Vietnamese partners for a long term.
“The visit to Vietnam will demonstrate the commitment. We want to fulfill the commitment of U.S. private firms as reliable partners and resources in fostering mutual priorities and economic purposes,” Osius affirmed.
The U.S. business delegation to Vietnam this week will include firms which have come to Vietnam and those that have yet to, proving that Vietnam remains attractive to U.S. industrial firms.
Osius said the mission consists of firms in various sectors, such as energy, finance-banking, insurance, manufacturing, information technology, healthcare, logistics, tourism, aerospace, and national defense.
Some typical names are Apple, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, SpaceX, Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, Abbott, Visa, Citibank, Meta, and Amazon Web Services.
Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Bell will also come to the Southeast Asian country to meet with local national defense firms.
Osius said U.S. enterprises will support Vietnam’s digital and green transformation strategy to help the country realize its commitment to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
The USABC hoped to develop the partnership in the digital sector between Vietnam and the U.S. and foster the use of U.S. private firms’ investments in the energy sphere.
“We also want to seek opportunities to support Vietnam in reforming financial and banking services and developing global supply chains in Vietnam,” the USABC president added.
The visit is taking place while the two countries celebrate the 10th anniversary of their comprehensive partnership. Therefore, this will be an occasion for them to celebrate and review remarkable achievements of the business community over the past decade, Osius noted.
He also expected the two sides to determine key trade cooperation opportunities.
Through the visit, the USABC also expected discussions about the roles of U.S. enterprises in facilitating the deployment of free trade agreements, such as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), as well as negotiations over the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF).
|
The delegation of U.S. enterprises to Vietnam includes those operating in Vietnam and having plans to expand their presence in the country, such as Apple, Coca-Cola, and PepsiCo. Photo: Quang Dinh / Tuoi Tre |
It’s time to conquer Vietnamese market
James Ollen, executive director of the American Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (AmCham Vietnam), told Tuoi Tre that in the eyes of U.S. investors, Vietnam is a leading destination for multinational companies which are seeking ways to diversify their supply chains.
It also has a booming consumer market.
Moreover, it is an ideal destination for many tourists. Many Vietnamese cities are on the way to becoming the most dynamic start-up centers in Asia.
At a recent meeting with leaders of Ho Chi Minh City, Ollen said U.S. enterprises in Vietnam are optimistic about the continuous economic growth prospects this year and in the following years.
Therefore, the U.S. business community in Vietnam wants to cooperate with local authorities to develop a favorable environment to continue attracting investments, and boosting innovation and sustainable development.
AmCham Vietnam has more than 550 members in the central and southern regions.
The chamber representative added that U.S. enterprises always want to expand their operation in Vietnam and the most important factor for a favorable investment environment is a fair, transparent, predictable, and appropriately-arranged legal system.
In agriculture, the two countries’ trade relations are also positive.
According to U.S. Consul General in Ho Chi Minh City Susan Burns, the two sides’ agricultural trade surged from over US$4 billion in 2011 to nearly $10 billion last year.
Many U.S. agricultural product imports to Vietnam, such as blueberries, apples, grapes, and oranges, are popular and posted impressive growth.
Having been present in Ho Chi Minh City since early this month, Lawrence D. Bushnell, president of Gratia Dei Seafoods in Alaska State, said never before have U.S. enterprises paid such huge attention to Vietnam.
With a population of 100 million people and local residents’ increasing incomes, the Vietnamese market is a target for all U.S. enterprises. Following surveys, investors may make investments and shift their supply chains to the country.
Cooperating to develop supply chains
A leader of the European-American Market Department under the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade, told Tuoi Tre that the U.S. business mission and leaders of the ministry will discuss cooperation opportunities in industry and energy trade.
Besides economy, trade, and investment, the collaboration potential in energy transition, digital transformation, and the building of clean and sustainable supply chains between the two countries is huge.
As Vietnam is actively getting involved in global production networks and value chains, the two sides should join hands in other potential sectors, such as hi-tech, semiconductor chip manufacturing, aviation, digital transformation, energy transition, technology innovation, and environmental protection, apart from traditional cooperation sectors, said the official from the Ministry of Industry and Trade.
“The Vietnamese government has been creating the most favorable conditions for the shift of global supply chains to Vietnam,” the Vietnamese official affirmed.
“During that process, the direct investment from the U.S. as well as the technology, finance, and production capacity of leading U.S. groups, such as Google, Apple, Intel, Boeing, and Walmart, are extremely important.”
He added that to encourage Vietnamese enterprises to take part in multinational groups’ supply chains, the Ministry of Industry and Trade is cooperating with many other ministries, agencies, large enterprises, and international organizations to conduct projects and programs to provide consultancy, improve production, train human resources, develop science and technology, and boost digital transformation to improve the capability of Vietnamese suppliers.
|
SpaceX Group and many other U.S. enterprises learn about the Vietnamese market. Photo: NASA |
Nguyen Van Toan, vice-chairman of the Vietnam’s Association of Foreign Invested Enterprises, said many U.S. companies have made investments in Vietnam through third parties, such as Singapore, Hong Kong, and European countries.
In particular, they established subsidiaries in these places and the subsidiaries have invested in Vietnam.
The investment environment is changing when the global minimum corporate tax will take effect early next year. Most U.S. enterprises coming to Vietnam this week earn a huge revenue and are subject to the tax with a minimum rate of 15 percent of their profits.
The tax will significantly affect the global investment movement. As a result, leading U.S. firms have sought new destinations.
Vietnam will definitely impose the global minimum corporate tax, but U.S. firms pin high hopes on the country’s preferential policies.
According to Toan, this is a positive trend as Vietnam can avoid the race of issuing tax incentives.
Without preferential tax policies, Vietnam will have to attract foreign direct investment with a better investment environment, infrastructure, and workforce.
Thus, the country can attract high-quality foreign investment.
“It is good when large U.S. investors arrive in Vietnam to seek investment opportunities, but we have to commit to improving the local investment environment to set their mind at rest,” Toan said.
“In addition to the ideal geographical location, stable politics, and advantages in the market and integration, we need to improve other factors, such as administrative procedures, and especially the manpower quality.
“U.S. firms investing in Vietnam will not bring their human resources like those from other countries, so we must properly prepare the manpower to welcome them.”
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
A mission, including 52 businesses from the U.S., is scheduled to visit Vietnam this week to learn about the local market and seek business and investment opportunities.
This is the largest-ever U.S. business mission to Vietnam.
Ted Osius, president and CEO of the U.S.-ASEAN Business Council (USABC), told Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper on Monday that these U.S. firms will meet with the Vietnamese prime minister, National Assembly chairman, and ministers.
|
Amazon is among the U.S. enterprises coming to Vietnam this week. Photo: Reuters |
Learning about Vietnam’s digital, green transformation potential
According to Osius, USABC members stressed at a meeting with Vietnamese Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh during his visit to the U.S. on the occasion of the ASEAN-U.S. Special Summit in May 2022 that they considered Vietnam a strategic market in the region and were committed to making investments in Vietnam and cooperating with Vietnamese partners for a long term.
“The visit to Vietnam will demonstrate the commitment. We want to fulfill the commitment of U.S. private firms as reliable partners and resources in fostering mutual priorities and economic purposes,” Osius affirmed.
The U.S. business delegation to Vietnam this week will include firms which have come to Vietnam and those that have yet to, proving that Vietnam remains attractive to U.S. industrial firms.
Osius said the mission consists of firms in various sectors, such as energy, finance-banking, insurance, manufacturing, information technology, healthcare, logistics, tourism, aerospace, and national defense.
Some typical names are Apple, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, SpaceX, Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, Abbott, Visa, Citibank, Meta, and Amazon Web Services.
Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Bell will also come to the Southeast Asian country to meet with local national defense firms.
Osius said U.S. enterprises will support Vietnam’s digital and green transformation strategy to help the country realize its commitment to net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
The USABC hoped to develop the partnership in the digital sector between Vietnam and the U.S. and foster the use of U.S. private firms’ investments in the energy sphere.
“We also want to seek opportunities to support Vietnam in reforming financial and banking services and developing global supply chains in Vietnam,” the USABC president added.
The visit is taking place while the two countries celebrate the 10th anniversary of their comprehensive partnership. Therefore, this will be an occasion for them to celebrate and review remarkable achievements of the business community over the past decade, Osius noted.
He also expected the two sides to determine key trade cooperation opportunities.
Through the visit, the USABC also expected discussions about the roles of U.S. enterprises in facilitating the deployment of free trade agreements, such as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) and the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), as well as negotiations over the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF).
|
The delegation of U.S. enterprises to Vietnam includes those operating in Vietnam and having plans to expand their presence in the country, such as Apple, Coca-Cola, and PepsiCo. Photo: Quang Dinh / Tuoi Tre |
It’s time to conquer Vietnamese market
James Ollen, executive director of the American Chamber of Commerce in Vietnam (AmCham Vietnam), told Tuoi Tre that in the eyes of U.S. investors, Vietnam is a leading destination for multinational companies which are seeking ways to diversify their supply chains.
It also has a booming consumer market.
Moreover, it is an ideal destination for many tourists. Many Vietnamese cities are on the way to becoming the most dynamic start-up centers in Asia.
At a recent meeting with leaders of Ho Chi Minh City, Ollen said U.S. enterprises in Vietnam are optimistic about the continuous economic growth prospects this year and in the following years.
Therefore, the U.S. business community in Vietnam wants to cooperate with local authorities to develop a favorable environment to continue attracting investments, and boosting innovation and sustainable development.
AmCham Vietnam has more than 550 members in the central and southern regions.
The chamber representative added that U.S. enterprises always want to expand their operation in Vietnam and the most important factor for a favorable investment environment is a fair, transparent, predictable, and appropriately-arranged legal system.
In agriculture, the two countries’ trade relations are also positive.
According to U.S. Consul General in Ho Chi Minh City Susan Burns, the two sides’ agricultural trade surged from over US$4 billion in 2011 to nearly $10 billion last year.
Many U.S. agricultural product imports to Vietnam, such as blueberries, apples, grapes, and oranges, are popular and posted impressive growth.
Having been present in Ho Chi Minh City since early this month, Lawrence D. Bushnell, president of Gratia Dei Seafoods in Alaska State, said never before have U.S. enterprises paid such huge attention to Vietnam.
With a population of 100 million people and local residents’ increasing incomes, the Vietnamese market is a target for all U.S. enterprises. Following surveys, investors may make investments and shift their supply chains to the country.
Cooperating to develop supply chains
A leader of the European-American Market Department under the Vietnamese Ministry of Industry and Trade, told Tuoi Tre that the U.S. business mission and leaders of the ministry will discuss cooperation opportunities in industry and energy trade.
Besides economy, trade, and investment, the collaboration potential in energy transition, digital transformation, and the building of clean and sustainable supply chains between the two countries is huge.
As Vietnam is actively getting involved in global production networks and value chains, the two sides should join hands in other potential sectors, such as hi-tech, semiconductor chip manufacturing, aviation, digital transformation, energy transition, technology innovation, and environmental protection, apart from traditional cooperation sectors, said the official from the Ministry of Industry and Trade.
“The Vietnamese government has been creating the most favorable conditions for the shift of global supply chains to Vietnam,” the Vietnamese official affirmed.
“During that process, the direct investment from the U.S. as well as the technology, finance, and production capacity of leading U.S. groups, such as Google, Apple, Intel, Boeing, and Walmart, are extremely important.”
He added that to encourage Vietnamese enterprises to take part in multinational groups’ supply chains, the Ministry of Industry and Trade is cooperating with many other ministries, agencies, large enterprises, and international organizations to conduct projects and programs to provide consultancy, improve production, train human resources, develop science and technology, and boost digital transformation to improve the capability of Vietnamese suppliers.
|
SpaceX Group and many other U.S. enterprises learn about the Vietnamese market. Photo: NASA |
Nguyen Van Toan, vice-chairman of the Vietnam’s Association of Foreign Invested Enterprises, said many U.S. companies have made investments in Vietnam through third parties, such as Singapore, Hong Kong, and European countries.
In particular, they established subsidiaries in these places and the subsidiaries have invested in Vietnam.
The investment environment is changing when the global minimum corporate tax will take effect early next year. Most U.S. enterprises coming to Vietnam this week earn a huge revenue and are subject to the tax with a minimum rate of 15 percent of their profits.
The tax will significantly affect the global investment movement. As a result, leading U.S. firms have sought new destinations.
Vietnam will definitely impose the global minimum corporate tax, but U.S. firms pin high hopes on the country’s preferential policies.
According to Toan, this is a positive trend as Vietnam can avoid the race of issuing tax incentives.
Without preferential tax policies, Vietnam will have to attract foreign direct investment with a better investment environment, infrastructure, and workforce.
Thus, the country can attract high-quality foreign investment.
“It is good when large U.S. investors arrive in Vietnam to seek investment opportunities, but we have to commit to improving the local investment environment to set their mind at rest,” Toan said.
“In addition to the ideal geographical location, stable politics, and advantages in the market and integration, we need to improve other factors, such as administrative procedures, and especially the manpower quality.
“U.S. firms investing in Vietnam will not bring their human resources like those from other countries, so we must properly prepare the manpower to welcome them.”
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter to get the latest news about Vietnam!
Source: https://tuoitrenews.vn/news/business/20230322/biggestever-us-business-delegation-comes-to-vietnam-to-seek-investment-opportunities/72207.html
Business
VinFast rolls out long-awaited electric SUVs, eyes overseas deliveries
Published
15 hours agoon
March 28, 2023VinFast, which began operations in 2019, is gearing up to expand in the United States, where it hopes to compete with legacy automakers with its two electric SUV models.
“After Vietnam, VinFast expects to export the first batch of VF9 to international markets in the coming months,” VinFast said in a statement, without providing a specific timeline for deliveries of the new model.
The VF9 model was initially scheduled to debut at the beginning of this year.
The company currently sells the VF8 model of SUV. It started to ship those last year and began delivering them to customers this month. The company has said it would ship the second batch to the U.S. in the second quarter of 2023.
VinFast, backed by Vietnam’s biggest of conglomerate Vingroup JSC, is the country’s sole EV maker.
As of December last year, VinFast said it secured 55,000 orders globally, of which 12,000 were from the U.S. market.
Source: Reuters
Source: https://e.nhipcaudautu.vn/companies/vinfast-rolls-out-long-awaited-electric-suvs-eyes-overseas-deliveries-3351494/

Foreigner shares dos and don’ts of travel etiquette in Vietnam

Vietnamese boxer wins silver at world boxing championship

UN warns ‘vampiric overconsumption’ is draining world’s water

Tâm qualifies for world semi-finals, ensures at least third place

Beyond skin deep: the impact of beauty standards on young women

Việt Nam shocks Australia in U20 Asian Cup opening game

Fire at Indonesia’s Pertamina fuel storage station kills 17

Vietnam to join world’s leading tourism fair in Berlin

Scores evacuated as fire erupts in Hong Kong skyscraper

50,000 march across Australia’s Harbour Bridge for WorldPride

First Vietnamese representative at a Winter Olympic

Da Nang museums attracting domestic visitors with free entry policy

Nom, nom, Việt Nam – Episode 76: Fried cheese sticks

In Sa Pa, ethnic children forced to peddle on streets in bitterly cold night
Nom, nom, Việt Nam – Episode 74: Huế beef noodle soup
Trending
-
Your Vietnam2 weeks ago
California Fitness brings transformation challenge back to Việt Nam
-
Entertainment-Sports2 weeks ago
The Local Game:I love to say I told you so
-
Society2 weeks ago
At least two hospitalized after bus crashes into Hanoi eatery
-
Travel2 weeks ago
Quang Ninh province boosts tourism development with new sites and tours
-
Travel2 weeks ago
Vietnam expects to enter top 30 countries in terms of tourism competitiveness: PM
-
Travel2 weeks ago
Agritourism to become integrated economic sector: Minister
-
Society2 weeks ago
AstraZeneca collaborates with Vietnam’s health ministry for holistic health system development
-
Business1 week ago
CP Group weighs feed and seed business IPO