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By Bloomberg News - Apr 12, 2013
4:00 PM GMT+0700
Vietnam, the world’s most volatile stock market since 2009, is leading developing-nation gains this year
as the Communist government slows inflation and considers easing its grip on
the economy.
The benchmark VN Index (VNINDEX) posted
more 20 percent swings than
every major equity market in the past four years as policy makers grappled with
consumer prices, currency devaluations and bad bank loans. Their efforts helped
cut inflation to
6.6 percent in March from 23 percent in 2011 and produced the first annual trade surplus since
1992.
Now the government is
preparing to remove bad debt from lenders, ease restrictions on foreign ownership of
listed businesses and change the constitution to limit the “leading role” of
state companies that comprise about a third of gross domestic product. The VN
Index rose 22 percent this year through yesterday, the most among equity gauges
in 47 frontier and emerging markets.
After adjusting for volatility, the measure had the 16th-biggest gain, data
compiled by Bloomberg show.
“There’s an attempt to
move beyond just re-establishing macroeconomic stability and get seriously into
addressing the root causes of the instability,” said Dominic Scriven, who co-
founded Ho Chi Minh City-based Dragon Capital in 1994 and now oversees about
$1.1 billion as the firm’s chief executive officer. “The government itself has
identified these problems in allocation of capital, problems in the banking
sector and problems in the state-owned enterprises.”
The VN Index fell 1.9 percent
to 494.27 today. Its advance this year compares with the Standard & Poor’s 500
Index’s (SPX)14 percent gain. The
U.S.-listed Market Vectors Vietnamexchange-
traded fund, which tracks the
Southeast Asian nation’s shares, rallied 12 percent. The BofA Merrill Lynch US
Treasury Index rose 0.2 percent in the period, while the S&P GSCI Spot
Index of 24 raw materials fell 2.3 percent.
The
Vietnam measure produced a risk-adjusted return of about 1 percent after
dividing this year’s gain by the index volatility reading of 24. The gauge has
posted 11 swings of at least 20 percent since 2009, a threshold that signals
bull and bear markets. It took the S&P 500 three decades to record the same
amount of volatility, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Vietnam’s government is
reviving confidence after the economy expanded at the slowest pacesince 1999 last year and Moody’s Investors Service cut the
nation’s credit rating by one level to B2, five steps below investment grade,
in September on rising nonperforming loans at banks. The Communist Party
apologized to the nation for “big mistakes” in an Oct. 15 statement by General
Secretary Nguyen Phu Trong that was broadcast on state radio and television.
Interest rate cuts by
Vietnam’s central bank will help boost economic growth to 5.6 percent this year
from 5 percent in 2012, according to a Bloomberg News survey of three
economists. The expanding workforce and Vietnam’s appeal as a manufacturing hub
will spur long-term growth, Andrew Brudenell, whose $125 million HSBC GIF -
Frontier Markets fund has advanced 23 percent during the past year, said by
phone from London April 2.
Vietnam’s $44 billion stock
market trades for about 11 times estimated earnings, the lowest level in Southeast Asia. (MXSO) Profits at VN Index companies are projected to rise
25 percent in 12 months, compared with a 17 percent gain for both the MSCI Frontier Markets Index (MXFM) and the MSCI Emerging Markets Index, according to
more than 12,000 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
“Vietnam is going to have more
upside, with corrections along the way,” Mark Mobius, whose $1.7 billion
Templeton Frontier Markets Fund returned 15 percent in the past year, said in a
March 28 interview in Singapore. “Everything in Vietnam is now pretty cheap, even
though they’ve run up quite a lot. There are lots of opportunities.”
Foreign investors
have purchased a net $195 million of Vietnam shares in 2013, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. Mobius, whose holdings in the country are about twice as
big as its weighting in the MSCI frontier index, said he favors shares of
rubber, bank, health-care and dairy companies.
Vietnam’s stock-market swings began
with a surge in credit growth in 2009 that boosted the money supply by 26
percent, according to State Bank of Vietnam figures. While the jump in
borrowing helped spur economic growth of as much as 6.8 percent after the
global financial crisis, it also fueled inflation and left some state-owned
companies unable to repay debt. Vietnam Shipbuilding Industry Group, the
Hanoi-based company known as Vinashin, defaulted on a $600 million loan in
December 2010.
The
dong weakened more than 20 percent from its 2008 high against the dollar
through February 2011, while inflation jumped to an annual rate of 23 percent
in August 2011. The central bank responded by raising its refinancing rate to
15 percent two months later, matching the highest level on record, data
compiled by Bloomberg show.
Nonperforming loans were about
6 percent of outstanding debt as of Feb. 28, according to Vu Duc Dam, chairman
of the Government Office. The government’s NPL estimate may be too low and an
actual rate of as much as 20 percent “would not be a surprise,” Matt
Hildebrandt, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Singapore, wrote in a
report e-mailed April 9. China, the
biggest developing economy, has an NPL ratio of about 1 percent, according to
the nation’s central bank.
Vietnam’s economy is
showing signs of improving health. Inflation slowed to a six-month low in March
and exports climbed at a 20 percent pace in the first quarter. The dong has
been stable at about 20,900 per dollar, while the yield on benchmark five-year local-currency
bonds fell to a five-year low of 8.19 percent April 10.
“The economy is entering
into a more stable growth phase,” Tran Thi Kim Cuong, who helps oversee about
$342 million as the head of equities at Manulife Asset Management’s Vietnam
Unit, said in a March 29 e-mail.
The central bank may cut
policy interest rates by 0.5 percentage point this quarter and next, after
reducing the refinancing rate to 8 percent last month, said Alan Pham, who
helps oversee about $1.5 billion as the Ho Chi Minh City-based chief economist
at VinaCapital Group.
The Communist Party,
which has ruled over a reunified Vietnam since 1976, released a draft of the
revised constitution for public feedback in January. The document removes
language stipulating that the state will “assume the leading role” in the
economy. The draft also indirectly acknowledges the private sector.
SOE Overhaul
“This may be a
high-level, existential repositioning of the role of the state in the economy,”
Dragon Capital’s Scriven said in a March 28 phone interview.
The government plans to
start a pilot program to raise the 49 percent foreign ownership limit for some
companies, the State Securities Commission said in January.
Policy makers will
propose overhauling state-owned enterprises by June, Deputy Finance Minister
Truong Chi Trung said in a Feb. 1 interview in Hanoi. Vietnam Airlines, the
national carrier, has selected banks to manage an initial public offering,
Chief Executive Officer Pham Ngoc Minh said by phone April 9, without giving a
time frame for the sale.
The government will
decide at the end of April whether to set up an asset management company to
take over bad debt from lenders, Dam, chairman of the Government Office, said
March 29.
Other parts of Vietnam’s
economy are languishing. Retail sales growth slowed to 11.7 percent in the
first quarter from 21.8 percent a year earlier, the General Statistics Office
said on March 27.
Some portions of the
proposed constitution have spurred concern that the Communist Party is seeking
broader scope to curb political dissent and bolster control of the military.
Civil rights can
be limited “for reasons of national defense, national security, public order,
social security, moral health of the community,” according to a new clause in
the revised document. The armed forces owe loyalty “to the Communist Party of
Vietnam, the homeland and the people,” the revision says. The existing version
excludes the party.
Seventy-two
intellectuals and former government officials produced an alternative draft
constitution in January that calls for an end to Vietnam’s one-party system.
The draft received more than 12,000 signatures via an online campaign.
“The changes in the
constitution strive to form a constitution that reflects the common expectation
and will of the Vietnamese people,” Luong Thanh Nghi, a spokesman at the
Foreign Affairs Ministry, said in an e-mailed reply to questions yesterday.
“Gathering public comments on the constitutional draft has been and will
continue to be done with a democratic and transparent spirit. Every citizen has
a right to comment on the draft.”
Vietnam’s market
swings may persist even if the government delivers on its pledges, said
Hans-Henrik Skov, who oversees about $275 million in frontier markets as a
money manager at BankInvest in Copenhagen.
He cited parallels with
Nigeria, which formed an asset management company to buy bad debt from banks in
November 2010. Nigeria’s stock index dropped
16 percent in 2011, before rallying 35 percent last year and another 20 percent
in 2013.
“It won’t be a one-way
street,” Skov, whose BI New Emerging Markets Equities fund has returned about
34 percent during the past 12 months, said in a March 28 phone interview.
Consumer stocks such as Ho Chi
Minh City-based Vietnam Dairy Products Joint-Stock Co. (VNM), the nation’s biggest milk producer, will prove
good bets despite market volatility, Skov said. Vinamilk, as the company is
known, has surged 45 percent this year and is trading at 16 times estimated
2013 earnings, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That compares with an average
of 22 times for global peers.
Sixty percent of
Vietnam’s 90 million people were under the age of 35 as of 2011, according to
the General Office for Population Family Planning. The country is luring
manufacturers as more people move to cities from the countryside and labor
costs rise at a slower pace than in China.
Wages for Vietnamese
production workers climbed about 160 percent in the past decade to $1.20 an
hour, compared with 340 percent in China, analysts at New York-based Citigroup
Inc. wrote in a March 5 report.
Foreign direct investment
pledged to Vietnam during the first quarter increased 64 percent from a year
earlier to $6 billion, according to the General Statistics Office. Suwon, South
Korea-based Samsung Electronics Co. (005930), the world’s largest maker of mobile phones, won
approval for a $2 billion manufacturing plant.
The gains in Vietnam
stocks will probably continue as valuations remain low relative to regional
peers, Desmond Sheehy, who oversees about $300 million of Vietnam investments
at Duxton Asset Management in Singapore, said by phone April 2.
The firm favors shares
of Vinamilk and FPT Corp., Vietnam’s biggest listed telecommunications and
software company. FPT has climbed 11 percent this year and trades for 6.1 times
estimated 2013 earnings, versus an average multiple of 16 for global peers, data
compiled by Bloomberg show.
The VN Index’s forward
price-earnings multiple of 11 compares with 13 for Thailand’s SET Index (SET) and
20 for the Philippine Stock Exchange Index. (PCOMP)
“This
is a good base for a further rally,” Sheehy, Duxton Asset’s chief investment
officer, said in an April 2 phone interview. “The economy every year seems to
solve two problems for every new problem it creates, and in that way it keeps
getting better.”
Source: Bloomberg