Ha Noi-- Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in
Viet Nam can be used as a tool to support the country's economic
restructuring process, said Director of the Hanoi Socio-Economic
Research Institute Nguyen Minh Phong.
M&A activities could be seen both as a consequence and tool to facilitate the country's economic restructuring, said Phong.
However, an increase in M&A activities and
success in this area depends very much on the speed of continued
equitation of state businesses, market openness for foreign investors
and pressure on local businesses to repay debts, he said. In addition,
the Government's plans on restructuring the economy would also influence
the M&A trend to come.
Phong said there were two main trends in M&A
activities in the Vietnamese market. The first one was acquisition
between large foreign and domestic companies to create strategic
partnerships that would benefit both sides in the market. The second
trend includes buying stakes from loss-making companies or near bankrupt
businesses to make them become investors' affiliated companies.
According to a report released last month, the
total value of merger and acquisition (M&A) deals in Viet Nam
reached US$1.5 billion in the first quarter of this year.
Foreign investors were especially interested in
acquisition of joint ventures and of wholly foreign-invested companies
such as Unilever Vietnam Joint Venture Company, which bought a 33%
stakes in its local partner the Vietnam National Chemical Corporation to
become a wholly foreign-invested company in 2009
M&A activities seeing the most involvement
from foreign investors were in the areas of banking and finance, real
estate, stocks and retail sales in the country's two biggest cities of
HCM City and Ha Noi, said Phong.
Last year, M&A drew the strong participation
of foreign investors (both multinational corporations and private equity
funds), making up 83% of the total M&A deals in Viet Nam, in which
most of the foreign capital come from Japanese investors.
Last year, two foreign banks BNP Paribas and
Maybank became strategic partners of Phuong Dong Bank and An Binh Bank
respectively, with BNP Paribas's stake in Phuong Dong Bank reaching 15%,
while Maybank's stake in An Binh Bank was at 20%.
Vietnamese businesses were not limited to M&A activities at home, but also saw growing action abroad.
Viettel, was the first Vietnamese telecom
business to invest oversea. The business also has plans to buy stakes in
mobile coverage networks in Asia, Africa and Latin-America.
However, Phong said that many Vietnamese
businesses lacked comprehensive understanding of M&A activities and
were inexperienced in evaluating the assets of companies, meanwhile some
M&A deals in Viet Nam had revealed unhealthy competitiveness and
issues related to market speculation.
M&A activities in Viet Nam grew on average 30
per cent per year in recent years, having become a remarkable
investment channel for both local and foreign enterprises, according to a
report released last month. It also forecasted that M&A activity
would grow at over 30 per cent per year in the coming time, with
consumer goods, banking and finance and real estate forecast to continue
to be the most attractive sectors.
Controlling M&A activity was very important
to facilitating business expansion, production and restructuring as well
as to prevent the creation of monopolies in the market.
Phong said an incomplete legal framework had remained the biggest obstacle for M&A activity in Viet Nam.
Legal and governance barriers along with macro
instability and the lack of market transparency were still the greatest
concerns for investors, he said. --VNS
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