As of December 2019, 27 SOEs and enterprises where the state holds the controlling stake had outward investments.

 

 

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The enterprises have invested in 130 projects, mostly in the fields of telecommunications, oil and gas exploration and exploitation, rubber plantations, mining, aviation installation and air transport, hospitals, and food processing.

In 2019, 87 out of 130 projects had reports about revenue and profit, with total overseas revenue of $7.021 billion, or 127.16 percent of 2018.

This included 53 profitable projects with total profits of $565 million, an increase of $39 million (107.42 percent) over 2018. Meanwhile, 33 projects incurred losses, totaling $156 million, a decrease of $201 million (43.74 percent) compared with 2018.

As such, by the end of 2019, 10 out of 27 projects had recovered investment capital from outward investment projects, totaling $2.98 billion, or 45.72 percent of the implemented investment capital.

Among outward investment projects, 47 projects incurred an accumulated loss, totaling $1 billion. There was no report about revenue and profit for other projects, so there was no basis to assess their investment efficiency.

The money transferred home by December 31, 2019 was mostly from a number of projects, including PetroVietnam’s Nhenhexky project in Russia and PM 304 Block in Malaysia, and Viettel’s telecom projects in Southeast Asia.

PetroVietnam and its subsidiaries have 27 outward investment projects with total registered capital of $7.1 billion. The profit transferred home by the end of 2019 had reached $2 billion.

Meanwhile, there are projects facing difficulties in implementation, and projects where there are risks. These include highly capitalized oil and gas exploration and exploitation projects which have been suspended, rescheduled or stopped.

As for rubber plantation and processing, some projects are still under the period of having just been put into operation and are incurring planned losses. Other projects are facing risks because of land, tax and labor policies of the host countries, and because of risks from the markets.

Some telecommunication projects have large cumulative losses or face exchange rate risks. Some ineffective projects in other business fields are still operating, while some have stopped operation (potassium salt mining project in Laos, and a plan to establish an airline in Cambodia).

The report says that outward investments by SOEs and state invested projects have not had the desired effects.

It attributed the problem to the politics and investment policies of host countries, and to administrative capability, risk management, market forecast capability, and experience in outward investment. 

Luong Bang

How are SOEs’ outward investment projects performing?

How are SOEs’ outward investment projects performing?

State-owned economic groups had registered 114 outward investment projects as of the end of 2019 with registered capital of $13.8 billion, according to the MInistry of Public Investment.

Vietnam’s outward investment rebounds

Vietnam’s outward investment rebounds

Outward investments, which fell for a short time because of Covid-19, resumed again after the social distancing policy ended.