VietNamNet Bridge - Investors, both foreign and Vietnamese, are running a race for licenses to open horse race courses.

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Dai Nam, a Vietnamese owned company, just started construction of a new horse race course last July, planning to inaugurate it at year end. 

An area of 60 hectare within the campus of a tourism site will be reserved for an international horse race course with a stand with 60,000 seats. The total investment capital is estimated at $100 million.

A project on a horse race course and entertainment area in Hanoi registered by Hanoitourist, a travel firm, has resumed after 10 years of interruption. 

Thien Ma – Mandagui JSC has invested VND1.002 trillion to build a horse race course covering an area of 70 hectares in Lam Dong province. The project is scheduled to become operational by 2018.

The moves by investors are believed to be taken in anticipation of the government’s issuance of a decree on betting related to horse race, dog race and international football. 

Choi Hank Soo, president of South Korea’s Horse Race Group, last October paid a working visit to Bac Ninh province to seek investment opportunities there. 

Sources said the South Korean investor plans a horse race course and a general entertainment area in Thuan Thanh district with capital of $500 million in the first phase of development.

Vietnamese state management agencies are cautious in licensing race course projects as they are considered sensitive because of betting (gambling). 

Several other investors have been moving ahead quietly to implement their projects. Matrix Holdings Ltd is considering setting up a horse race in the central city of Da Nang. 

In mid-2016, Vietnam-Australia Sports proposed to Ba Ria – Vung Tau provincial authorities an international horse race project covering an area of 150 hectares, capitalized at $158 million.

In Binh Phuoc province, an Australia Investment Group has received the local authorities’ nod on a $100 million horse race in the locality. 

The Phu Yen provincial authorities have granted an investment license to the Phu Yen Horse Race Course investor – Golden Turf Club Pty Ltd.

First proposed in 2005, a $570 million horse race course in Vinh Phuc province was thought to have been shelved but the investor has unexpectedly restarted the project with 3 times more capital than before. The complex is hoped to bring revenue of $972 million a year.

Vietnamese state management agencies are cautious in licensing race course projects as they are considered sensitive because of betting (gambling). 


Mai Thanh