The Phnom Penh Post

Investment from Vietnam hits a dry patch: CDC

- Hor Kimsay

VIETNAMESE investors shied away from the Cambodian market during the first half of the year as the Council for the Developmen­t of Cambodia (CDC) failed to register a single qualified investment project (QIP) fromVietna­m during that period for the first time in its 22-year history, a Cambodian official said yesterday.

Speaking at the CambodiaVi­etnam business forum in Phnom Penh, CDC deputy secretary-general Chea Vuthy said that no Vietnamese investment projects were recorded during the f irst half of t he year, but insisted this was not a cause for concern.

“There is no negative effect because this often happens when doing business,” he said, explaining that investment registrati­on numbers regularly fluctuate during different periods.

He also pointed out that QIP status is not provided to small investment­s, or those made in the banking and services sectors.

“I think that other areas of [ Viet na mese] i nvest ments that do not need approval from the CDC, like the service sector, are still coming to Cambodia,” he added.

Vietnamese firms were the fourth-largest source of foreign direct investment (FDI) in Cambodia for 2015, as total investment­s to the Kingdom reached $4.64 billion during the same period, CDC figures show.

Nguyen Duc Thanh, president of the Vietnam Institute for Economic and Policy Research, attributed this year’s investment slump to the poor performanc­e of Cambodia’s agricultur­al sector.

“Recently, the price of rubber has not been good so I think [Vietnamese investors] do not see this as a good time to make investment­s,” he said.

Ha Thi Thanh Binh, general secretary of the Associatio­n of Vietnamese Investors in Cambodia (AVIC), told reporters that Vietnam’s overall investment­s in Cambodia reached $2.85 billion through 182 different projects. Four more Vietnamese firms have now committed to invest in Cambodia through QIP projects and this will improve CDC investor figures for the second half of the year, she added.

MajorVietn­amese investors in Cambodia include telecom giant V i e t t e l , w h o s e l o c a l subsidiary Metfone is one of the Kingdom’s biggest mobile telecom operators. Vinamilk, Vietnam’s largest dairy company, has invested in a $23 million production facility in Phnom Penh, while Vietnamese rubber giant Hoang Anh Gia Lai owns several economic land concession­s (ELC) in the country and has heavily invested in Cambodia’s agricultur­al sector.

The government­s of both countries had set a target to boost bilateral trade to $5 billion by 2015, but failed to reach their goal as total exchange reached just $3.37 billion last year.

 ?? SOVAN PHILONG ?? An employee picks out a Metfone SIM card for a customer at a Phnom Penh store.
SOVAN PHILONG An employee picks out a Metfone SIM card for a customer at a Phnom Penh store.
 ?? THE WASHINGTON POST US PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ?? Image from Apple’s patent.
THE WASHINGTON POST US PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE Image from Apple’s patent.

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