The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

In Vietnam, poor demand leads to peak share auction withdrawal­s

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HANOI: When state-owned Vietnam National Shipping Lines announced a 35% stake sale earlier this year, it was confident it could raise more than US$200mil. It only managed to pull in US$2.3mil.

The company known as Vinalines wasn’t the only one to meet poor demand. Viglacera Corp, a government-controlled maker of building supplies, failed to sell shares when it offered a 17.97% stake in July – not a single investor registered bids.

Vietnam’s communist leaders are struggling to find suitors as they seek to offload shares of state-owned enterprise­s. So far, the government has managed to privatise only 10 of the 64 companies it meant to sell this year, according a report on the Ministry of Finance’s website. In total, 17 auctions - popular ways in Vietnam to sell shares - have been withdrawn since January, with the total deal value canceled reaching a record US$401mil, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

It’s not that investors have no love for the South-East Asian nation - they’re willing to pay up for private companies. Shopping-mall operator Vincom Retail JSC set the biggest-ever fundraisin­g amount in an initial public offering last fall. That record stood until Techcomban­k’s share sale in April, which brought in US$922mil. A month after that, luxury property developer Vinhomes JSC hauled in almost US$1.4bil.

“Private company IPOs in Vietnam did well because there is more transparen­cy in the process - management meetings, prospectus, book-building process,” said Ruchir Desai, a senior investment analyst at Asia Frontier Capital Ltd in Hong Kong.

He pointed out they’re also mostly linked to the rising growth of the Vietnamese consumer.

“Some of the SOEs were loss making or had high debt levels, and they are also probably in sectors where there is not much interest.”—

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