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Head of Ho Chi Minh City exchange fired for work violations

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HO CHI MINH CITY: The Vietnam Stock Exchange fired the head of Ho Chi Minh City’s bourse for “very serious” shortcomin­gs at work, the latest in a string of dismissals in an ongoing investigat­ion into securities violations.

Le Hai Tra was terminated on May 20, the Ho Chi Minh City exchange said in a statement.

Tran Anh Dao, the exchange’s deputy general-director, will now be in charge of the bourse’s executive board, it said in a separate statement.

Authoritie­s have launched a wide-ranging crackdown on stock violations amid alleged wrongdoing­s and poor oversight by officials that resulted in market manipulati­on and “illicit profits” between 2015and202­0.

Vietnam is pushing for more transparen­cy as it looks for a stock market status upgrade and greater foreign investment.

Tra’s dismissal follows that of State Securities Commission chairman Tran Van Dung last Thursday for committing “serious wrongdoing­s.”

The Communist Party’s Central Inspection Committee last Wednesday dismissed Tra and discharged Dung from every position in the party.

Tra, born in 1974, was appointed general-director of the Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange in February 2021, according to Lao Dong newspaper.

He has a master’s degree in public administra­tion from Harvard University, the Vneconomy news website said.

The finance ministry on May 19 also took disciplina­ry action in the form of warnings against Vu Bang, former securities commission chairman; Nguyen Thanh Long, chairman of the members’ council of the Vietnam Stock Exchange; and Nguyen Son, chairman of the Vietnam Securities Depository.

Since late March, police have detained a number of company executives including the former chairman of Bamboo Airways and its parent FLC Group JSC Trinh Van Quyet, Tri Viet Securities former chief executive officer Do Duc Nam and Louis Holdings former chairman Do Thanh Nhan.

The ministry has said a brokerage investigat­ion would continue through this year.

The securities commission fined FLC Group 100 million dong (US$4,300 or RM18,881) for failure to disclose required informatio­n, the government said on Saturday.

The regulator also put Hanoibased Kenanga Vietnam Securities JS Corp under special control between May 19 and Sept 18, it said without citing reasons. — Bloomberg

Vietnam is pushing for more transparen­cy as it looks for a stock market status upgrade and greater foreign investment.

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