Quick-footed FIEs evade banks

Dissolved foreign-invested enterprises are hurting local banking institutions.

More than 230 Taiwanese and South Korean projects were dissolved or faced bankruptcy in the last few years, with some foreign-invested enterprises (FIE) using investment certificates to take out bank loans then absconded to their home countries, according to Saigon Tiep Thi newspaper.

Banks currently could not take back loans from 22 projects in 12 different locations, mainly in Hai Duong and Phu Tho provinces.

For instance, in 2005 Hai Duong Province People’s Committee gave the nod for Taiwan-based Kenmark Group to pump $500 million into Hai Duong city’s Viet Hoa Industrial Park.

Since the foreign-invested project envisaged building industrial production, trading and services facilities and urban areas that match provincial industrial development planning, the developer could easily take loans worth several dozen million US dollars from local banks such as the Saigon-Hanoi Bank’s Quang Ninh branch, Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam’s Thanh Do branch and Habubank’s Bac Ninh province branch.

Kenmark’s two factories abruptly stopped operating in May 2010 and the developer left the country due to disputes during the project’s implementation. The firm owed around $50 million to local financial institutions which were turned into bad debts. Relevant banks reportedly seized Kenmark’s assets in an effort to partly recoup their losses.

In Phu Tho province, head of provincial Industrial Zone Authority Nguyen Manh Hung acknowledged many FIEs had left local credit institutions counting their losses.

Some South Korean firms took over $12 million loan packages from Agribank’s Phu Tho to get projects rolling. These firms later incurred losses and faced insolvency as their owners absconded, according to branch director Vu Van Minh.

Minh said the provincial authorities took back investment licences from such firms and Agribank Phu Tho procured around $60,000 from selling workshops and machinery of these firms.

Reality shows that slew of FIEs used their projects’ land use rights and relevant assets as collateral to take out bank loans.

Some bank executives acknowledged the land use rights and asset values claimed by FIE owners were often higher than the actual values.

To address the situation on September 19, 2011 the prime minister issued Directive 1617/CT-TTg forwarding to ministry leaders and provincial people’s committees which regulates foreign investment projects’ licencing and post-licencing management. – VIR

Tags: , ,

Posted by VBN on Oct 6 2011. Filed under Banking-Finance. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Stay informed everyday

Subscribe to free RSS and email updates from Vietnam Business News

Subscribe via Email Subscribe in a Reader Follow us on Twitter Connect on Facebook

RSS Singapore Business News

  • Rail Corridor chosen as project name for former railway land
  • HDB resale prices rise faster in Q3
  • Govt making good progress in meeting flat demand: Khaw
  • Paramount Hotel renamed in S$30m makeover
  • SDB sells 9 units at Hijauan project
  • Colliers survey reveals property investor caution in Asia

RSS India Business News

  • Nifty rangebound; JPAsso, HDFC, ITC, Sun Pharma up
  • Sensex gains momentum; FMCG, realty, metals up
  • Nifty slips in red; ICICI, SBI, RCap, GAIL, PNB down
  • Bombay Dyeing on path to transform into realty company
  • Godrej Properties in development pact with Godrej & Boyce
  • Exports rise 44 percent in August; deficit widens to $14 bn

RSS Malaysia Business News

  • Adventa likely to rechallenge overnight resistance
  • Continuous selling pressure on Bursa
  • CPO futures finish easier
  • Solution to protect children in cyberspace
  • Ringgit ends flat on fears of Greece default
  • 11 corporate heads attend leadership talks

Sponsored

  • Looking for an overseas forex broker?
  • Trading Point now offering Forex Malaysia and FX Japan with Forex, CFD's and Futures.