Giá kinh xây dựng, flat glass, building glass

by finandlife03/10/2016 15:22

Tags:

Economics

Vĩ mô tháng 10|Enjoy it

by Michael02/10/2016 22:15

Tốc độ tăng trưởng tín dụng và M2 tiếp tục duy trì ở mức cao trong tháng 9 vừa qua. Mức độ mở rộng tiền tệ năm 2016 cao hơn so với 2015. Tốc độ tăng trưởng cung tiền vẫn lớn hơn so với tăng trưởng tín dụng, và mức độ phân kỳ ngày càng lớn. Điều này cho thấy nền kinh tế đang ngập lụt trong tiền, tiền nhiều nhưng hiệu quả hấp thụ tiền của nền kinh tế không theo kịp. Tiếp tục là thiên đường cho equity.

Như phân tích ở trên, tiền nhiều đến mức lãi suất liên ngân hàng gần như cho mượn không. Cùng với đó, lợi suất trái phiếu chính phủ ở tất cả kỳ hạn đều giảm về vùng thấp nhất lịch sử. Chính phủ tận dụng giai đoạn này phát hành thì được mùa lắm.

Thống đốc Lê Minh Hưng cho biết, 9 tháng đã mua 11 tỷ USD, nâng dự trữ ngoại hối lên hơn 40 tỷ đồng. Với con số 11 tỷ USD mua vào sẽ tương đương với hơn 240 ngàn tỷ đồng được cung ra nền kinh tế. Lãi suất thì đang bèo, kho bạc, chính phủ kỳ kèo trả giá nên công cụ thị trường sơ cấp trái phiếu không làm tốt việc rút bớt tiền ra khỏi lưu thông. 

Với lượng USD lớn được mua vào như vậy nhưng USD không tăng giá trong suốt 9 tháng qua, cho thấy lượng USD đổ vào VN là rất đáng kể. Gần đây, một số thông tin cho rằng chính sách tỷ giá VN có thể sẽ phải linh hoạt khi đồng CNY chính thức hiệu lực vào rổ IMF. Với lượng USD lớn thế này thì có đáng sợ không nhỉ?

Nhà đầu tư nước ngoài bán ròng tổng cộng 4,194 tỷ đồng từ đầu năm 2016 đến nay. Điểm an ủi có lẽ lượng bán chủ yếu tập trung vào những cổ phiếu to đầu, to xác, đã tăng giá nhiều và luôn bị đai gia cố tình treo ở mức định giá trên trời.

Không tính phần bán ròng rất mạnh gần đây của các Blue chips giá cao được gắng mác FA như VNM, HPG, HSG,… Chỉ loại phần bán ròng của VIC, Nhà đầu tư nước ngoài vẫn mua ròng 1,584 tỷ đồng.

Tỷ giá gần đây tương đối ổn định, chỉ có một phiên tăng kha khá vào tuần cuối tháng 9 do trùng lịch trả nợ nước ngoài của Chính Phủ. Các đầu quy đổi ngoại tệ cho biết không có diễn biến bán đồng gom USD rút tiền nào. Ngoài ra, Thống Đốc gần đây công bố đã mua 11 tỷ USD trong 9 tháng, đẩy lượng dự trữ ngoại hối lên hơn 40 tỷ USD. Tỷ giá ổn định, tiền ngoại vẫn nằm đấy, cầu tiềm năng vẫn rất lớn cho những nhóm cổ phiếu phù hợp.

 

Trong 5 phiên giao dịch gần nhất, Nhà đầu tư nước ngoài bán ròng 143 tỷ đồng, một action ngược so với mua ròng 400 tỷ đồng của một tuần trước.

Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift… that is why it is called the PRESENT! Enjoy it. 

FINANDLIFE

Tags:

Economics

Vietnam’s Economy Remains Outperformer as GDP Climbs 6.4%

by finandlife30/09/2016 08:14

Nguyen Dieu Tu Uyen, Bloomberg

Vietnam’s economic growth accelerated this quarter, boosted by foreign investments and rising exports.

Key Points

Gross domestic product rose 6.4 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, up from 5.78 percent in the previous three months, the General Statistics Office said in Hanoi Thursday.

In the nine months through September, the economy grew 5.93 percent, compared with the median estimate of 5.83 percent in a Bloomberg survey of four economists.

Big Picture

Growth is being buoyed by rising foreign direct investment and exports, stronger credit demand and a slight recovery in agriculture following a crippling drought. Vietnam’s economy has benefited in the past five years from companies such as Samsung Electronics Co. setting up plants in the country, transforming it into a manufacturing hub for electronics goods, including smartphones.

Economist Takeaways

"We expect Vietnam to remain a growth outperformer, bucking regional weakness in trade," said Eugenia Victorino, an economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Singapore. "Reforms are slowly instituted which should prop up potential growth further in the medium term."

"The jump comes from a rebound of the agriculture sector after a drought suppressed growth," said Trinh Nguyen, a senior economist for emerging-market Asia at Natixis SA in Hong Kong. "The industrial sector remains a key bright spot, with construction, manufacturing and electricity pulling through. Vietnam manufacturing is indeed a regional bright spots - exports are expanding despite the regional and global gloom. Wage cost competitiveness is the key region that it is attracting capital from countries that have worsening demographic transitions in East Asia.

Other Details

Manufacturing rose 11 percent in January to September from a year earlier, while agriculture rose 0.05 percent. In the first half of the year, farm output shrank

Disbursed foreign direct investment rose 12 percent in January to September from a year earlier

Exports increased 9 percent in September from a year earlier, with sales of electronics surging 29 percent 

Vietnam posted a trade deficit of $100 million for September. For the first nine months of the year, it had a trade surplus of $2.77 billion

Tags:

Economics

OPEC đồng ý giảm nhẹ sản lượng

by finandlife29/09/2016 09:03

OPEC đã đồng ý cắt giảm khoảng 700k thùng dầu 1 ngày sau cuộc họp tối thứ 4, ngày 8/9 theo giờ Việt Nam.

Tức, cắt giảm sản lượng nhẹ từ mức 33.24 triệu thùng/ngày hiện nay xuống 32.5-33.0 triệu thùng.

Tuy vậy, sản lượng cho mỗi quốc gia ra sao chỉ được quyết định trong cuộc họp vào tháng 11 tới, kỳ họp tới sẽ mở rộng ra cả những thành viên ngoài OPEC, như Nga.

Giá dầu tăng mạnh sau thông tin trên.

 

FINANDLIFE

Tags:

Economics

Negative Interest Rates: Not Without Consequences

by finandlife26/09/2016 10:29

This month, there are several key central bank monetary policy meetings taking place around the world, including those of the European Central Bank (ECB), Bank of Japan (BOJ), Bank of England (BOE) and the US Federal Reserve (Fed). While the Fed has been moving toward a tighter monetary policy, many global central banks remain highly accommodative—some even pushing interest rates negative. I thought it might be an appropriate time to examine the consequences of unconventional monetary policy pursuits, particularly negative interest-rate policies.

While Fed policymakers have recently indicated a negative-rate policy isn’t a constructive option for the United States right now—and in fact, market observers expect the Fed to hike rates this year—there is growing concern regarding the pursuit of negative interest rates by central banks including the BOJ and the ECB and others in Europe. An important criticism of the low-rate environment we are in is that many people who want to save their money in a bank to gain interest wind up paying the price—particularly when inflation is factored in. Instead of earning interest on their deposits, they are essentially charged money to keep it in the bank!

More importantly, while a number of central banks have pushed interest rates lower and lower in a bid to boost economic growth, these measures haven’t yet proved effective in a meaningful way. The theory is that by discouraging (some would say punishing) people and organizations from keeping cash on deposit, it would encourage them to spend instead. With low or negative rates on deposits, the hope was that banks would also be encouraged to lend aggressively, and we haven’t really seen that either. The global economy is not roaring ahead despite the huge money-printing taking place and the extremely low interest rates in the major economies. The ECB first made the move to negative rates in 2014; Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland and Japan followed.So we are now in a situation where private banks in those countries must pay the central bank to keep their money on reserve, and investors who purchase government bonds must pay those governments for the privilege of lending the government money.

I’m not alone in expressing my view that negative-rate policies are not creating the positive results that had been hoped for—at least in some key aspects. The negative rates are shrinking bank profit margins and thus, making them reluctant to lend. Many people who would normally deposit their money in the bank now simply keep their cash in safe deposit boxes or under the floorboards. The lack of interest earnings make people who are not able to invest the money elsewhere feel that they are financially disadvantaged.

Many pension funds are in trouble since the safety they sought from government bonds normally held in their portfolios has not been earning any yield to speak of, and some are forecasting they will not be able to meet their obligations to pensioners in this prolonged low-rate environment. The result is a search for yield among those institutional investors, leading them to more toward risky bonds and equities. This, some observers fear, could lead to another financial market bust if the risky investments come home to roost.

There is another aspect to these developments: currency competition. Lower interest rates available in any particular currency would tend to cause investors to flee that currency in search of higher interest rates. Governments wanting to be competitive in the global marketplace for goods and services thus encourage the currency weakening.This could lead to what may be termed “currency wars,” a “beggar-thy-neighbor” (ăn xin hàng xóm) policy that can lead to political tensions when countries devalue their own currencies in an effort to compete with others. Of course, these developments can lead to great volatility and uncertainty.

It remains to be seen when the Fed finally raises interest rates if there will be a reaction in other major markets by other central banks. In terms of the global economic impact of these rate divergences, if other central banks hold fast to their easing policies and perhaps even accelerate them, those actions could offset the impact of the Fed’s tightening. The markets seem to have already factored in a Fed tightening this year and in my view, a small rate hike will not likely have a notable market impact. However, if US interest rates move up more quickly (one percent or higher) then I think the impact on global markets could be greater and trigger other global central banks to react.

That said, the current central bank negative-rate policies don’t appear to be working as hoped (at least in the areas I noted here), so there is a possibility that banks will resort to what some have dubbed “helicopter money,” which is to drop money directly into the pockets of consumers to bypass the reluctant banks and encourage people to spend. Under such conditions of uncertainty and unconventional stimulative measures, confidence tends to deteriorate and business leaders develop a reluctance to move forward and invest. This can actually do the opposite of what these efforts intend; they can actually prolong or exacerbate a growth slowdown in an economy.

In the short term, the search for yield is resulting in more money flowing into the higher-yielding emerging-market equity and bond markets, resulting in the recent outperformance of those markets.From our team’s perspective, that is certainly not something we would complain too much about! However, we must be mindful of the macro developments engendered by unconventional central bank policies which could have unforeseen consequences for many investors.

The comments, opinions and analyses expressed herein are personal views and are intended to be for informational purposes and general interest only and should not be construed as individual investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy, sell or hold any security or to adopt any investment strategy. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. The information provided in this material is rendered as at publication date and may change without notice, and it is not intended as a complete analysis of every material fact regarding any country, region market or investment.

Important Legal Information

All investments involve risks, including the possible loss of principal. Investments in foreign securities involve special risks including currency fluctuations, economic instability and political developments. Investments in emerging markets, of which frontier markets are a subset, involve heightened risks related to the same factors, in addition to those associated with these markets’ smaller size, lesser liquidity and lack of established legal, political, business and social frameworks to support securities markets. Because these frameworks are typically even less developed in frontier markets, as well as various factors including the increased potential for extreme price volatility, illiquidity, trade barriers and exchange controls, the risks associated with emerging markets are magnified in frontier markets. Stock prices fluctuate, sometimes rapidly and dramatically, due to factors affecting individual companies, particular industries or sectors, or general market conditions. 

Source: http://mobius.blog.franklintempleton.com/

Tags:

Economics

DISCLAIMER

I am currently serving as an Investment Manager at Vietcap Securities JSC, leveraging 16 years of experience in investment analysis. My journey began as a junior analyst at a fund in 2007, allowing me to cultivate a profound understanding of Vietnam's macroeconomics, conduct meticulous equity research, and actively pursue lucrative investment opportunities. Furthermore, I hold the position of Head of Derivatives, equipped with extensive knowledge and expertise in derivatives, ETFs, and CWs.

 

To document my insights and share personal perspectives, I maintain a private blog where I store valuable information. However, it is essential to acknowledge that the content provided on my blog is solely based on my own opinions and does not carry a guarantee of certainty. Consequently, I cannot assume responsibility for any trading or investing activities carried out based on the information shared. Nonetheless, I wholeheartedly welcome any questions or inquiries you may have. You can contact me via email at thuong.huynhngoc@gmail.com.

 

Thank you for your understanding, and I eagerly anticipate engaging with you on topics concerning investments and finance.

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