Vietnam to ease foreign investment limits

Vietnam to ease foreign investment limits

A man drives past the Hanoi Stock Exchange, in Hanoi, Vietnam June 26, 2015. (Reuters photo)
A man drives past the Hanoi Stock Exchange, in Hanoi, Vietnam June 26, 2015. (Reuters photo)

HANOI — Vietnam will eliminate limits on foreign ownership in many listed companies, a step likely to spur investment inflows and reduce market volatility.

Overseas investors will be allowed to increase holdings of voting shares in a number industries to 100% from 49% currently, according to a statement on the government’s website late on Friday.

The decree didn’t specify how soon the change will become effective. The cap on foreign investment in banks will remain at 30%.

There are about 30 companies whose foreign ownership is at the 49% limit, according to Hanoi-based VNDirect Securities JSC. Investors including Templeton Emerging Markets Group and Dragon Capital Group Ltd have said they’ve been unable to buy as many shares as they want in the market’s most attractive companies.

“As soon as the limits are raised, you will see a rush to buy in the blue chips,” said Patrick Mitchell, the head of institutional sales at VinaSecurities JSC in Ho Chi Minh City.

The benchmark VN Index has gained 6.6% this year, making it the best performer in Southeast Asia. Vietnamese regulators see foreign investment as one key to the stock market’s growth.

‘Game-changer’

The end of investment limits is a “game-changer” that will “immediately make Vietnam the most attractive Asian frontier market,” said Andy Ho, chief investment officer of Ho Chi Minh City-based VinaCapital, which manages about $1.4 billion in assets.

Sectors the government regards as strategic are likely to continue to have investment limits, Mr Ho said. These include banking, telecommunications, airlines and defence.

Overseas investors have bought a net $135.6 million of Vietnam stocks in 2015 through June 25, heading for the ninth straight year of purchases, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The nation’s stocks are valued at $58.6 billion, compared with $558.1 billion in Singapore, the region’s largest market.

Greater foreign ownership and the depth created by new listings are likely to make the Vietnamese market less volatile in the future, VinaCapital’s Ho said.

Vietnam’s gross domestic product rose 6.44% in the second quarter from the same period a year earlier. The government is targeting GDP growth of 6.2% this year, up from 5.98% in 2014.

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