Friday 16th May 2008
moneyweek.com
MoneyWeek logo

The most important financial stories, and how to profit from them

Skip to navigationSkip navigation
Vietnam stocks, investing in Vietnam

Vietnam is “truly exciting” – but don’t jump in yet

26.10.2007

This genius investor does dizzying levels of research to uncover...Half Price Shares!

Vietnamese stocks have rocketed over the past few weeks, gaining 25% since early August. The recent rush into emerging markets has boosted sentiment, while the long-term story remains compelling. Vietnam has posted GDP growth of over 7% for four years and should grow by around 8.5% this year.

Deregulation and privatisation, along with booming commodities and increasing foreign direct investment have underpinned growth. Higher real incomes are fuelling consumption, with car ownership now up to 5% of the population. The boom is evident from the growth rates at Sacombank, Vietnam’s biggest private-sector bank, notes Christopher Wood of CLSA. It expects loans and pre-tax profits to grow by 90% and 130% respectively this year. And the 85 million-strong population still only has six million bank accounts. 

Property too is on a roll. Also a big factor in the market’s recent upswing, says Wood, is the privatisation of major state-owned firms; twenty to 30, including the four major state-owned banks and telecoms and infrastructure companies, are expected to hit the market over the next three years. All this will give the relatively small market capitalisation a big boost and raise the profile of this “truly exciting market”. Leading stocks are on a 2008 p/e of 25, but this figure is matched by anticipated earnings growth, as Wood points out, making Vietnam appear reasonable on a price-to earnings-growth basis. 

The best long-term punt on Vietnam, says Profit Hunter’s Manraaj Singh, is the Aim-listed Vietnam Opportunity Fund (VOF), which looks well placed to ride the privatisation wave. Investors may also wish to explore the newly-launched SGL Vietnam Property Fund (SGLV). However, given that emerging markets look vulnerable to global jitters, it might make sense to hold off: better value may soon emerge.



FREE! For all our latest advice on making profitable investments, claim your 3-week FREE trial of the MoneyWeek website and magazine now.
Free! Our daily email
Free Daily Email sign up
Money Morning is the FREE daily email from MoneyWeek – a punchy round-up of the latest investment news and profit opportunities. DON’T MISS IT!
New to MoneyWeek? Editor Merryn Somerset Webb explains what we do

 

FTSE 100 - 16 May 08