here ya go!
Around the Markets: Currency is Vietnam's new lure - International Herald Tribune
Around the Markets: Currency is Vietnam's new lure
By Ron Harui and Oliver Biggadike Bloomberg News
Published: April 23, 2007
E-Mail Article
SINGAPORE: Vietnam's currency is starting to capture the attention of derivatives traders as Southeast Asia's fastest-growing economy accelerates.
DBS Group Holdings and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group have begun offshore trading in contracts tied to the future value of the currency, the dong. The $50 million of Vietnamese contracts that trade monthly may double in a year, Standard Chartered estimates. More than $1 billion of Chinese yuan forwards change hands daily in an overseas market that did not exist 15 years ago, HSBC Holdings said.
Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung of Vietnam loosened currency controls this year and announced plans to increase sales of state-owned assets. The new currency market gives investors more opportunities to bet on an economy that expanded at a 7.7 percent annual rate in the first quarter and may grow 8.3 percent this year, according to the Asian Development Bank.
"You can't imagine the amount of money going into Vietnam," said Peter Soh, head of foreign exchange in Singapore at DBS, Southeast Asia's biggest bank. "Everyone thinks Vietnam will follow China's path. The dong must strengthen."
Vietnam's benchmark stock index is up 29 percent so far in 2007, after gaining 145 percent in 2006, the world's best performance. The economy is the fastest among the six biggest in Southeast Asia.
Investors need derivatives to trade the currency because the government only allows them to buy dong for specific purposes, such as investing in stocks or building factories. The contracts are settled in dollars.
"It's very positive," and is in line with government goals of having the currency trade overseas, State Bank of Vietnam's deputy governor, Phung Khac Ke, said in an interview in Hanoi. "It shows international investors are more and more interested in Vietnam."
The central bank's support coincides with Dung's plans to open the economy. Dung, 57, became prime minister in June and last week approved a $1 billion sale of government bonds, the largest ever. The Communist Party this year told three of the four biggest state banks to prepare for initial public offerings.
Vietnam this year ended a decade-long policy of "managed devaluation" that caused the dong to weaken 30 percent. The currency gained 0.7 percent between Nov. 22 and Feb. 21. It has since fallen 0.4 percent to 16,041.05 per dollar as regulators curbed borrowing for stock market investment.
Three-month, nondeliverable forward contracts trade at 16,111 to the dollar, data compiled by Bloomberg found. The prices take into account higher interest rates in Vietnam as well as the expectations among traders for dong movements.
The central bank will "keep the dong stable, in a flexible manner, so that it can help our exports," Phung said. Traders may be "turned off" by the central bank's support for gradual depreciation, said Sean Callow, a senior currency strategist in Singapore at the Sydney-based Westpac Banking. State controls may limit swings in the currency and opportunities to profit, he said.
Investors are still "testing the water" in Vietnam, said Amy Auster, head of international economics at the Melbourne-based ANZ Bank, which owns stakes in two Vietnamese banks.
Derivatives are financial instruments derived from stocks, bonds, loans, currencies and commodities, or linked to specific events like changes in the weather or interest rates.
Trading in the futures may increase once banks introduce a standardized contract for the dong by early June, DBS said in an e-mail. Between 15 and 20 banks in Singapore and five brokers may be interested in the market, DBS said. The central bank doubled the daily limit on dong moves against the dollar to 0.5 percent this year.
"Vietnam is the next market in Asia to look at," said Greg Clinton, global head of interest rate derivatives in Singapore at Standard Chartered, a London-based bank that makes two-thirds of its profit in Asia. "It's booming but it has currency restrictions, and that gives rise to a nondeliverable market."
Forwards are agreements to buy assets at a later specified date. A nondeliverable forward is typically settled in dollars and involves no physical exchange of other currencies.
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Thread: Dong and Dinar same time??
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06-05-2007, 01:48 PM #21
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06-05-2007, 04:27 PM #22
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I only purchased 3 mil Dong. don't think I will get rich off of that, but what will be nice if and when something happens is I can cushion my pockets just a little and feel free to buy more Dinar if I want. I think more that I will just sit on what I have and see if anything ever comes of it. I would just like something to happen. this summer would be real nice. thats not asking to much is it?
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06-05-2007, 04:54 PM #23
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06-05-2007, 05:04 PM #24
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got to have something! I woke up and its a cruel hard world out there! My husband mae a mistake and said when we get rich, I had to immediately correct him! I said when "I" get rich! LOL
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06-05-2007, 05:12 PM #25
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Aaawwww... it was alleged...that Eve was the one who actually held the apple...
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06-05-2007, 06:56 PM #26
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Thanks for finding that article for me. I was too busy watching the Mayweather/De La Hoya fight last night to look. (Good fight btw). The article seems very positive, yes?
Somewhere in Bogota, Colombia is a beautiful baby waiting on my wife and I to come and bring him or her home! This investment is to help us pay for diapers!!
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06-05-2007, 07:07 PM #27
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06-05-2007, 11:48 PM #28
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if they reval at the same time, there can be no double dipping. i believe that was the WTO first intent. if it still is, then is also seems that the dinar should be about to RV soon, since with the all the new news on dong pushing for an RV. If they let Vietnam go first, then you could cash in the profits from the dong and invest right back into dinar. Lets say you only have about 300 bucks a month to invest into dinar. rougly, i know its different for everyone. now factor in a 80k profit from dong, since you have been buying that as well. we all think we will be rich off our 10-50 million dinar, and rightfully so. then all of a sudden we throw down an additional 80k into dinar, and look out gates here we come! it would create mass ammounts of people with stupid ammounts of cash. = why a lot of people agree that the WTO wouldnt allow such a thing.
this means that even though the dinar and iraq looks very slow at times, we can actually expect it soon, since the dong seems to be going to RV soon as well. I dont have times, or ammounts, obviously, but if they are going to RV at the same time and you want to know what the dinar will RV... just look into the news with the dong and youll get a good indicator of when they will both go down. Of course i would perfer to cash in dong and wait a year for the dinar to RV for a much bigger turn out, but i really dont think that the WTO is going to let us do that. just my 2 cents. anyone else agree or disagree?
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07-05-2007, 01:53 AM #29
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07-05-2007, 03:34 AM #30
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i agree-double dipping is a red herring.
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