Vietnam – leader of the pack

Welcome to Vietnam

Vietnam is a high growth market situated in the heart of Asia. Its cohesive population of 100m people is young, hard-working and increasingly digitally connected. Over the last 30 years, Vietnam has experienced high levels of GDP growth, averaging about 6 to 7% and attracting record levels of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) with almost USD 20 bn in 2019. It also is an increasingly open economy, with trade equivalent to 200% of GDP, and the government has negotiated a number of free trade agreements. Vietnam is one of the original countries in what was formerly known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership TPP and is now the somewhat unpronounceable alphabet soup of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CTCPP). In addition, Vietnam recently approved a bilateral EU free trade agreement, which could serve as a model for a new free trade agreement with the UK.

Perhaps more important than a static GDP number is the per capita GDP which has just recently passed USD 3,000, which is considered an inflection point in an emerging consumer society. For example, Thailand doubled its GDP from this point in seven years and China doubled its GDP within five years. 

Vietnam has emerged from the COVID-19 crisis as a winner. Its capital markets are set for expansion, the infrastructure is improving, and it will continue to attract interest from manufacturers and other types of companies looking to diversify away from China.

V for Victory – against the coronavirus

Vietnam declared war on the coronavirus in late January and emerged victorious in containing it within about 90 days by the end of April. The government was very quick to react when the first cases were confirmed during the Lunar New Year (‘Tet’) holiday in January by imposing a large-scale quarantine, stopping flights to China, and implementing control and trace to identify outbreaks. It also employed all the tools in the ‘media’ armory to keep its citizens informed via social media, traditional media, as well as propaganda art.

Vietnam is in many ways a Confucian ‘East-Asian’ society, with strong community values, and adherence to authority. Its social cohesion and the government’s effective response meant that Vietnam was one of the first countries to come out of lockdown at the end of April after a relatively short three-week lockdown. Since mid-April, there have been no community spread cases, and remarkably, in a population of close to 100m people, there have been less than 420 infected cases in total and zero deaths. The closest someone came to death was a British pilot with Vietnam Airlines, the National Carrier, an unfortunate super-spreader at a popular expat-bar in Ho Chi Minh City’s District Two. He was in a coma and at death’s door for almost 100 days in an Intensive Care Unit in Vietnam. The Vietnamese people rallied around him, even offering him their own lungs, and he went on to make a complete and full recovery. He has now returned to his home city of Motherwell in the UK, saying that ‘I would have died’ if it were not for Vietnam.

As a frontier market, it is estimated that only one in five emerging market investors are present: it will be a game-changer in a few years if and when Vietnam is classified as an MSCI Emerging Market.

V-Shaped recovery

Vietnam has the potential to make a V-shape road to recovery post-pandemic. The Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) rose sharply from the depths of the pandemic, as the country gradually went back to work. Retail sales have also been rising, though some discretionary spending has been unsurprisingly delayed. The GDP growth for the first six months of 2020 was 1.8%, and the full year is expected to be somewhere between 3% and 4%. This is lower than the 6-7% trend but is a rare positive number in a world of fearful negative growth forecasts.

Prospects for Vietnam will be strengthened as more manufacturers look to its proximity to key markets and abundant, well-educated and young workforce as a powerful source of production. Last year’s trade spat between the US and China accelerated a ‘China-plus-one’ strategy as supply chains are increasingly being broadened in an attempt to diversify risk and bend costs down. Vietnam has seen decades of strong FDI into the manufacturing sector and has enhanced its logistics and business-to-business (B2B) services to facilitate this growth. A number of international companies have started to relocate to Vietnam, and there is strong evidence of that trend continuing as Apple and other global brands look to increase what they make in Vietnam. That will also have a positive knock-on effect in the private sector. In the 1980s and 1990s countries such as Singapore and Thailand adopted a Michael-Porter inspired ‘cluster’ approach to creating centres of specialized large-scale manufacturing (for hard disk drives, semiconductors, and cars). This approach can lead to a localized supply chain for the brand-owner and its myriad of sub-contractors. This notion has already attracted Samsung, which makes nearly every tablet and phone in Vietnam with close to 100,000 employees across the country and has accelerated the expansion of Vietnam’s industrial parks.

In addition to the planned investment by the government into infrastructure (a total amount of USD 30 bn over the next few years), Vietnam’s private sector will also see increasing opportunities. The government recently passed a Private-Public-Partnership (PPP) law to encourage private investment as a means to finance infrastructure. Unlike the UK where the government plans ‘brown-field’ rejuvenation of existing commercial and retail centres in an attempt to breathe life into hollowed-out sectors, much of the infrastructure development in Vietnam is in ‘green-field’ projects. This could have a multiplier effect on economic growth.

After a few years of hibernation, the privatization of state-owned assets and enterprises looks likely to resume this year. The government is committed to selling off selected equity stakes in listed companies that it still owns, as well as privatizing businesses for the first time. One of the stakes set for sale is in the country’s largest brewer (and the world’s 20th largest brewer by volume) Sabeco (HOSE: SAB), which produces the popular Saigon and ‘333’ rice-brewed beers.

Most importantly perhaps for investors, is the way in which the capital markets have grown and deepened. Daily liquidity across Vietnam’s stock markets is currently around USD 350m. This is more than the entire size of the market back when the UK’s Prudential (now Eastspring) was an early successful investor on behalf of its Vietnamese life insurance customers in the capital markets.

Although Vietnam has many of the characteristics of a more recognized ‘emerging market’ in part due to the size of the equity market already being above USD 160 bn, and with more than 1,500 companies to invest in, it is still classified by MSCI as a frontier market. In fact, this year Vietnam is likely to be the largest component of the Frontier Market Index. As a frontier market, it is estimated that only one in five emerging market investors are present: it will be a game-changer in a few years if and when Vietnam is classified as an MSCI Emerging Market.

Vietnam has emerged from the COVID-19 crisis as a winner. Its capital markets are set for expansion, the infrastructure is improving, and it will continue to attract interest from manufacturers and other types of companies looking to diversify away from China. Its macro-economic position is the envy of much of the world, and this could improve in a scenario where the US dollar weakens. Clearly the world as a whole is facing uncertainties, and there will be winners and losers ahead. Vietnam has signaled the ‘V’ for Victory sign against the devastating coronavirus, and this fast-growing country of 100m people is one to keep an eye out for in the months and years ahead.

Defeating Covid-19 in 90 days

Defeating Covid-19 was the Nation’s priority

Much has been written elsewhere about how Vietnam defeated Covid-19’s initial waves in 90 days. In a country of close to 100 million people, it is remarkable that there have been no confirmed deaths. As UK Prime Minister Johnson said, “the virus thrives on ambivalence”, and perhaps that is why this country was able to succeed where so many others have succumbed. A combination of quick action: closing borders, imposing quarantine and military efficiency and effective communication: TikTok videos, traditional media and propaganda posters (above) helped pull the nation’s actions into a cohesive plan. The country’s lockdown in April was relatively short, less than three weeks, and then the hard-working nation got back to work.

No new community spread cases in the last 90 days

Travel Travails

Vietnam’s borders remain pretty much closed to tourists and non-essential travel. Arrivals must undergo two weeks quarantine, currently in state facilities, but soon possibly in swanky hotels. This is a sensible approach to protect the 90 day record of no community-spread cases of Covid-19. Although the international tourism market will suffer as a result – probably until next year – the domestic tourism market is getting a boost. Popular destinations like Hoi An, and the coastal resorts, will no doubt be even more charming without the swarms of North Asian tourists in their pineapple-print shirts and matching shorts. The airline industry has been hit hard and National Carrier Vietnam Airlines is seeking government help to the tune of about US$ 500m.

Some Motherwell’s Son

One of Vietnam Airlines’ pilots, a Brit from Lanarkshire, Scotland – an ardent Motherwell supporter – has a lot to thank Vietnam for. He was an unfortunate carrier of more than passengers in April, and brought Covid-19 to a popular expat bar in Ho Chi Minh City’s District 2. He became very sick, and his lungs became like sacks of cement, putting him at death’s door, and with a real-chance of being Vietnam’s only Covid-19 fatality. He spent close to 100 days in an ICU in Ho Chi Minh City, and received excellent healthcare. Several Vietnamese people even offered to be lung-transplant donors to save the life of the British pilot. Thankfully, he made a full recovery, and is safely back in Scotland. It appears that his local football club is seeking a new sponsor for the next season, maybe Vietnam Airlines can be allowed to use some of its subsidy to get its name on the jersey of its newest fan. The pilot said that he would have died, had he been anywhere other than Vietnam.

Viva Vietnam

Vietnam is a high growth market situated in the heart of Asia. Its cohesive population of 100m people is young, hard-working and increasingly digitally connected. Over the last 30 years, Vietnam has experienced high levels of GDP growth, averaging about 6 to 7% and attracting record levels of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) with almost USD 20 bn in 2019. It also is an increasingly open economy, with trade equivalent to 200% of GDP, and the government has negotiated a number of free trade agreements. Vietnam is one of the original countries in what was formerly known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership TPP and is now the somewhat unpronounceable alphabet soup of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CTCPP). In addition, Vietnam recently approved a bilateral EU free trade agreement, which could serve as a model for a new free trade agreement with the UK.

Perhaps more important than a static GDP number is the per capita GDP which has just recently passed USD 3,000, which is considered an inflection point in an emerging consumer society. For example, Thailand doubled its GDP from this point in seven years and China doubled its within five years.

V for Victory – against the coronavirus

Vietnam declared war on the coronavirus in late January and emerged victorious in containing it within about 90 days by the end of April. The government was very quick to react when the first cases were confirmed during the Lunar New Year (‘Tet’) holiday in January by imposing a large-scale quarantine, stopping flights to China, and implementing control and trace to identify outbreaks. It also employed all the tools in the ‘media’ armory to keep its citizens informed via social media, traditional media, as well as propaganda art.

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Vietnam: post-pandemic winner

Vietnam is in many ways a Confucian ‘East-Asian’ society, with strong community values, and an adherence to authority. Its social cohesion and the government’s effective response meant that Vietnam was one of the first countries to come out of lockdown at the end of April after a relatively short three-week lockdown. Since mid-April there have been no community spread cases, and remarkably, in a population of close to 100m people, there have been less than 400 infected cases in total and zero deaths. The closest someone came to death was a British pilot with Vietnam Airlines, the National Carrier, an unfortunate super-spreader which created a cluster of infections around a popular expat-bar in Ho Chi Minh City’s District Two. He was in a coma and at death’s door for almost 100 days in an Intensive Care Unit in Vietnam. The Vietnamese people rallied around him, even offering him their own lungs, and he went on to make a complete and full recovery. He has now returned to his home city of Motherwell in the UK, saying that ‘I would have died’ if it were not for Vietnam.

Shall we Zoom?

Infographic: Zoom Grows Exponentially | StatistaChart Source:  https://www.statista.com/chart/21484/zoom-daily-users/

In less than a month we are all now Zoom-a-holics.

I have attended a Barmitzvah on Zoom, a Church meeting on Zoom, a surprise birthday party on Zoom, as well as countless work-related meetings, client meetings, and a TV interview.

Zoom has entered our lexicon in the same manner as ‘Hoover’. I note that we still don’t ‘Dyson’ yet.

A month ago when the user base had risen spectacularly to 200m, the share price was around $110. It closed Friday 24th April at $159 – a rise of 45%, after hitting an all-time of $180 a few days before. Its user base has risen 50% in a month, a whopping increase of 290m daily users in less than four months, so that kind of makes sense.

Having just bailed out of Tesla at a significant profit (figuring that, yes, it is just a car company, and no, people aren’t driving or buying cars right now) I wonder when it will be time to call time on Zoom.

There have been wobbles in the last extraordinary month. Classic Zoom-bombs in online classrooms and webinars leading to bans from use in several country’s public services and education ministries. Not so in the UK, however. Zoom premiered quite literally with Boris Johson’s cabinet and G20 meetings and is now the technology that enables the Mother of Parliaments to operate.

Education ministries are allowing their teachers and students back into the zoom waters, and there is greater persistence in adoption and usage, presumably nudging more people to take on a paid-for subscription.

Zoom has also addressed a number of security concerns and reacted quickly to fix problems with its recorded meetings practices.

The question will be, when is Peak-Zoom. We have passed this current Peak-COVID in many countries, but with continuing work-from-home in many places around the world, there is still a tail-wind, and its user base will grow. At a market cap of $44 billion, that works out at around $150 per subscriber (which is equivalent to the revenue from one annual paid subscription at the lowest tier). It needs to grow the user-base much faster and/or convert more of its users to the paid version to justify this valuation, but it is already a profitable company, and in the right place at the right time. Plenty of Zoom to grow.

There’s an App for that.

One thing that Working From Home has shown me this past week, is the abundance of Apps that I haven’t been using.

Last week I upgraded Zoom to the paid version ($14.99 a month) and installed the WebCam, Airpods, Extra monitor and Green Screen that I wrote about in the last blog. Now my Zoom calls are on steroids. Last week the Zoom price, well, Zoomed. Screenshot 2020-03-26 at 3.06.30 PM

This week, I have been full force into Teams, OneNote, SharePoint, OneDrive and the myriad of Microsoft 365 apps.

I am an Apple-Addict and Mac-Mad, so it is rare for me to do so much in Microsoft, but I must say that I have found all the Apps to be robust and platform-agnostic (running on my Mac as well as my iPhone).

Screenshot 2020-03-26 at 3.08.08 PM

Thankfully we were able to upgrade our home Broadband as our two adult children are on Stay At Home notices from the Singapore Government. Nothing to stop us now. At least nothing other than COVID-19 and the impending global recession.

COVID-19 – Working from Home: Zoom, Zoom I’m in my room.

The only winner in my listed equity portfolio recently has been Zoom. See the chart below, but don’t look at the P/E ratio.

Screenshot 2020-03-18 at 3.50.34 PM

Yes, that’s a pretty high P/E ratio (I said, don’t look), and a sweltering market cap, so is only a small part of my equity portfolio, but it is a nice feeling to have something that looks green in the morning other than an Avocado shake.

As a business tool, however, in truth I have only dipped my toes into Zoom, as I already have FaceTime, Skype, WebEx, Teams, Google (something or other) and WhatsApp. But I like what I see.

I have been using the basic version for a year or so, and still get confused when using it, but I am determined to become more proficient, particularly as I am now a satisfied shareholder.

The basic version is free, but once you start dabbling, though, be prepared for some additional costs…

Virtual Background – this is a neat feature – but for it to work well (at least on a 2-core MacBook Pro) you need a GreenScreen. I typed ‘how to get a green screen?’ and was directed by the Zoom ChatBot to Amazon. The range was huge $10 to $200. My family hails from Scotland, so I ordered delivery of the $10 version. It arrives Friday.

I soon found that the free 40 mins on the basic version aren’t enough for me, as I tend to prattle on, so I signed up to the Standard Pro Monthly at US$14.99 per month (you get a discount if you pay for 12 months upfront).

Next are the thoughts about a second monitor ($100), web-cam ($200), Airpods ($200). I can see a trip to the computer store coming… oh, wait.. can’t go out so that will be Amazon again.

But beyond the purely technical aspects of working at home are some more basic tips, kindly also provided by Zoom, and worth a think about.

Zoom Work-from-home tips

• Get dressed: Get dressed from head to toe. You should put on a shirt or outfit you’d normally wear to the office work and not the ratty old shirt you’d wear to clean your garage.
• Take 5 regularly: Just like the office, proactively take breaks every hour to avoid burnout. Take the dog for an extra walk (your dog will love it!), put in that load of laundry, or spend 15 minutes outside with the kids (they’ll love it, too!).
• Stretch! Stop your video and stretch yourself a little bit every hour. Take a lap around the kitchen in between calls or use a lacrosse ball or massager on your back to stave off the kinks. Or make it more fun and use a virtual video workout background and get your reps in during a meeting!
• Communicate your availability: Publish your calendar so others can see it and quickly understand your commitment. You can block off time for work on projects, set reminders for important tasks, and even reserve a time to get dinner started. You can also toggle your Chat status to busy when you need to be heads-down on a project.
• Eliminate distractions: Shut the door to give yourself some privacy and separation, especially at home. Even hanging a curtain to separate your space can help. You’ll also want to close tabs and pause notifications so you’re not tempted to constantly check social media. Even setting a 10-minute meeting or two throughout your day to specifically check your feeds can give you a break and something to look forward to.
• But avoid isolation & loneliness: Many people need that personal contact with their team, so it’s helpful to have daily team stand-ups and check-ins. You can even set up a “group lunch” with your colleagues. Talk live or disable the audio and chat with the group or 1-on-1 privately, whatever helps you get the conversation and connection you need.

Welcome to the new world.