Car prices fall sharply in the first months of the year

A number of large manufacturers slashed car prices early this year, signaling fierce competition in the Vietnamese auto market.
Car prices fall sharply in the first months of the year ảnh 1Honda Vietnam offers to pay 100% of registration fees for customers buying Honda CR-V and Honda City cars. (Photo: vtv.vn)
HCM City (VNS/VNA) - A number of large manufacturers slashed carprices early this year, signaling fierce competition in theVietnamese auto market.

Sales agents are offering attractive preferences such as paying 100% of theregistration fee and also giving extra packages of accessories to attractpeople who want to buy cars.

Many Hyundai sales agents in HCM City are offering a price discount from 20million VND to 103 million VND (855- 4,400 USD) for popular Hyundai modelssuch as Grand i10, Accent, Elantra, Tucson, Stargazer and Santa Fe.

Meanwhile, Honda Vietnam has just announced to pay 100% of the registration feefor customers buying Honda CR-V and Honda City cars from February 4 to 28.

In addition, the company's dealers are also offering car bodyinsurance and dozens of accessories for car buyers.

Many other car manufacturers such as Mazda, Mitsubishi, Kia, Subaru, Nissan,and Suzuki are also launching discount programmes for many models fromseveral tens of millions of dong as well as offering to pay 50to 100% of registration fees.

According to car dealers in the city, the reason why car prices are falling isdue to weak consumption in the first months of the year while the inventory ofcars is quite large, forcing dealers to reduce prices in order toreduce inventory and then import new car models./.
VNA

See more

Toy production at a Hong Kong-invested factory (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam targets deeper market penetration in Hong Kong in 2026

Vietnam-Hong Kong trade hit 62.3 billion USD in the first 11 months of 2025, soaring 73.1% annually. Vietnamese exports to Hong Kong amounted to 36.8 billion USD, a 90.6% hike, ranking fourth among Hong Kong’s import sources, while imports from Hong Kong stood at 25.5 billion USD, up 52.9% and ranking third.

Vietnam’s start-up market enters restructuring phase

Vietnam’s start-up market enters restructuring phase

In 2026, venture capital inflows into Vietnam’s start-up ecosystem are expected to recover gradually, though in a more selective manner. VinVentures forecasts that capital will focus on start-ups that have survived the rigorous screening of 2024–2025, possess clear business models, strong commercialisation capacity, and the ability to generate real cash flows.

Workers process tra (pangasius) for export (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam–Singapore trade continues to thrive

For the year as a whole, Vietnam retained its position as Singapore’s 10th largest trading partner. Bilateral trade reached a record high of nearly 40 billion SGD, up 26.2% from the previous peak of 31.67 billion SGD recorded in 2024.

Eric Van Vaerenbergh, an energy expert and lecturer at the Brussels Engineering School (ECAM) (Photo: VNA)

Belgian expert optimistic about Vietnam’s economic outlook

Vietnam should move from a growth model based mainly on expanding capital and labour to one driven by productivity improvements. He said that this requires enhancing the quality of the workforce, particularly engineers, technicians, and managers in industrial sectors.

Workers at the VSIP Hai Phong industrial and urban complex, which specialises in producing electronic components for office equipment. (Photo: VNA)

Roadmap aims to improve business climate and boost competitiveness

By the end of 2026, Vietnam aims to rank among the world’s top 50 performers in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, advance at least three places in the International Property Rights Index, and climb at least one position in the Global Innovation Index.

Vietnam is strengthening its position in the technology value chain, becoming a major manufacturing hub for complete consumer electronics products. (Photo: VNA)

ESG standards offer opportunities to reposition Vietnam’s electronics firms

The 2025-2027 period will be a critical turning point, as exporters to the European market will be required to strictly comply with ESG standards, including net-zero emissions roadmaps, labour standards, corporate governance and transparency requirements. As a key export sector, the electronics industry is being directly and strongly affected by this shift.