Vingroup forecast revenue up 12 percent

Conglomerate Vingroup JSC plans to earn 145 trillion VND (6.2 billion USD) in revenue this year, up 12 percent year-on-year.
Vingroup forecast revenue up 12 percent ảnh 1Pham Nhat Vuong, Vingroup Chairman of the Board of Directors, speaks at the annual general meeting of shareholders (AGMs) held in Hanoi on  May 28.

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) - Conglomerate Vingroup JSC plans to earn 145 trillion VND (6.2billion USD) in revenue this year, up 12 percent year-on-year.

The information was released during the group’s annual general meeting ofshareholders (AGMs) held on May 28 in Hanoi.

Post-tax profit is expected to decrease 35 percent to reach 5 trillion VND.

Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, Vingroup Chairman of the Boardof Directors Pham Nhat Vuong said its tourism arm Vinpearl wasmost ravaged by the disease.

“However, the group still seeks solutions to stimulate domestic demand fortourism, especially inbound because we could not offer services for foreignclients during the pandemic,” he said.

“According to statistics, Vietnam greets 80 million domesticvisitors and 18 million foreign visitors each year,” Vuong said.

The Vingroup chairman said if the disease was controlled and people couldnot travel abroad, domestic tourism would be strongly boosted. Therefore,Vinpearl can partially offset the damage caused by COVID-19, he said.

Earlier, in a conference with businesses of Hanoi on April 16,Vingroup said that during the disease outbreak, Vinpearl stopped 70 percent ofits hotel services and ceased operation of 100 percent of its entertainmentservices.

In the period, revenue from tourism and entertainment plunged. The group stillmaintained a hotel staff of more than 18,000 and must ensure income for all ofthem.

Industrial real estate will be one of Vingroup’s main segments in the future, Vuongsaid.

Vinhomes Joint Stock Company (Vinhomes), real estate arm of Vingroup, hasstarted to implement some projects in Hai Phong and other localities. Some projectshave been licensed for site clearance, so construction can be gradually startedby the end of next year.

The VinFast automobile manufacturing complex has been converted into anindustrial park managed by Vinhomes with a total area of 335 hectares.

The group has decided to delay the investment project in Lach Huyen Portbecause it is incapable of arranging funds for the project at present.

For the industrial segment, Vuong said VinFast is researching new markets forexport besides existing markets.

“We aim to focus on the US as this is one of the most fastidious markets in theworld, if you can penetrate this market, to some extent, we can be able toreach others,” he said.

“With the automobile segment, Vingroup determines to investheavily and drastically and accept to compensate for losses from three to fiveyears, with the goal of increasing market share,” he said.

At the meeting, the Board of Directors agreed on the plan not to pay dividendfor 2019, using all the remaining profits to invest in business. This is thesecond consecutive year that Vingroup retained its profit and has not paida dividend.

The last time it paid a dividend was in June 2018.

In order to proactively cope with the instabilities caused byCOVID-19, the group will stick with austerity measures, strictly control theexpansion of spending and investment, optimise operational efficiency inexisting fields./.
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.

A production line for camera modules and electronic components at the factory of MCNEX VINA Co. Ltd, a Republic of Korean-invested company in Phuc Son Industrial Park, Ninh Binh province. (Photo: VNA)

Science, technology, innovation as engines of economic growth

To ensure that science and technology truly act as a powerful growth engine, experts emphasised the need for the Government to put in place supportive mechanisms and policies that encourage enterprises to invest in research and development, while strengthening cooperation among the State, research institutions and the business sector.

The headquarters of the Ministry of Industry and Trade in Hanoi (Photo: VNA)

PM updates lead roles to drive UKVFTA forward

The Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) is named the lead agency, with overall responsibility for the agreement’s general goals and definitions, trade remedies, non-tariff barriers to trade and investment in renewable energy, competition policies, State-owned enterprises, enterprises with special or exclusive rights and those with designated monopolies, as well as institutional, general and final terms.