Monday, June 29, 2015

Deliveries of SUVs expand 49% in China

CHINA’S passenger car sales grew nearly 8 percent in the first four months from a year ago, with deliveries of SUVs soaring almost 49 percent, according to latest data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers yesterday.
From January to April, passenger vehicle sales rose 7.7 percent from a year earlier to 6.97 million units. Total vehicle sales, including trucks and buses, added 2.77 percent to 8.14 million units in the same period, CAAM said yesterday.
Sales of SUVs in the January-April period jumped 48.73 percent year on year to 1.75 million vehicles, while MPV sales surged 20.02 percent year on year to 749,800 vehicles during the period.
Li Chunrong, general manager of Dongfeng Passenger Vehicle Co, said at a CAAM monthly data release media conference that Chinese automakers are keen on making SUV-like vehicles as CAAM deputy secretary Shi Jianhua also attributed the sales growth of passenger vehicles to SUVs.
Meanwhile, China’s auto sales growth decelerated as April deliveries in the world’s biggest auto market shed 0.49 percent year on year to 1.99 million vehicles, according to CAAM.

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Thursday, June 25, 2015

Telco Deep Dive: How Malaysia’s industry fared in Q1 2015

  • Maxis retakes pole position in terms of total subscriber base
  • Celcom now has the smallest subscriber base in prepaid segment
DURING the first quarter of 2015, the Malaysian mobile industry shrank by more than 500,000 subscribers, one of the biggest quarterly declines in recent years.

However, it was not the first time we witnessed such a drop. In the third quarter of 2014, the total mobile subscriber base declined by 89,000.

In 2006, the industry also saw a decline of approximately 500,000 subscribers following the implementation of a prepaid registration exercise mandated by the Malaysian Government. The bulk of the decline came in the second half of 2006.

Take Celcom Axiata Bhd, then known as Celcom Bhd, for example – it managed to grow its subscriber base by over 742,000 during the first half, before experiencing a decline of 1.5 million subscribers in the second half of 2006.

Fast forward to the present. During the first quarter of 2015, the total mobile subscriber base declined to 44.42 million, versus 44.93 million in the fourth quarter of last year.

The overall decline was partly driven by Celcom’s shrinking customer base.

During the quarter, its total customer base fell by 5% to 12.28 million, versus 12.97 million in the fourth quarter of 2014. It attributed the decline to the intense competition in prepaid subscriber acquisition.

Besides the decline in the mobile subscriber base, the industry also saw a change in rankings, with Maxis regaining its leadership in the mobile subscriber base.

For a deeper insight on how the industry fared in the first quarter, let’s look at the some of the numbers and break them down.

The return of the king
For many years, Maxis Bhd had been holding the top position in terms of total mobile subscriber base. However, a few years ago, its market leadership came under attack by aggressive competition from rivals Celcom and Digi.Com Bhd.

As a result, it slipped, and Celcom overtook Maxis to become the largest mobile operator in Malaysia in terms of subscriber base.

In 2014, Celcom had a 34.8% market share while Maxis had 34.6%.

Meanwhile, Digi is steadily growing its subscriber market share as well. During the first quarter, its mobile subscriber base expanded by 270,000 subscribers to hit a market share of 31.4%.

Although Maxis has regained its lead, don’t expect Celcom or Digi to stay cowed. After all Celcom, at one point, was the smallest player in the prepaid space before it staged a slow but steady climb to the top spot.
While the earlier table shows how the top three players performed in the first quarter, the table above is a snapshot of the entire mobile space, which includes mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs) and privately-held mobile operators like U Mobile.

From this full perspective, based also on figures from industry regulator the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC), it can be seen that besides Celcom, ‘Other’ players in the sector have also experienced a decline in subscriber base.

While the MCMC did not reveal which mobile operators are contributing to the decline, it is believed that U Mobile may be one.

U Mobile chief executive officer Wong Heang Tuck, in a recent conversation with Digital News Asia (DNA), revealed that the company had taken measures to ‘wipe out’ a substantial number of inactive subscribers.

“We churned out some one million subscribers,” he told DNA after a signing ceremony between Telekom Malaysia Bhd and U Mobile in Kuala Lumpur.

While Wong did not reveal how many subscribers U Mobile had as at end-2014, a U Mobile official claimed that the company’s current subscriber base is more than four million.

Assuming U Mobile had four million in the first quarter, which telcos do the remaining 3.2 million subscribers in the ‘Others’ category belong to?

Based on industry observers’ feedback, a large portion of the 3.2 million are probably on Tune Talk (approximately 1.5 million), while the balance may likely be split amongst Merchantrade Mobile, XOX Bhd, redONE, and others.

Revenue trend and market share
In terms of revenue, the mobile industry – without factoring in revenue from U Mobile (as it is not publicly available) and the various MVNOs – experienced a slight decline in the first quarter of 2015.

The top three players registered total mobile service revenue of RM5.39 billion (US$1.44 billion), compared with RM5.4 billion (US$1.45 billion) in the first quarter of last year.

Do note that mobile service revenue does not take into account the sales of devices or the fixed-line business.

The Q1 decline was mainly driven by Celcom, as it was the only player amongst the incumbents to register a downtrend. The shortfall came from its voice and Short Message Service (SMS) business.

SMS suffers bigger than usual decline
A look at MCMC’s statistics also shows that there was a sharp decline in text messages. Although SMS volume has been trending down, it has never before fallen at such a pace.

In the first quarter of 2014, total SMS volume in the country was 14.24 billion, declining to just over 10 billion in the fourth quarter.

By the first quarter of this year, SMS volume had fallen by approximately 2.3 billion to scrape by at 7.77 billion.

The decline was likely driven by the increasing adoption of smartphones as well as the skyrocketing popularity of messaging apps such as WhatsApp, Line, WeChat and KakaoTalk.

Prepaid consolidation?
During the first quarter, the total prepaid subscriber base in the industry shrank by 620,000 subscribers to 36.16 million.

The decline was mainly driven by Celcom’s performance in that segment. During the quarter, it recorded 9.54 million prepaid subscribers versus 10.17 million in the fourth quarter of last year.

This also saddles Celcom with the smallest prepaid subscriber base, with Digi recording 9.93 million prepaid subscribers and Maxis leading with 9.98 million.

In terms of revenue, it appears that Maxis was the biggest winner in the first quarter as it gained the most ground. During this period, its prepaid mobile revenue market share jumped to 33.4%, from 30.5% and 30.7% in the first and fourth quarters of 2014, respectively.

Though it gained the most market share, Maxis still couldn’t dethrone Digi in the prepaid space, with the ‘Yellow Man’ staying strong at pole position with a 36.6% market share.

Postpaid status quo
The postpaid landscape remained pretty much unchanged for the top three players. Maxis was almost untouched in this space, with a commanding 42.1% subscriber market share and a 45.2% revenue market share.

Although Celcom suffered in its prepaid business, its postpaid business remained somewhat stable. During the quarter, it lost a marginal number of subscribers, while revenue fell 1% to RM739 million (US$197.8 million).

Nevertheless, its position as a strong No 2 player in this space was not threatened.

Digi was the only player amongst the top three to register growth in both its postpaid revenue and subscriber base.

Summary

With all these leadership changes, it will be interesting to see if Maxis can hold on to the overall top spot, if Digi can defend its prepaid turf, and if Celcom can get aggressive enough to regain lost ground.
 

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Monday, June 22, 2015

India beats China as most favoured emerging mkt: BofA-ML

Global investors may have reduced their exposure to emerging market equities but India still continues to be the most favoured country, says a report.

According to global financial major Bank of America Merrill Lynch, global investors have reduced their exposure to emerging market equities amid weak earnings prospects, weak Chinese economic growth and a strong dollar.

India topped the global emerging market investors' country preference chart followed by China and Poland in the second and third place, respectively.

Asia Pacific investors have increased their allocations to India and Taiwan in June.

Meanwhile, as per latest data from depositories, Foreign investors pulled out more than Rs 3,300 crore from Indian stock markets so far this month, mainly on account of better returns from Asian peers, concerns over a slow revival in corporate earnings and continued worries over taxation issues.

"Despite having lost 14 per cent (in USD terms) since January highs, India continues to be the most favoured country for GEM (Global Emerging Market) investors," BofA-ML said in a research report.

Other countries in the list included, Turkey, Indonesia, Mexico, Korea, Thailand and South Africa.

The BSE's benchmark 30-share sensitive index closed 0.74 per cent or 200.34 points higher at 27,316.17 points on June 19. So far this calender year (since January 1) the index has lost 191.37 points or 0.69 per cent.

According to BofA-ML, the views on the Chinese economy, to a large extent, define investor views on emerging market equities. Moreover, China growth prospects have come down sharply since April.

"With the Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index up about 150 per cent in the last year with no sign of an earnings revival, 70 per cent of global investors believe China equities are in a bubble," the report said.

According to June's BofA Merrill Lynch Fund Manager Survey, globally investors have moved out of equities into cash ahead of an expected US Fed rate hike.

Investors have also shown concern about a Greek default and a possible bubble in Chinese equities as they have scaled back risk.

"Higher cash levels show how caution is in the air, with 65 trading days until we expect the Fed to tighten," BofA Merrill Lynch Global Research chief investment strategist Michael Hartnett said.

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Chinese firms pour money into US R&D in shift to innovation

WASHINGTON: Surging investment by Chinese companies inUS research labs is yielding a fast-growing trove of patents, part of a push to mine America for ideas to help China shift from being the world's factory floor to a driver of innovation. 

Largely absent from American research hubs a decade ago, Chinese firms including Huawei Technologies and ZTE Corp are now using US researchers to create patents ranging from new software to internet infrastructure, according to an analysis of Thomson Reuters' global intellectual property database. 

The rapid growth in China's US investments will be a key topic at economic and security talks on Tuesday and Wednesday between top US and Chinese officials in Washington. 



They are negotiating a bilateral investment treaty that could deepen ties between the world's two largest economies even amid tensions over China's military assertiveness. 

Even without a treaty, China is pouring capital into US research as well as buying other assets. While its firms are still newcomers to investing in America and few work on the technological frontier, the Thomson Reuters data offers a glimpse of the advanced economy China aspires to build. 

Patented inventions by Chinese firms that involved at least one US researcher roughly doubled worldwide in each of the last three years, reaching 910 in 2014. 

"We have established a beachhead," said Vincent Xiang, who heads international investment at Humanwell Healthcare Group , a Chinese drug company that has put over $50 million into a New Jersey subsidiary that employs dozens of US researchers. 

Rather than compete with powerhouses like US drug maker Merck to invent blockbuster medicines, Humanwell's US researchers are making smaller refinements such as figuring out how to administer some drugs as pills rather than injections. 

Humanwell's New Jersey researchers have won approval on four patents so far in the United States and European Union, Xiang said. There are advantages to setting up labs in the US, where there are over 800,000 people with research doctoral degrees in science, engineering, and health.

"Without access to innovation, it is hard to win in the domestic market," said Xiang. 

A small but growing player 

And yet, direct investment between the United States and China is remarkably low considering the size of their economies, and the fruits of China's US R&D are similarly modest compared with the vast quantities of patents that emerge from America every year. 

The cumulative stock of foreign direct investment in China from the United States makes up just over 1 percent of the FDI sunk into Chinese businesses by all nations, according to U.S. government data. Most FDI in China comes from other Asian countries. 

China's share of America's FDI stock is even smaller, but it has been growing rapidly in recent years as Beijing has eased restrictions on outward investment. 

That is helping Chinese companies sink more money into a range of advanced economies. The Thomson Reuters data also shows a sharp increase in recent years in patents by Chinese firms using German and Japanese researchers. 

"This is a change in China's economic development model," said Thilo Hanemann, who helps maintain a database on Chinese FDI at the Rhodium Group, a New York consultancy. "They want to move from an economy driven by domestic investment and exports to one driven by consumption, technology and services." 

Annual flows of Chinese FDI into the United States have gone from tens or hundreds of millions of dollars per year between 2000 and 2009 to $14.3 billion in 2013 and $11.9 billion in 2014, according to Rhodium Group figures, which are widely cited because they track China's investments made via third countries such as Singapore. 

That is now approaching the annual flows from America's traditional sources of FDI: advanced countries such as Germany and Canada who continue to mine much more knowledge from Americans than does China. German companies extracted 1,416 patents last year using U.S. researchers. 

China already publishes more patent applications than any other country, although development economists note that its state-mandated patent targets often lead to lower quality patents, particularly those taken out only in China. 

However, the Thomson Reuters data, which brings together information from patent offices in dozens of countries, points to many high quality inventions using US researchers. 

For example, Huawei, the top Chinese company with patents fueled by US research, has a US patent for processing fiber optic signals that was cited by 101 later inventions. 

The recent Chinese National Patent Development Strategy highlights the country's plans through 2020, including seven strategic industries positioned for growth: biotechnology, alternative energy, clean energy vehicles, energy conservation, high-end equipment manufacturing, broadband infrastructure and high-end semiconductors. 

It also includes an increase in research and development expenditures as a proportion of economic output from 1.75 percent in 2010 to 2.2 per cent this year. 

One Chinese concern likely to be aired at the US-China meetings this week is that Beijing feels its companies' investments are singled out in U.S. security reviews. 

Huawei is a world leader in producing telecommunications equipment and has six U.S. research centers, but is a bit player in America's telecom infrastructure market. US national security concerns have helped scuttle several attempts by Huawei to expand its US presence. 

"Huawei has occasionally found itself caught in the middle" of geopolitical tensions between Washington and Beijing, said company spokesman William Plummer. 

Most Chinese FDI happens when investors snap up established U.S. companies, such as when auto parts maker Wanxiang Group 

bought California-based electric carmaker Fisker Automotive - and its patents - at a bankruptcy auction last year. 

The Chinese are also starting new ventures and have invested $3 billion in these "greenfield" projects over the last three years, according to Rhodium. 

America's state and local governments have set up dozens of offices to compete with one another to attract this capital, which could flow more freely under a US-China investment treaty. Officials offer potential investors tax incentives and introduce them to potential local partners and to legal and accounting firms. 

State officials understand there are no-go areas given tensions between Washington and Beijing on security matters. Washington reviews more potential investments from China for security concerns than any other country. 

"China being China we don't do aerospace or defense," said Bradley Gillenwater, the Maryland state government's point person for attracting Asian investment. "But biotech is a big deal."



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Friday, June 19, 2015

Electronics Manufacturing Proposals Worth Rs. 65,000 Crores Received: Prasad

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Government has received proposals worth Rs. 65,000 crores for electronics manufacturing in the country, Telecom Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said on Monday.
"In principal approval has been given to 21 electronics manufacturing clusters. Almost Rs. 65,000 crores worth proposals have been received under MSIPS and Rs. 9,000 crores of which have been approved," Prasad said while speaking at an event here.
The minister said that electronics is going to drive growth of India, revenue, and employment in the country.
Government has identified manufacturing as one of important pillar of growth.
The minister said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi will inaugurate a massive Digital India programme on July 1.
"We are planning to celebrate Digital India week which will be inaugurated by the PM," Prasad said.
IT industry body Nasscom and the India Electronics and Semiconductor Association Monday entered into agreement to work together with an aim to push the share of electronics manufacturing and IT to 25 percent of the country's GDP by 2025.
"The collaboration between Nasscom and IESA is a natural outcome of similar goals and mindset. We have signed memorandum of understanding (Mo) with Nasscom with a vision to take share of ESDM and IT in country's GDP to 25 percent by 2025," said IESA Chairman Vinay Shenoy.
India has been a global leader in building and delivering software and IT services, which contributes more than 9 percent of the GDP but its electronic market almost entirely dominated by imports.
"This MoU signed between Nasscom and IESA is an effort to combine strengths that India has in electronic system design which is part of IT industry. This convergence is important because technology has blurred difference between hardware and software," Nasscom President and former IT and Telecom Secretary R Chandrashekhar said.
He said that both the organisation will work on identifying key growth area, facilitate business tie-ups among members of each other and work with government for setting up incubation centre.
Indian Electronic System Design and Manufacturing (ESDM) market is expected to grow from $76 billion (roughly Rs. 4,88,100 crores) in 2013 to $94 billion (roughly Rs. 6,03,800 crores) in 2015 and touch $400 billion (Rs. 25,69,327 crores) by 2020.

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Thursday, June 18, 2015

India's 243 Million Internet Users And The Mobile E-Commerce Revolution

Broadband internet connectivity, considered a luxury some 10 years ago across India, is spreading fast, this time through mobile phones, and is set to overhaul the country’s digital economy.
Cheaper smartphones and a ballooning telecommunications industry have together pushed India to the cusp of digital revolution. Today, India has243 million internet users – more than the United States and second only to China.
And they are leapfrogging traditional desk-bound technology. Facebook, the world’s biggest social networking site, says that it has more than 100 million users in India, of which nearly 84 million access the site through mobile phones. This suggests the rise of the “mobile first” generation of internet users.
India is getting richer and phones are getting cheaper. Domestic producers are now selling smartphones for as little as $70, and have captured nearly 50 percent of the market. They are selling Android-based handsets in villages so remote that even basic necessities like access to safe drinking water is a major challenge.
In the past, the lack of a high-speed broadband network and the cost of computers hampered the internet’s reach in India. In addition, the strength of the country’s traditional media means that many people continue to rely on newspapers and TV for information and entertainment rather than seeking out digital content.
However, with the rapid spread of high-speed mobile data, that is changing fast. India’s internet contribution to GDP could increase from 1.6 per cent in 2012 to between 2.8 per cent and 3.3 per cent by 2015, according to McKinsey.
The widespread use of English on Indian websites has made it easier for global companies to enter the market, which has given consumers a much wider choice of applications and boosted local application developers and technology start-ups.
The growth of the local online industry is being amplified by the return of talent from overseas. Indian-born engineers have played a key role in the success of Silicon Valley. Many are starting to look back, investing resources and expertise in one of the world’s fastest growing online markets.
As more Indians start using the internet on phones, they are gaining access to products and services that were otherwise tough to find or access. The internet has revolutionized travel, education, retail, and agriculture across the world, but the combination of India’s unique characteristics and the leap to mobile is accelerating a particularly profound shift on the subcontinent.
Booking a rail or plane ticket once took hours of queuing, or paying an agent. Today, the government’s railway ticketing website is biggest e-commerce portal in the country.
Numerous coaching classes and computer training institutes have developed on-line platforms for students who no longer need to travel to bigger cities for education or training. The internet has also helped Indian farmers, who can use their cell phones to find real-time information on commodity prices and then dispatch their produce to the appropriate market, which gives them higher returns.
Scenting market opportunity, overseas companies are taking an interest, particularly in retail. Despite restrictions on foreign direct investment in the sector,eBay has invested in Snapdeal, while Amazon launched an online marketplace last year.
As more and more Indians access the internet, this connected revolution will gather momentum, changing the shape of the economy and helping to cut costs and improve choices for consumers.
India is the new e-frontier. A rapidly expanding middle class, with smartphones in hand and cash in their pockets, are looking to the future and finding it online.

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Study: Cost of Data Breaches Increasing to Average of $3.8 Million

The cost of data breaches is rising for companies around the world as sophisticated thieves target valuable financial and medical records, according to a study released on Wednesday.

The total average cost of a data breach is now $3.8 million, up from $3.5 million a year ago, according to a study by data security research organization Ponemon Institute, paid for by International Business Machines Corp.

The direct costs include hiring experts to fix the breach, investigating the cause, setting up hotlines for customers and offering credit monitoring for victims. Business lost because customers are wary after a breach can be even greater, the study said.

Data breaches are becoming more common and significant, with high-profile attacks on Sony Corp, JPMorgan Chase and retailers Target Corp and Home Depot Inc in the past year and a half.

“Most of what’s occurring is through organized crime,” said Caleb Barlow, vice president of IBM Security. “These are well-funded groups. They work Monday to Friday. They are probably better funded and better staffed than a lot people who are trying to defend against them.”

IBM, which sells cyber-security services to companies, has a vested interest in highlighting the costs of data breaches.

The cost of a data breach is now $154 per record lost or stolen, up from $145 last year, according to the study, based on interviews with 350 companies from 11 major countries that had suffered a data breach.

The study’s authors said average costs did not apply to mega-breaches affecting millions of customers, such as those suffered by JPMorgan Chase, Target and Home Depot, which cost the companies far greater sums. Target alone said last year its breach cost $148 million.

The study found that the healthcare was most at risk for costly breaches, with an average cost per record lost or stolen as high as $363, more than twice the average for all sectors of $154.

That reflects the relatively high value of a person’s medical records on the underground market, said IBM, as Social Security information is much more useful for identity theft than simple names, addresses or credit card numbers.



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Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Mobile Internet usage among elderly varies in Asian markets: Telenor finds

While mobile Internet continues to explode across Asia, recent research by the Telenor Group in four of its regional markets suggests that not all citizens are receiving access to the benefits of connectivity.

The research note on the unconnected senior citizens of Asia draws upon customer data from four Telenor markets - India, Thailand, Bangladesh and Malaysia. The findings suggest that the senior segment in some of these markets represents as little as 2 per cent of active mobile users, with still fewer using smartphones.

According to the Thai Gerontology Research and Development Institute, the number of senior citizens is set to increase by 500,000 each year. By 2021, for the first time the country will have more elderly than youth, with senior citizens comprising a fifth of the population. 

This has prompted the government to speed up the process of setting policies and a strategy to serve this ageing population. This includes the Senior Citizens National Plan, aiming to prepare the elderly on life-long learning processes and emphasising the importance of valuing and honouring senior citizens.

Research from Michigan State University indicates that increased Internet access for seniors results in decreased stress and depression. The study of 22,000 retired citizens in the US over six years shows that connectivity and online communication has a significant positive impact on the elderly and reduces isolation. 

The Internet plays a crucial role in reducing loneliness and boredom, while motivating them to expand social networks and form new relationships.

In Thailand, Total Access Communication (DTAC), Telenor's local business unit, reported 6 per cent of users being over 60, although a mere 2 per cent over 65. This possibly reflects a more prosperous senior generation in a country with an average life expectancy of 74.2 years, as compared with only 60.2 in India. 

Usage within these demographics also presents an interesting contrast to India and Bangladesh. The figures show that data penetration among the elderly is comparatively high in Thailand, with 56 per cent of users over 60 and 50 per cent over 65 using data. 

Smartphones, at 50-55 per cent among the two upper age groups, far outnumber feature phones, and mirrors the situation in similarly middle-income Malaysia. 

Among the top two demographics, the male/female split, while pronounced, is nevertheless encouraging, with 19 per cent of Thai female users over 60 years of age and 15 per cent over 65 using data.

Sigve Brekke, Telenor's executive vice president and head of Asia operations, said yesterday that given the company's vision of "Internet for All", it is a source of concern that senior citizens in its Asian markets are not fully receiving the benefits of the mobile internet. 

"This is particularly true as several Asian societies anticipate increasingly ageing populations. We must work to achieve connectivity for all, not just the young," he said.


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Vietnam consumers spend $1.65bn on technical consumer goods in Q1/2015: GfK


Vietnam consumers spend $1.65bn on technical consumer goods in Q1/2015: GfK

Spending by consumers in Vietnam on technical consumer goods in the first quarter of this year surged 22.8 percent from the same period last year, a GkK report has found.
Vietnamese consumers spent more than VND36 trillion, or US$1.65 billion, on technical consumer goods, consisting of seven sectors, in the first three months of this year, the German market research firm said last week, citing findings from its TEMAX Vietnam Q1 2015 quarterly report.
TEMAX, or Technical Market Index, is an index developed by GfK to track the technical consumer goods markets.
The report said Vietnam’s spending on technical consumer goods “reached yet another high,” with all seven of the technical consumer goods sectors reporting positive gains.     
“Six of which were in a double-digit range,” it noted.
The sectors include photography, office equipment and consumables, consumer electronics, telecommunications, major domestic appliances, small domestic appliances, and information and technology.
Photography reported the largest growth among these sectors in Q1/2015, with total three-month sales of VND426 billion ($19.57 million), a 43.9 percent increase from Q1/2014.
The first three month of the year was also the photography sector’s best performing quarter since 2011, according to the report.
Telecommunications was Vietnam’s largest technical consumer goods sector in Q1/2015, generating sales of VND15.7 trillion ($721.18 million), primarily because of the healthy demand for mobile handsets.
Vietnamese consumers had higher demand for cooling products, washing machines and microwave ovens in the latest quarter, enabling the major domestic appliances sector to report significant year-on-year growth and total value of more than VND6.3 billion ($289,389).
The report also found that Vietnamese consumers spent 8.7 percent, or VND5.1 billion ($234,267), more in the information technology sector this quarter, with desktop computing products and media tablets registering healthy growth.
Although sales of mobile computing products – the sector’s largest segment– fell by 9.3 percent, this was compensated for by increased sales of desktop computers and media tablets by 26.5 percent and 25.6 percent, respectively.
A media tablet is a device based on a touchscreen display that facilitates content entry via an on-screen keyboard. The device has a screen with a diagonal dimension that is a minimum of five inches.
The GfK report also predicted that the healthy growth Vietnam’s technical consumer goods sectors enjoyed in the first quarter is not expected to continue in the second one.
The healthy sales in Q1/2015 were driven by the Lunar New Year holiday, which will be no longer a case in Q2/2014.
“However, as the weather gets warmer in the coming months, we anticipate that air conditioners, cooling products and electric fans will perform well,” it noted.
“Also, media-tablets and smartphones are expected to report healthy increases in sales due to high demand from consumers and aggressive discount programs for retailers.”
The findings are based on surveys carried out on a regular basis by the retail panel of GfK, the German firm said. The retail panel comprises data from over 425,000 retail outlets worldwide. 

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Monday, June 15, 2015

Government plans to integrate 36 services with eBiz portal

NEW DELHI: Seeking to promote ease of doing business, the government today proposed to integrate 36 central and state government services such as application for environment clearance, property tax and factories licence with the eBiz portal. 

The portal provides one-stop clearance platform for investment proposals. 


Listing new initiatives, schemes and programmes during the first year of the NDA government, the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) said next set of 12 central government services have been identified to integrate with eBiz portal. 

"The roll-out of 24 identified state services have been initiated in remaining nine pilot states viz., Delhi, Haryana, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal," it said. 

India has been ranked 142 among the 189 countries in the World Bank report, falling two places from last year's ranking. The government is aiming to bring India into the top 50 ranks. 

The central government services which have been identified includes annual filing of company returns, constitution of the firm, registration under the Contract Labour Act, 1970 and registration under the Building and other construction workers Act, 1996. 

Similarly, the list of 24 identified services for states for possible integration include issuance of fire safety recommendation, land mutation and conversion, drug licence, annual filing under Factories Act, Licence under FSSAI, shops registration, trade licence, NOC from Pollution Control Board and new power connection and permission to charge the line. 
Major initiatives have been taken up in the last one year for improving ease of doing business in India through simplification and rationalisation of the existing rules and introduction of information technology to make governance more efficient and effective, it said. 


The DIPP said during the year the most decisive step taken to boost manufacturing was the 'Make in India' initiative. 

The initiative is based on four pillars - new processes, new infrastructure, new sectors and new mindset - which have been identified to give boost to entrepreneurship in India. 
Talking about industrial corridors, it said government is building a pentagon of corridors across the country to boost manufacturing and to project India as a global manufacturing destination of the world. 

Work on five smart cities in Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor has been taken up. Japan International Cooperation Agency study team undertook the preliminary study for comprehensive integrated master plan for Chennai-Bengaluru Industrial Corridor (CBIC). 

On intellectual property rights, it said after incorporating comments received from all ministries and departments concerned and other stakeholders on the draft IPR Policy, the think tank has submitted a final report to DIPP on April 18. 

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