A recent trip to Vietnam underscored how this fascinating Southeast Asia region is adeptly maneuvering the rift between the United States and China to fuel its own economic rise.
I was in Hanoi for the Vietnam Venture Summit 2023, an event organized by the countryâs Ministry of Planning and Investment and Golden Gate Ventures. The summit was Vietnamâs debut to the business community following the upgrade of its relations with the U.S. during President Bidenâs visit in September.
The event featured hundreds of local startup entrepreneurs eager to meet with foreign and regional venture capital firms. The investor âspeed datingâ portion was so popular that the organizers needed to add a second session.
The participants were overwhelmingly young, optimistic, and well-educated. The companies on offer spanned fields including artificial intelligence, gene technology, renewables, education technology, and fintech. The atmosphere reminded me of China two decades ago when foreign capital and expertise were welcome, and the growth potential seemed unbounded.
âBamboo Diplomacyâ Pays Off
Vietnam has emerged as one of the rare winners during recent years of de-globalization thanks to its thoughtful policy of âbamboo diplomacyâ. The policy has enabled it to upgrade relations with the West while maintaining positive ties with its largest trading partner, China. Bamboo diplomacy is enshrined in Vietnamâs âFour Noâsâ: no military alliances, no picking sides in conflicts, no foreign military bases, and no use of force in international relations. Officials are open to doing business with anyone as long as they arenât dragged into quarrels.
The nation has invested heavily in education and infrastructure while offering industrial wages about half as high as those in China. Vietnamâs government has adopted a series of policies to remove barriers to foreign investment. And it still has reserves of untapped rural laborers to draw on, with urbanization currently at 38% compared to 65% in China.
Vietnam has negotiated free trade agreements with 15 nations, enabling it to plug into regional supply chains without incurring tariffs.
These factors have made Vietnam an ideal locale for multinationals seeking to de-risk their supply chains with a âChina Plus oneâ manufacturing strategy.
Today, Samsung employs 200,000 people in Vietnam and has invested $17 billion in facilities to crank out smartphones and other devices. Foxconn Technology assembles Appleâs (NASDAQ:AAPL) MacBooks at a factory outside Hanoi and recently announced a new facility for electric vehicle chargers, per a Reuters report.
During Bidenâs trip, Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) announced new AI research partnerships for Vietnam, and Synopsys (NASDAQ:SNPS) and Marvell Technology (NASDAQ:MRVL) committed to opening semiconductor design centers in the country.
Foreign direct investment is set to reach a new record in this year, rising by 54% to $15.3 billion in the first ten months of 2023, Investment Monitor reported. This occurred even as China reported negative FDI in the third quarter for the first time since opening up its economy after the Covid-19 pandemic, Bloomberg noted.
Preparing For The Global Stage
While Vietnam has become a magnet for multinational manufacturing, achieving prosperity will require attracting significant foreign capital to back its domestic companies. However, the countryâs immature financial markets have posed a considerable obstacle. Put simply, foreign financial institutions are reluctant to put money to work without clear paths to exit.
Vietnamâs domestic stock exchanges in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi are categorized as frontier markets by FTSE and MSCI, which puts Vietnamese stocks off limits to many global investors and family offices. Vietnam would need to lift restrictions on the percentage of foreign ownership to upgrade to the emerging markets category and stop being grouped with the likes of Croatia, Kenya, and Senegal.
Until recently, it was unclear if a Vietnamese company could launch an IPO overseas without running afoul of its domestic laws. The recent listing of Vietnamâs electric vehicle manufacturer, VinFast (NASDAQ:VFS), on NASDAQ through a SPAC merger has opened the door for more of the countryâs leading companies to step out on a global stage.
One likely candidate, VNG, is Vietnamâs leading video game company and owns the ubiquitous Zalo messaging app, which is used by 75% of the population. VNG had planned a $150 million U.S. IPO this year but reportedly decided to delay until 2024 in hopes of more favorable market conditions. At the conference, VNGâs CEO, Le Hong Minh, described the companyâs evolution from distributing PC games and posters to internet cafes by motorcycle in 2005 to developing AI large language models customized for Vietnam today.
Other players said to be weighing future overseas IPOs include Vietnamâs largest retail company, The CrownX, valued at $8.2 billion in its last private funding round, and Momo, a Vietnamese payment app with 30 million users, backed by Warburg Pincus.
If Vietnam can generate a few high-profile exits, that could spur more sizable private investments.
Tapping Into Vietnamâs Talent
Vietnamâs aspirations reach beyond being the factory floor annex to China. It seeks to become a technologically advanced and sustainable economy and achieve upper- middle-income status following the path laid out by Asian leaders such as Korea and Singapore in decades past.
Vietnamâs legislature recently set a target for GDP growth of 6% to 6.5% in 2024, and its digital economy is expected to grow at 20% a year, reaching $45 billion in 2025, according to a recent report by Bain and Google. To reach upper-middle-income status by 2030, such high rates of growth will need to be sustained for several years in the future.
Meeting those goals will require tapping into the abundant dreams and drive of young entrepreneurs like those I met at the Venture Summit. Central planning can effectively build infrastructure and provide worker training. However, it is unlikely to spawn innovative companies that will put Vietnam on the map with global investors.
Vietnamâs next generation appears eager to learn from the outside, take risks, and start businesses that havenât yet been conceived. The entrepreneurs told me that they felt that their moment had arrived. After spending a few days with them, I was convinced that Vietnamâs economic rise was just beginning.