State-owned corporations and groups may lose $13 billion due to COVID-19

Apr 7th at 06:44
07-04-2020 06:44:24+07:00

State-owned corporations and groups may lose $13 billion due to COVID-19

If the COVID-19 pandemic continues to last for a long time and the price of oil cannot recover, the revenue of 19 state-owned groups and corporations will see a plunge of VND279.76 trillion ($12.16 billion) this year, and eight of them will suffer a damage of VND26.32 trillion ($1.14 billion), according to the Committee for Management of State Capital at Enterprises.

State-owned corporations and groups may lose $13 billion due to COVID-19
The 19 state-owned groups under the Committee for Management of State Capital at Enterprises may see losses in the billions of dollars due to COVID-19

In the first three months, these 19 firms under the Committee for Management of State Capital at Enterprises reported a total loss of VND3.7 trillion ($160.87 million). The company suffering the largest damage is Vietnam Airlines with a plunge in accumulated revenue reaching VND6.7 trillion ($291.3 million) on-year and loss of VND2.3 trillion ($100 million). If the pandemic lasts until the fourth quarter of this year, its revenue is estimated to decline by VND72.4 trillion ($3.15 billion) compared to its initial target, with VND20 trillion ($869.57 million) in losses.

At present, Vietnam Airlines suspended all international flights and keeps domestic flights at a minimum. It has increased the exploitation of both international and domestic cargo flights in order to offset the lost revenue.

The VND3.5 trillion ($152.2 million) fund allocated for wages has been exhausted and the company had to look for short-term loans to meet payments.

Another case in the aviation sector is Airports Corporation of Vietnam (ACV). In the first quarter, the corporation reported negative VND800 billion ($34.78 million) of revenue and negative VND580 billion ($25.22 million) in profit. ACV forecast VND11.3 trillion ($491.3 million) in revenue and VND1.47 trillion ($63.9 million) in profit for the whole year, down VND10.2 trillion ($443.48 million) and VND9.3 trillion ($404.35 million) on-year.

In the transport sector, VietnamExpressway Development and Investment Corporation (VEC) expressed concerns about losing VND15 billion ($652,200) in revenue in the first three months due to the plunge in transport demand in the context of the pandemic. This damage may increase to VND140 billion ($6 million) if the epidemic lasts until the fourth quarter.

VND100 billion ($4.35 million) was the damage of Vietnam Railways Corporation (VNR) in the first three months. The figure is estimated to rise VND643 billion ($27.96 million) to VND935 billion ($40.65 million) by the end of this year.

Regarding the oil and gas sector, in the first quarter of this year, PetroVietnam saw a decline of VND13.2 trillion ($573.9 million) in revenue and VND4.58 trillion ($199.13 million) in after-tax profit against last year.

If the selling price of crude oil decreases to $55 or $30 per barrel, the total revenue of the group will drop by between VND23 trillion ($1 billion) and VND141 trillion ($6.13 billion).

Meanwhile, Petrolimex is concerned about a potential revenue loss of about VND12.5 trillion ($543.48 million) this year.

Despite the soaring demand for online working and learning due to the pandemic, telecommunications groups – the providers of these services – have not manged to escape the damage of the pandemic. Notably, VNPT forecast that its revenue may decrease by VND6.1 trillion ($265.2 million) while profit could drop by VND1.52 trillion ($66.1 million) against its initial expectations for the whole year.

VIR





RELATED STOCK CODE (3)

NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Additional fiscal measures to draw along hard-hit stakeholder groups

Tormented by growing losses to the economy, the Vietnamese government is about to offer another fiscal package worth billions of US dollars for those hit hard by...

Vietnam's Q2 GDP growth forecast to slow to 2% or even fall into recession

A change in the epicenter of the pandemic from China to the US and Europe is causing greater impacts on Vietnam’s economy.

Vietnam mulls increasing Covid-19 tax deferral package for businesses

The Finance Ministry has proposed deferring VND180 trillion ($7.6 billion) worth of taxes and land rents for entities affected by the Covid-19 epidemic.

Online shopping surges on Vietnam social distancing campaign

Amid the 15-day nationwide social distancing campaign, people in Vietnam are increasingly resorting to online shopping and home delivery.

A third of businesses might not survive 3-month pandemic: survey

Thirty five percent of small and medium-sized businesses could go under if the coronavirus pandemic persists for over three months, a survey has found.

Vietnam inflation rate likely to drop below 4% in H2/2020

Vietnam's headline inflation averaged 5.6% year-on-year in the first quarter, but has been gradually decreasing since last December.

National Assembly plans to ratify EU trade deal at next meeting

The European Union (EU) – Viet Nam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) will be submitted to the National Assembly (NA) for discussion and ratification at the NA’s next...

Six Vietnamese startup founders in Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia list

The 2020 Forbes 30 Under 30 Asia list honors six Vietnamese representatives in healthcare and science, finance and venture capital, industry, and social...

Vietnam parliament set to ratify EVFTA in next sitting

Once Vietnam's parliament ratifies the trade deal, it can enter into force 30 days after Vietnam and the EU have notified each other that legal procedures have been...

Vietnamese economy to grow despite COVID-19: ADB

Viet Nam’s economic growth rate is expected to slow sharply to 4.8 per cent this year due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, said a new Asian Development Bank...


MOST READ


Back To Top