Vietnam’s significance conveyed by Samsung

Oct 28th at 08:32
28-10-2020 08:32:32+07:00

Vietnam’s significance conveyed by Samsung

Samsung is expected to construct a battery manufacturing plant in Vietnam, in addition to its already-huge investments in the country.

Vietnam’s significance conveyed by Samsung
Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc (right) met with Lee Jae Yong, vice chairman of Samsung Electronics. Photo: VNA

At last week’s meeting in Hanoi between Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc and Samsung Electronics vice chairman Lee Jae Yong, they were reported to have discussed a rise in investment related to battery and smartphone manufacturing, and Samsung SDI reportedly may announce a plan to build an electric vehicle battery manufacturing plant in Vietnam.

Currently, Samsung SDI has no such lines in Vietnam although it has local assembly lines for mobile phone battery assembly and supply to Samsung Electronics Vietnam.

Yong also inspected Samsung’s facilities in the northern provinces of Bac Ninh and Thai Nguyen, and Ho Chi Minh City. He said that the business situation for Samsung Vietnam is still facing challenges amid the pandemic.

In recent weeks, Vietnam has decided to allow entry for more than 3,000 Samsung engineers and experts in order for the company to operate factories smoothly. According to Yong, if the factories in Vietnam cannot operate as planned, Samsung’s entire global production chain would be disrupted.

The invited engineers are also needed for the company’s research and development (R&D) centre, which will be put into operation at the end of the year. The centre will be the group’s main R&D base, employing more than 3,000 engineers and illustrating Samsung’s efforts in not only investing in manufacturing but also R&D activities in Vietnam while cooperating with domestic businesses in software development.

At the meeting with PM Phuc, Yong expressed wishes that the Vietnamese government would continue to create favourable conditions for Samsung and its partners, while PM Phuc expressed his hopes that the company would make an investment in a semiconductor plant in the country.

Currently Samsung has invested about $17 billion into Vietnam with different projects producing electronics products, especially smartphones.

Meanwhile, competitors like Apple are seeing its production outputs stagnate amid the pandemic’s effects in China. Samsung, on the other hand, is benefiting from the very limited impact on its operations in Vietnam. While investing in developing a smartphone facility in the country, Samsung has actively increased output through more affordable labour costs and incentives from the government.

Together with Samsung, a series of South Korean suppliers also came to Vietnam, resulting in the sector’s impressive growth, with nearly half of Samsung’s smartphones now being manufactured in the Southeast Asian nation. With this setup, Samsung is in a much better position than its competitors.

Samsung’s ceded most of the Chinese market to competitors in recent years, which has helped the company mitigate the impact of the market’s declining demand – which is still affecting other manufacturers of smartphones with factories in China. In 2019, Samsung ended its smartphone production in China as its market share fell to nearly zero.

However, the import of large quantities of components from China could also have a negative impact on Samsung, especially if the pandemic continues to go on. Samsung depends on Chinese contractors for certain low-end phone components, and may also have problems in production due to a lack of basic elements like semiconductors imported from Japan.

Import of the above materials from Japan accounts for more than 90 per cent of Samsung’s total supply, and a possible replacement of semiconductors from this nation with domestic products remains unstable.

VIR





NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Growing trade remedies a sign of rising export activity

As Vietnam is continuously increasing its presence and exploring new export markets, applied trade remedies against domestic producers and their goods have become...

Mitsubishi spends $90mn buying 10% of Vietnam's high-tech material firm

Mitsubishi Materials Corporation (MMC) has decided to inject US$90 million into Masan High-Tech Materials (MHT) to own 10 percent, or nearly 110 million shares, in...

Demand for organic farm produce rising in Viet Nam

Demand for organic products has been rising sharply globally including in Viet Nam, and this is good news for businesses investing in them, according to the...

Ha Noi will promote linkage between production and consumption for OCOP products

Many business households and enterprises in Ha Noi which are part of the One Commune, One Product (OCOP) programme hope the Ha Noi Department of Agriculture and...

Vietnam Association of Fish Sauce set up

The Vietnam Association of Fish Sauce (VAFS) was launched in Ha Noi on Tuesday.

Leveraging mobile connectivity for smarter factories

Ericsson expects over two-thirds of the world’s manufacturing sites to reside in Asia by 2025, with Vietnam increasingly becoming a major manufacturing and...

Long An gifted the spotlight with new IMG industrial park

The Mekong Delta province of Long An has been implementing targets according to its development plan under the theme “Year of promoting investment attraction”...

GE signs agreements with EVNGENCO 3 to boost largest power plants in Vietnam

The five-year service agreement between GE and EVNGENCO 3 includes the provision of new and reconditioned parts, and on-site services for four GE GT13E2 gas...

First mercury-free battery factory in Binh Phuoc put into operation

The handover ceremony of the GPPD battery factory between general contractor WorldSteel Group and investor GPPD Energy Co., Ltd. took place on October 19 at Becamex...

MoIT's projects keep racking up debt with no end in sight

The clock is ticking on 12 large economic projects started by the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MoIT) with no solutions to their debt problems in sight a few...


MOST READ


Back To Top