Japan, once the largest source of corporate investment in Vietnam, has fallen to fourth place for the first nine months of 2020, overtaken by South Korea and China. The pandemic and slow corporate decision-making are being blamed for the drop. Can Tokyo’s push to forge stronger diplomatic ties with Hanoi reverse the slide? READ MORE (CACHED ARTICLE)
Similar Posts:
- Korea, Japan Companies Expanding in Vietnam (The Asset)
- Scottish Oriental Smaller Companies Trust – Annual Report for Year Ended Aug 31, 2022
- Investors in Emerging Market ETFs Should ‘Look Under the Hood’ (Reuters Video)
- Apocalypse Now For Investors? A Realistic Vietnam Investment Review
- As US-China Relations Worsen, Expect Supply Chain Chaos (Freight Waves)
- SK Group Sets Sights on Vietnam’s e-Commerce Sector (The Asset)
- Vietnam’s Economy is Firing on All Cylinders (Eaton Vance)
- Vietnam Closed End Funds: Improving Outlook & Attractive Valuations (Numis)
- Vietnam: Key Sectoral Opportunities and Risks (A&M)
- Vietnam Economy Grows Nearly 7% on Trade War Tailwinds (Nikkei Asian Review)
- Small But Mighty: Seizing Untapped Opportunities in Southeast Asia (Nielsen)
- Vietnam: Tail of the Dragon (Mirae Asset)
- Vietnam Emerges as Southeast Asia’s Next Fintech Battleground (Nikkei Asia)
- Digging Deeper: Vietnam’s Stock Market Reforms and Frontier Market Status Update (July 2022)
- The VinFast VF8 Is Simply Not Ready for America (Jalopnik)