WRAPUP 1-Vietnam halts venture, gold imports as trade gap soars
* State shipbuilder pulls $1 billion investment
* Trade gap triples in first six months
* Gold imports suspended due to trade balance worries
By Nguyen Nhat Lam and Lewa Pardomuan
HANOI/SINGAPORE, June 23 (Reuters) - Vietnam pulled the plug on a $1 billion investment by a state firm and has halted gold imports in its struggle to prevent soaring prices and a ballooning trade gap from crippling the once-booming economy.
Vietnam's state-run shipbuilder Vinashin said on Monday it
had dropped a plan to invest in a $5 billion steel venture with
South Korea's POSCO (005490.KS) heeding the government's appeal
to state companies for spending cuts to bring down inflation
from multi-year highs above 25 percent.
Vinashin said it would also delay or suspend 40 other projects worth a total of $395 million.
The Communist Party-run government has ordered state-run businesses to cut borrowing and spending, cited by economists and authorities as among the drivers of inflation.
Vietnam also temporarily suspended imports of gold earlier this month, worried that purchases of the precious metal were pushing the country's swelling trade shortfall to unacceptable levels, a World Gold Council official said on Monday.
Official June trade and inflation data are due later this week, but a state-run newspaper reported on Monday Vietnam's trade deficit tripled in the first half of this year to almost $17 billion.
Imports are estimated to have soared 64 percent in the first six months to $45.5 billion, while exports rose 27 percent to $28.6 billion, the official Lao Dong newspaper reported, citing planning and investment ministry data.
"The government is very concerned. They have to reduce trade balance deficit. Gold is one of the main imports," said Hyunh Trung Khanh, a consultant for the Vietnam chapter of the World Gold Council.
SHATTERED CONFIDENCE
Vietnam is Asia's second-largest gold investor and traditionally Vietnamese use gold for savings, jewellery and real estate transactions. But the surge in inflation and a slew of worrying trade figures in the past weeks and months have shattered local investors' confidence in the dong currency and triggered strong demand for gold and U.S. dollars.
According to the council's figures, Vietnam's gold imports doubled to about 60 tonnes, worth $1.8 billion, in the first five months of this year, compared with the same period of 2007.
The Southeast Asian nation of 86 million people for the better part of the past decade has boasted one of the fastest economic growth rates, averaging 7.5 percent since 2000.
But after a bumper 2007, the economy began sputtering with inflation roaring to more than decade highs, the import bill soaring and local stock markets and the currency hit by quickly deteriorating investor confidence.
The dong was quoted around 16,610 per dollar in the official onshore market VND=, 0.96 percent weaker than the mid-point set by the central bank.
The central bank allows the dong to move only within a 1 percent band around that mid-point, but effectively devalued the currency earlier this month by 2 percent.
Still, black market rates are markedly lower than official rates. Traders said the dollar was changing hands at about 17,800 dong on Monday, down from a record 19,600 dong last Friday.
In another sign of pessimism about the local currency, speculators in the offshore non-deliverable forwards VNDNDFOR=, priced the dong at 22,650 in the one-year tenor, 27 percent weaker than the spot rate.
The decision to suspend gold imports had little impact on the international gold markets or in the local market, given that high imports earlier in the year will keep the market well supplied for the time being.
"We have imported quite a lot. So there's still quite a lot of gold inside the country, and the demand in June is slowing down. The difference between the local and international gold price is not very high," said Khanh.
The price of gold was quoted by local dealers at around $873 an ounce, below the international price XAU= above $900. OTHER STORIES > Vietnam suspends gold imports....[ID:nSP54864] > Vietnam effectively devalues dong 2 pct........[ID:nSP221939] > Vietnam net foreign reserves $20.7 bln........[ID:nL19802759] > Vietnam H1 loans up 20 pct, June credit slows.[ID:nHAN320478] > FACTBOX-Inflationary stresses confront Asia....[ID:nSP291331] (Additional reporting by Grant McCool, Miyoung kim and Ho Binh Minh, Writing by Tomasz Janowski; editing by Neil Fullick)
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