Top Vietnam steelmaker says local building boom will fuel growth
[HANOI] Vietnam's top steelmaker Hoa Phat Group is counting on the nation's rising economic growth and massive infrastructure projects from railways to seaports to fuel the company's expansion and cushion any fallout from US tariffs.
The company targets 15 per cent annual revenue growth in the 2025 to 2030 period, chief executive officer Nguyen Viet Thang said. That would take Hoa Phat's revenue to about 325 trillion dong (S$16.2 billion) by 2030, based on Bloomberg calculations using the projection. Last year, it recorded revenue of 140.56 trillion dong.
Hoa Phat is banking on increasing domestic steel demand driven by government-backed infrastructure projects amid challenges posed by US President Donald Trump's threatened 46 per cent tariff on Vietnamese goods, he said.
'Our goal is not something we came up with arbitrarily. It is based on the growth foundation of Vietnam's economy,' Thang said.
Hoa Phat is not highly exposed to international markets. The CEO said the company aims to keep overseas sales at about 20 per cent of total revenue. Hoa Phat currently exports to about 40 countries. The company does not disclose how much of its business is tied to the US market.
Hoa Phat could, though, experience some trade-war risk if tariffs cause a slowdown in domestic industrial park construction because investors pull back, according to Bao Viet Securities analyst Minh Ton. Expansion of industrial parks, which provide factory space for global suppliers, account for as much as 20 per cent of Vietnam's steel demand, he wrote in a research note.
A NEWSLETTER FOR YOU
Friday, 8.30 am Asean Business
Business insights centering on South-east Asia's fast-growing economies.
Sign Up
Sign Up
The global steel market has been under pressure following US tariffs and rising measures to stem the tide of cheap Chinese steel. Most major nations aspire to have a steel industry, making it prone to bursts of protectionism.
Hoa Phat is poised to benefit from Vietnam's protective anti-dumping duty of as much as 28 per cent on Chinese imports of some hot-rolled coil – a type of steel used in everything from infrastructure to consumer goods.
The government, under pressure from Vietnamese steelmakers, also issued a levy of more than 37 per cent on Chinese imported galvanised steel. The temporary tariffs could become permanent. Vietnam is the biggest single buyer of Chinese steel outside China.
'This will support domestic producers a lot, especially Hoa Phat Group, because their new steel complex will go online this year,' said Hai Nguyen, an analyst at Maybank Investment Bank in Ho Chi Minh City. 'The Chinese sold their hot-rolled coil at a discount.'
Hoa Phat dodged US anti-dumping duties when the Department of Commerce recently ruled Hoa Phat pipe shipments to America were made in Vietnam, not China. The ruling allows the company to 'expand its export activities' in the US, Hoa Phat said.
Rail network
The company, though, sees the driver of its growth at home.
Vietnam's government aims to start building a US$67 billion high-speed rail network connecting northern and southern provinces in 2027. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG
Vietnam's government aims to start building a US$67 billion high-speed rail network connecting northern and southern provinces in 2027. It also plans a seaport system expansion by 2030 that will need about 351.5 trillion dong in investments.
Vietnam's ambitious railway and metro system plans will foster 'further urbanisation and property sector expansion, which requires ample steel', Hieu Le, an analyst at Turicum Investment Management, wrote in a report.
Hoa Phat, which began in 1992 by producing machine accessories, has expanded into sectors that include real estate and agriculture. Its core business, though, is steel-making.
Hoa Phat expects to complete its Dung Quat 2 steel complex by the end of this year, increasing the company's capacity to 15 million tonnes per year from the current 11.3 million tonnes, of which 8.6 million tonnes will be for hot-rolled coil steel.
The plant will reduce average production costs for a hot-rolled coil by 11 per cent in 2025 compared to last year, giving Hoa Phat an additional competitive edge locally and abroad, according to CRU Group's research.
Hoa Phat's after-tax profit surged 76 per cent last year to 12 trillion dong, while revenue increased 18 per cent. In the first quarter, the company's profit rose 14 per cent and revenue increased 22 per cent due to strong domestic demand for construction steel.
The company targets a steel-producing capacity of 21 million tonnes per year by 2029, Thang said. Hoa Phat is planning to construct a railway track manufacturing plant next to its 85 trillion dong Dung Quat 2 Complex in Quang Ngai province.
'For at least the next five years, infrastructure will remain a bottleneck that the government wants to remove, and naturally this will lead to increased demand for steel,' Thang said. BLOOMBERG

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Singapore shares rise as trade tensions between China and US ease; STI up 0.1%
Singapore shares rise as trade tensions between China and US ease; STI up 0.1% SINGAPORE – Signs of a truce in the tense tariff stand-off between the US and China gave local shares a welcome nudge north on June 12. While far from a ringing endorsement of an apparent trade deal, hopeful local investors still managed to push the benchmark Straits Times Index (STI) up 0.1 per cent or 3.15 points to 3,922.2 but losers pipped gainers 252 to 236 on trade of 1.3 billion securities worth $1.2 billion. Jardine Matheson was the STI's standout, rising 1.9 per cent to US$44.64, while inflight caterer Sats led the losers, down 1.3 per cent to finish at $3.11. The local banks ended lower: DBS dropped 0.4 per cent to $44.67; UOB fell 0.1 per cent to $35.09; and OCBC shed 0.1 per cent to $16.14. There wasn't much for share investors to shout about on Wall Street overnight, where most action was in the markets for oil and government bonds, which rallied after the latest US inflation numbers. Stocks had a lacklustre day with the S&P 500 down 0.3 per cent while and Dow Jones Industrials was unchanged and the tech-heavy Nasdaq declined 0.5 per cent. Major regional indexes had mixed sessions. South Korea's Kospi rose 0.5 per cent and Malaysian stocks gained 0.2 per cent but the Nikkei in Japan fell 0.7 per cent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 1.4 per cent. Buoyant energy shares couldn't prevent the ASX in Sydney from sliding 0.3 per cent. Mr Jose Torres, a senior economist at Interactive Brokers, said: 'Markets are soaring following a lighter-than-anticipated (US) consumer price index report that is quelling fears about tariff-related inflation and boosting enthusiasm that the (US Federal Reserve) will cut rates in the next two or three meetings.' He added that bulls are energised by a de-escalation in trade tensions between Beijing and Washington, with American President Donald Trump remarking on June 11 that the relationship between the two economies is 'excellent'. THE BUSINESS TIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Business Times
an hour ago
- Business Times
Investor rush for India exposure revs up block deals, IPOs
[NEW DELHI] India's market for share sales is warming up after several dull months, as companies and shareholders cash in on a buoyant stock market. The South Asian nation saw US$6.4 billion raised through share sales in May, the highest monthly total since December 2024, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Block trades worth US$5 billion were the biggest contributors, marking the busiest month for such deals since March last year. The momentum has carried into June, with at least 10 blocks raising US$1.2 billion in the first week alone. Indian stocks are now positioned for more gains after the central bank on Friday delivered a bigger-than-expected interest rate cut and injected further liquidity into the banking system. This has supported a rally that's already underway, with the benchmark NSE Nifty 50 Index rebounding from its April lows, which were triggered by concerns over US President Donald Trump's broad tariffs. 'Right now, investors are saying, 'I need exposure to India – and I need it fast,'' said Sunil Khaitan, a managing director leading financing in India at Goldman Sachs Group. 'Block trades remain the quickest and most efficient way to get that exposure.' The recent torrent of deals stands in contrast to the lull earlier in 2025, when local deals cooled off after a record-breaking year. India even ceded its position to Hong Kong as the world's second-largest market for share sales in the first three months of the year, weighed down by an unexpected slowdown in economic growth and cautious corporate earnings forecasts. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Some of the largest recent block trades include British American Tobacco's US$1.5 billion sale of tobacco manufacturer ITC's shares, Singapore Telecommunications' US$1.5 billion selldown of wireless carrier Bharti Airtel's stock and billionaire Rakesh Gangwal's US$1.4 billion disposal of shares in IndiGo's parent company. Private equity firm Carlyle Group and South Korean automaker Hyundai Motor were also among those paring their India holdings. The flurry of activity with blocks appears to be spilling over to IPOs. HDB Financial Services recently secured a nod from the securities regulator for a first-time sale that could raise US$1.5 billion. Prudential's Indian asset management venture is also nearing a filing for a listing expected to fetch as much as US$1.2 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. Better-than-expected corporate earnings and decent economic growth provide a robust backdrop for deals, which could include billion-dollar IPOs later this year, said Samarth Jagnani, Morgan Stanley's head of global capital markets for India and South-east Asia. 'The second half will be better,' he said. Despite the recovery, Indian deals remain well below last year's US$66 billion record. Total share sales – including IPOs, placements and blocks – have raised US$15.5 billion so far this year, 29% lower from the year-ago period, according to Bloomberg-compiled data. Some IPOs are also moving ahead with tamer valuations: Solar-pump maker Oswal Pumps this week said its IPO was looking to raise US$162 million, lower than what it targeted last year. 'In the last six months, we have passed on several IPOs largely on valuation grounds, even though we liked the businesses,' said Vikas Pershad, Asian equities portfolio manager at London-based asset manager M&G Investments. 'On balance, our patience has helped and in some instances, we've eventually become shareholders in names we initially passed over – and at better levels.' Still, India's share-sale proceeds this year are likely to surpass last year's levels at the current pace, according to Goldman's Khaitan. The pipeline is particularly strong in consumer technology and financial services, where 'growth stories are resonating with both domestic and global institutional investors,' he said. BLOOMBERG
Business Times
an hour ago
- Business Times
Singapore shares rise as trade tensions between China and US ease; STI up 0.1%
[SINGAPORE] Singapore stocks rose on Thursday (Jun 12), amid the world's two largest economies agreeing to de-escalate trade tensions. The blue-chip Straits Times Index (STI) closed 0.1 per cent or 3.15 points higher at 3,922.2. Across the broader market, gainers beat decliners 252 to 236 as 1.3 billion securities worth S$1.2 billion changed hands. The top gainer on the STI was Jardine Matheson , which advanced 1.9 per cent or US$0.85 to US$44.64. The trio of local banks ended the day lower. DBS was down 0.4 per cent or S$0.20 at S$44.67, UOB fell 0.1 per cent or S$0.03 to S$35.09, and OCBC shed 0.1 per cent or S$0.02 to end at S$16.14. The biggest loser on the index was inflight caterer Sats , which lost 1.3 per cent or S$0.04 to finish at S$3.11. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Across Asia, major indices were mixed. South Korea's Kospi rose 0.5 per cent and the Bursa Malaysia Kuala Lumpur Composite Index gained 0.2 per cent. Meanwhile, Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 0.7 per cent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index lost 1.4 per cent. Jose Torres, a senior economist at Interactive Brokers, said: 'Markets are soaring following a lighter-than-anticipated consumer price index report that is quelling fears about tariff-related inflation and boosting enthusiasm that the (US Federal Reserve) will cut rates in the next two or three meetings.' He added that bulls are energised by a de-escalation in trade tensions between Beijing and Washington, with American President Donald Trump remarking on Wednesday morning that the relationship between the two economies is 'excellent'.