Vietnam Financial News

03.04 / 11:49
markets economy students War country classical Schools Trump will claim victory in the next couple of weeks and then reverse the policies he has introduced: Ramesh Damani
Ramesh Damani, Member, BSE, says like Lyndon Johnson on Vietnam, Donald Trump will just declare victory in the next couple of weeks and then change all the policies that he has introduced, saying that, oh, my policies have been achieved, everyone has come to the negotiating table, everyone is scared of America. He will declare victory because he will never admit loss. He will declare victory and the rest of the world will move back to the regime we were in. How should the world look at the tariff announcements by the US administration? Old school economists are saying that this is against the classic economic theory. This means inflation comes back, de-globalisation starts, and that is going to lead to serious contraction in the US economy. Ramesh Damani: There is a movie out now called The Emergency, and I remember that as a young student in 1975, the then Prime Minister Mrs Indira Gandhi imposed the emergency.
03.04 / 11:13
markets Platform Opinion Trade Experts social innovations 'A defining moment': Why stock market veteran Vijay Kedia is not bothered by Trump's tariffs
Vijay Kedia thinks this will be an opportunity for a new transformation, which will pave the way for a new beginning. «A new beginning for India is unfolding. Not just economic but emotional — a renewed faith in our capacity to build, innovate, and lead,» Kedia said on social media platform X.
03.04 / 11:13
Twitter Man Trade President Destiny country International Did a man just crack the 'math' behind Trump's tariffs? Says the calculation is ‘extraordinary nonsense’
April 2, 2025, was declared Liberation Day by President Donald Trump—a momentous occasion where he unveiled sweeping tariffs aimed at foreign nations. In his dramatic announcement from the White House, Trump proclaimed, “April 2, 2025, will forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn, the day America's destiny was reclaimed, and the day that we began to 'Make America Wealthy Again.’”
03.04 / 09:47
markets UPS security Trade country Commentary Headlines Post tariff tantrum, expect a correction in short term; more positive on India in H2: Manishi Raychaudhuri
Manishi Raychaudhuri, Veteran Investor, says India is somewhere in the middle of the pack. Headline tariffs show that some Southeast Asian countries have been slapped with much larger tariffs. So all this is playing out, and the market did not have a drastic fall post the tariff announcement. However, we should not lull ourselves into a sense of security, just going by what we are seeing today. Tariffs at the rate of 34% have been slapped on China, add 20% of historical tariff and that makes it 54%. It is 26% in India, 40% in Vietnam and when such tariffs are slapped, financial markets get into a panic mode. But that is not happening. It is a good morning for Asia this morning. Markets have recovered from the day's low. Are markets getting complacent or it is time to move on? Manishi Raychaudhuri: To some extent, there is the possibility of demand retrenchment across the world, but particularly in the United States, that situation has not yet been factored in. The initial reaction of the market despite this is what I call a nuclear trade, almost a ‘nuclear battle’ in a sense in the trade regime.
03.04 / 04:05
COST President Experts country testing rights US Commerce Secy Lutnick evades India tariff question post Trump's announcement
tariffs on India. When reached out to Lutnick regarding a query on the tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump, he avoided the question and walked away. Trump announced new import tariffs on Wednesday (local time), outlining the rates to be imposed on countries around the world. India will face a 26 percent tariff. Calling Prime Minister Narendra Modi a «great friend,» Trump said that India charges the US 52 per cent, and «we charge them almost nothing.» ALSO READ: Govt analysing impact of 26% Trump tariff on India; it's mixed bag, not setback: Official Trump's announcement came while he addressed the Make America Wealthy Again Event.
03.04 / 03:21
markets COST Food Research International India's farm exports may withstand US tariffs as competitors face steeper duties, says economist
Trump's 26 per cent tariff on Indian goods would have a limited impact on key agricultural exports like seafood and rice when compared to higher duties imposed on regional competitors, Gulati said. «We should not look at the tariff increase in absolute terms, but see relative tariff increases with our competitors,» Gulati told PTI. The former chairman of the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices (CACP) noted that while India faces 26 per cent tariffs, China faces 34 per cent, creating an 8 per cent differential advantage for Indian exporters. Other competitors face even steeper barriers, with Vietnam at 46 per cent, Bangladesh at 37 per cent, Thailand at 36 per cent, and Indonesia at 32 per cent, Gulati said.
03.04 / 03:21
markets UPS Strategy Trade country electronic India better placed on electronics than China, Vietnam after Trump move: Industry
As per India Cellular and Electronics Association (ICEA), India has emerged favourably placed in the first round of reciprocal tariff announcements, especially compared to key electronics export competitors like China, Vietnam, Thailand, and Indonesia following the extraordinary and relentless efforts by our negotiators and leaders. Read More:Trump's 26% tariffs put pressure on India. Is New Delhi ready for the impact?
03.04 / 02:23
markets UPS Manufacturing Apple Trade President country Trump tariffs aim to bring down curtain on era of globalization
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. President Trump’s biggest tariff blitz yet sends a clear message to U.S. and foreign companies alike: The era of globalization is over.
03.04 / 02:11
COST Target CEO economy Food Bill Trade Companies face a new reality of Trump tariff chaos
global trade it pioneered and furthered over several decades. Trump says the levies will bring jobs back to the United States — but executives in the immediate aftermath were focused on possibly raising prices, reducing shipments to the world's largest economy, or just cutting back investment activity outright. «This is how you sabotage the world's economic engine while claiming to supercharge it,» said Nigel Green, CEO of global financial advisory deVere Group. «The reality is stark: these tariffs will push prices higher on thousands of everyday goods — from phones to food — and that will fuel inflation at a time when it is already uncomfortably persistent.» Trump sees tariffs as a way of protecting the domestic economy from unfair global competition and a bargaining chip for better terms for the U.S.
03.04 / 01:43
markets Reuters Trade Features Investigations What are Trump's new reciprocal tariffs and how will they impact trade?
Here's a look at some of the new tariff regime's key features, as detailed in Trump's executive order.
03.04 / 01:43
markets Provident Dash Trade President country Asian stocks drop, bonds jump as Trump tariffs sap risk
S&P 500 futures sank over 3.5% while contracts on the Nasdaq 100 slid 4.5%. Shares in Australia, Japan and South Korea tumbled at the open Thursday. US 10-year Treasury yields slumped with the flight to havens also lifting the Japanese yen and gold, which touched a new record high.
03.04 / 00:23
markets IPO Provident SPY information Swedish PE firm EQT plans Rs 4,000 crore IPO for Straive
IPO) for its portfolio company Straive in India, said people familiar with the matter. EQT has appointed Axis Capital, JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley to manage the offering for the edtech-focused data and solutions provider, the people said.
02.04 / 21:11
Target Manufacturing Action Trade President country Equality India to face 26% US tariff as Trump unveils reciprocal trade measures on global imports; China hit with 34%
China, which has long been a target of US trade actions, will face a hefty 34% tariff, while the European Union will see a 20% levy. Vietnam, another key player in the global trade landscape, will bear the heaviest burden with a 46% tariff on its imports to the U.S. The tariffs, which Trump announced on what he referred to as “Liberation Day,” are designed to boost US manufacturing and punish countries for trade imbalances.
02.04 / 14:21
UPS Manufacturing Strategy Pfizer Trade country Pharmaceuticals How Trump’s tariffs could upend pharma’s overseas tax strategy
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. Pfizer in 2019 sold $20 billion of drugs in the U.S. Its federal tax bill? Zero.
02.04 / 12:45
markets COST Fox Platform Trade Universities country Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs: When, where, and how to watch – which countries and sectors will be most affected?
global trade tensions and sparking uncertainty in markets worldwide. These tariffs, designed to counter what Trump calls unfair trade practices, are expected to reshape global commerce in a significant way.
02.04 / 04:13
UPS Target economy Trade country Trump tariff rollout to retaliate against India & others opens new era of risk for global economy
Donald Trump on Wednesday is set to announce the most expansive US trade restrictions in a century, at a stroke upending the postwar global trading system and posing difficult-to-predict economic risks. The administration’s plans to impose what Trump calls reciprocal tariffs have left investors, executives, government officials and consumers around the world guessing what lays ahead when he takes the podium at the 4 p.m. White House Rose Garden event. Deliberations are coming down to the wire, with the size and scope of new levies still being discussed Tuesday. Also Read: As tariff clock counts down, Trump is still up for 'a good negotiation' The lack of details so far on the structure, size and targets of the levies have left the world “flying blind” heading into the big announcement day, according to Nomura Holdings Inc. chief economist Rob Subbaraman. “The Trump administration’s proposed reciprocal tariffs mean different things to different people,” he wrote in a recent note to clients. While a direct approach means the US matching the levies that other nations impose on US goods, “we suspect the criteria for US reciprocal tariffs will be much broader than that, and indeed more difficult to quantify.”
02.04 / 02:45
markets Booking Manufacturing Platform Trade country International Shri Ahimsa Naturals shares to debut today. Here's what GMP indicates
Shri Ahimsa Naturals will debut on the NSE SME platform today. The GMP is currently at 16% over the issue price of Rs 119 apiece. The company offered 62 lakh shares to investors, which included a fresh equity sale of 42.03 lakh shares and an offer for sale (OFS) of 19.99 lakh shares. The issue was booked nearly 63 times as non-institutional investors piled on bids 182 times more than that are reserved for them.
31.03 / 08:35
BLOCK Analysis economy Research poverty country reports Why India can’t take its demographic dividend for granted
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. By its own estimate, the Indian government expects the economy to close 2024-25 with an expansion of 6.4%. That would make India one of the fastest-growing economies, but it’s still some way from maximising its unique demographic moment.
31.03 / 04:09
Waters CEO Analysis Discover information testing China discovers major new oilfield off Shenzhen
The Huizhou 19-6 oilfield lies about 170 kilometres (100 miles) from Shenzhen in south China's Guangdong Province, Beijing's Xinhua news agency said. Test drilling has yielded a daily production of 413 barrels of crude oil and 68,000 cubic meters of natural gas, the CNOOC said. The state-owned oil giant's CEO, Zhou Xinhuai, hailed «successive breakthroughs in oil and gas exploration in the eastern waters of the South China Sea». CNOOC «has discovered 100-million-ton oilfields for two consecutive years, which creates a new growth pole for the continuous growth in offshore oil and gas production,» he added.
30.03 / 11:57
markets COST Manufacturing President Experts country Imports, price challenges to affect stainless steel sector in Q1: Experts
The inflow of low-cost imports, particularly from China and Vietnam, remains a concern for domestic manufacturers, ISSDA President Rajamani Krishnamurti said in reply to a query on the outlook for Q1 FY26. «The stainless steel sector is also likely to encounter challenges such as volatile raw material prices, especially for key inputs like nickel and ferroalloys,» he said.

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