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Fisheries Research and Development in the Mekong Region
Volume 14, No.2, September 2008

Mekong Delta catfish industry under intense financial pressure

By Peter Starr*

With the Vietnamese economy overheating earlier this year, the aquaculture bubble has burst. But catfish exports are still booming.

VN Index
Six months to June 30, 2008

Source: Vietcombank Securities

With the value of shares listed on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange losing more than half their value during the first half of 2008, the aquaculture industry has emerged as one of the weakest sectors of the overall Vietnamese equity market. As monetary authorities raised interest rates to curb inflation, the market capitalisation of five catfish processors in the Mekong Delta dropped by 72% in the six months to June (see table below). Leading catfish producer An Giang Fisheries (Agifish), a major exporter which has been listed for six years, lost two thirds of its value. So did Cuu Long Fish (CL-Fish Corp), a rival catfish processor from An Giang province which listed its shares only last year (see charts below).

Another relative newcomer to the market, Ben Tre Forestry and Aquaculture (Faquimex), suffered an even steeper decline. Faquimex, which processes both catfish and shrimp, made its trading debut on January 14 this year. By the end of June, its share price had lost three-quarters of its value and was barely trading above par. The heaviest losses were suffered by Nam Viet Corp (Navico), the biggest catfish exporter. Navico’s share price fell almost 90%. In the space of six months, it went from being the biggest to the smallest of the five processors in terms of market capitalisation. Losses were less acute for Ben Tre Aquaproduct (Aquatex Bentre). Its share price dropped 59%, broadly in line with the 57% decline in the VN Index (see chart above).

The upshot is that investors wiped 3.1 trillion dong (US$187 million) off the value of these five companies during the first half of the year. As a result, their combined market capitalisation fell from 4.3 trillion dong ($260 million) at the end of 2007 to 1.2 trillion dong ($73 million) at the end of June. The impact on actual business conditions has been mixed. In January for example, CL-Fish announced plans to contribute 32.4 billion dong ($2 million) towards the establishment of a joint venture capitalised at 90 billion dong ($5.5 million), giving it a stake of 36%. In April, it decided to go ahead with the venture with Thai Son Co and three foreign partners—Singapore’s Inter-Ocean Foods, Malaysia’s Piau Kee Holdings and a Saudi Arabian partner. However, the company also announced that it had postponed the construction of a joint-venture processing plant targeting export markets in Russia, Singapore and Eastern Europe. At the same time, Faquimex postponed an additional share issue to raise 105 billion dong ($6.4 million).

Selected catfish processors
Listed on the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange

Code Name Province Est List Staff Ownership (%) Market Cap (VND blk)
            State Foreign Dec 28 2008 Jun 30 2008
ABT
Aquatex Bentre
Ben Tre
NA 2006 NA NA 51.8  729 297
ACL
CL-Fish
An Giang
2003 2007 1223 NA NA  761 230
AGF
Agifish
An Giang
2001 2002 2561   8.2 47.0 1060 390
FBT
Faquimex
Ben Tre
NA 2008 NA 32.8   8.8 *630 155
NAV
Navico
An Giang
2001 2006  853 30.0 NA 1104 127
                4284  1199 
Source: Vietcombank Securities * Jan 14

Despite sharp declines in values, foreign investors remain among the key shareholders in at least two companies, holding 47% of Agifish and 52% of Aquatex Bentre in August. These included a fund listed on the Irish Stock Exchange and several funds operated by Dragon Capital, a foreign portfolio fund manager with offices in Viet Nam, Britain and New Zealand.

Share prices
First Half, 2008

Company
Dec 28, 2007
Closing Price
(VND)
Jun 30, 2008
Closing Price
(VND)
Change (%)
Aquatex Bentre
90,000 36,600 - 59.3
CL-Fish
84,500 25,600 - 69.7
Agifish
82,400 30,300 - 63.3
Faquimex
*42,000
10,300 - 75.5
Faquim
138,000  15,900 - 88.5
VN Index
927.02 399.40 - 56.9

Source: Vietcombank Securities * Jan 14

Government and central bank intervene
According to Nguyen Hoang Vu, a former marketing manager with Roussel Viet Nam who now runs his own consulting firm, the dollar's recent appreciation against the dong and rising inflation caused considerable difficulties among all stakeholders. "The situation in early 2008 was an alert to the industry," Vu wrote in the May-June edition of Aqua Culture Asia-Pacific magazine. "Farmers with banks loans had to pay higher interest rates while processing plants could not sell (dollars) to get Vietnamese dong in order to purchase raw materials".

With tighter credit conditions creating supply bottle-necks, Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hao instructed banks in June to provide loans to processors to buy an estimated 300,000 tonnes of catfish over the next three months. According to Sai Gon Giai Phong, the party newspaper in Ho Chi Minh City, processors in An Giang province alone needed 2.2 trillion dong ($133 million) to maintain operations until the end of the year. At the same time, State Bank of Viet Nam Governor Nguyen Van Giau reportedly indicated that priority commercial bank lending would be directed towards the catfish sector as a key export industry.

Results and forecasts
Based on annual meeting resolutions

Company
Sales (VND bln) Net Profite
(VND bln)
 
2007 (actual) 2008 (forecast) 2007 (actual) 2008 (forecast)
Aquatex Bentre
427 500 39 40
CL-Fish
538 640 56 60
Agifish
1,246  
1,400   40 NA
Faquimex
366  727 16 37
Navico
NA NA NA NA

Source: Vietcombank Securities * Jan 14

With inflation rising to 25% during the first half of the year, feed traders and farmers were also reported to be suffering. Sai Gon Giai Phong reported that feed traders had stopped accepting instalment payments from farmers and that some buyers were taking advantage of the situation to squeeze farmers. Agifish indicated as much in its first-quarter earnings statement released in late May. Although sales in the March quarter declined 5.7% from the December quarter, earnings more than doubled to 5.3 billion dong ($0.3 million) in the same period. Agifish attributed the higher, albeit modest, earnings to controls over input costs and management expenses in addition to lower

Agifish share price (AGF)
Six months to June, 2008

 

Cuu Long Fish share price (ACL)
Six months to June 30, 2008


Source: Vietcombank Securities
 

Source: Vietcombank Securities

Faquimex share price (FBT)
January 14 to June 30, 2008

 

Aquatex Ben Tre share price (ABT)
Six months to June 30, 2008


Source: Vietcombank Securities
 

Source: Vietcombank Securities

Navico share price (NAV)
Six months to June 30, 2008

Source: Vietcombank Securities

catfish prices. According to the Viet Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers (VASEP), average export prices for catfish were $2.33 per kilogram in the five months to May, down 18% from the same period in 2007. Navico blamed falling export prices and rising production costs for its lower first-half earnings. In August, Navico said its pre-tax profit fell 19% from a year earlier to 164 billion dong ($9.9 million) in the six months to June.

Exports keep booming
The Vietnamese catfish export boom meanwhile showed no signs of contracting during the first five months of this year. The value of exports of Sutchi river catfish (Pangasianodon hypophthalmus) and Bocourt’s catfish (Pangasius bocourti) leapt 31% from a year earlier to $487 million in the five months to May. According to VASEP, export volumes jumped 48% to over 209,000 tonnes in the same period. In terms of value, Russia was the biggest single market for these two species, known as ca tra and ca basa in Vietnamese. Russia accounted for more than 12% of all exports followed Spain with more than 10% and the Netherlands and Germany with about 8% each. Ukraine and the United States each accounted for about 6% of exports and were followed by Mexico (4%), Hong Kong and Australia (3% each) and Thailand and Singapore (2% each).

During the five-month period, Navico was the leading exporter with shipments of $81 million. Among the other listed companies, Agifish ranked fourth with $20 million, while CL Fish was seventh with $15 million. Following an anti-dumping ruling by the United States in 2003 and confusion with American species of catfish, the two Mekong species are mostly marketed abroad these days as pangasius, basa, panga or sutchi filets. According to Vu, "new export markets such as Mexico and the core markets in Europe are seen as a guarantee that catfish production will continue its growth as previewed."

*Mr Starr is editor of Catch and Cultur


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