ABC News reported that a Vietnamese businessman has spent US$18 million to buy a farm with 10,000 cattle in the northern part of Australia. The buyer was Pham Nhat Vu, chair of An Vien Group, a media company.
Vu is the brother of Vietnam's first dollar billionaire recognized by Forbes Pham Nhat Vuong, who is the president of Vingroup. This is the first Vietnamese invested project in animal husbandry in Australia.According to the businessman, except the higher personal income tax, foreign investors are treated like local citizens. Regarding profit, he believes that he would ‘live well’ if he invests US$5 million.
Local newspapers have recently reported that some Vietnamese businessmen bought farms in Canada for pig breeders to export to Vietnam.K, the owner of a pig farm in Canada, said the country does not allow new pig farms, therefore, foreigners can only take over existing farms through stake transfer deals.He said his farm provides meat to the domestic market, and he hopes he can bring pig breeders to Vietnam by mid-2017.Vietnam is a big rice producer and exporter, but Vietnamese also like Cambodian and Lao rice. This has prompted some businesses to grow rice in Cambodia and Laos to export to Vietnam. Loc Troi Group, for example, began developing a 107 hectare rice area in Kampong Speu in Cambodia in 2014, growing rice with no chemical fertilizer.By 2015, the area had been expanded to 340 hectares which provided jobs to 240 households.Nguyen Van Ngai, Economics Dean of the Ho Chi Minh City Agriculture and Forestry University, said that Vietnamese investors, with experience in rice growing, can easily succeed in other countries.
