12/31/2010
Source: Thanh Nien, SGTT (Hanoi)
With Laos and Cambodia’s first stock exchanges slated to begin trading next year, Vietnamese  securities companies are seeking to expand their operations and  Vietnamese stock market players see more investment options. 
The Lao Securities Exchange was  established in October and will commence trading operations on January  11. Banque pour le Commerce Exterieur Lao (BCEL), one of the largest  commercial banks in the country, and EDLGeneration Pcl, a unit of  state-owned Electricite du Laos, will be the first two enterprises to be  listed on the bourse.
The exchange’s opening has  helped Vietnam’s Sacombank Securities expand its business to the  smallest economy in Southeast Asia. The brokerage firm and the Lao  Development Bank (LDP) have set up the first securities firm in Laos,  named Lane Xang Securities Public Co. Sacombank Securities holds a 51-  percent stake in the joint venture.
Lane Xang was financial adviser for the initial public offering (IPO - a necessary process before being listed) made by BCEL.
The firm has also signed deals to do the same for other Lao enterprises.
“Lane Xang has won in  competition with many Thai and Korean securities companies [to become  advisers to the BCEL IPO] as the Lao economy is similar to Vietnam’s,  which has begun from a state-owned base and then entered the  equitization stage,” said Nguyen Hoang Giang, consultancy director of  Sacombank Securities.
Giang said Lane Xang Securities  not only provides financial consultancy services for enterprises seeking  to list their shares on the Lao stock exchange but also acts as a  broker for investors wanting to trade shares on the bourse.
The IPO of BCEL, the first-ever  in Laos, closed on December 23. The atmosphere was exciting and the  shares were oversubscribed, said Giang.
Nearly 20.5 million BCEL shares,  or 15 percent of the lender’s registered capital, were offered on  auction at an average bid price of 5,910 kip (74 US cents), he said.
Only Lao investors were  permitted to subscribe for shares in the bank as the Lao Securities  Exchange Commission is yet to decide on the portion of shares that  foreign investors can hold in a company, the Vientiane Times said on  December 15.
However, many Vietnamese investors are hopeful that they will get the opportunity to buy shares of Lao companies in future IPOs.
As for the Cambodia, the Kingdom’s first stock exchange is also due to open in 2011.
The launch of the US$6 million  bourse, which is being built by a South Korean developer, has twice been  delayed but the Finance Ministry says it will begin trading by July  2011 “at all costs.”
The ministry has given priority  to state companies for listing, and has asked Telecom Cambodia, port  operator Sihanoukville Autonomous Port and the Phnom Penh Water Supply  Authority to list their shares, Reuters said last month.
Meanwhile, two  Vietnamese firms, Cambodia-Vietnam Securities and Sacombank Securities  (Cambodia), are among fifteen companies that have been granted licenses  by the Securities and Exchange Commission of Cambodia to operate on the  bourse.
The former is permitted to  operate as an underwriter that will provide advice on the issue of  securities - such as pricing, public offerings and distribution  timelines.
The Cambodia-Vietnam Securities  Company belongs to the Bank for Investment and Development of Cambodia  Plc, a subsidiary of the Bank for Investment and Development of Vietnam,  also known as BIDV.
Several other Vietnamese  companies that wished to remain anonymous said they had plans to open  securities firms in Laos and Cambodia in the near future.






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