TPP - 9h sáng nay giờ VN 1-8 sẽ được thông qua

Chủ đề trong 'Thị trường chứng khoán' bởi KenHirai, 01/08/2015.

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  1. KenHirai

    KenHirai Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    http://kinhdoanh.vnexpress.net/tin-...ong-bo-ket-qua-vong-dam-phan-tpp-3257000.html
    Sáng nay công bố kết quả vòng đàm phán TPP
    Cuộc họp của bộ trưởng thương mại 12 nước kéo dài hơn dự kiến, song hứa hẹn mạng lại thông tin quyết định về Hiệp định Đối tác Xuyên Thái Bình Dương (TPP) trong vài giờ tới.
    Hôm nay (1/8), Bộ trưởng Thương mại 12 nước tham gia TPP sẽ tổ chức họp báo công bố kết quả cuộc họp cấp bộ trưởng lần thứ 5, diễn ra tại Hawaii (Mỹ) từ ngày 28 đến 31/7.

    Ban đầu, cuộc họp báo dự kiến được tổ chức lúc 6h30 sáng nay (theo giờ Việt Nam), song do quá trình đàm phán kéo dài, ban tổ chức cho biết việc công bố sẽ được dời lại đến khoảng 9h. Vòng đàm phán này được coi là cơ hội cuối cùng để các bên tiến tới thỏa thuận. Nếu bỏ lỡ, các nước sẽ phải chờ đến sau bầu cử Tổng thống Mỹ năm 2017 mới có thể ký được TPP.

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    Đại diện thương mại 12 nước tham gia đàm phán TPP tại Hawaii. Ảnh: Nikkei

    Trước đó, vòng đàm phán giữa các bộ trưởng được kỳ vọng rất cao, khi đại điện các nước đều tỏ ra lạc quan. Hai gã khổng lồ Mỹ và Nhật Bản - đã gần như giải quyết được các vấn đề lâu nay về nông sản và ôtô. Quốc hội Mỹ tháng trước cũng chính thức thông qua Quyền đàm phán nhanh (TPA). Việc này sẽ giúp Tổng thống Mỹ - Barrack Obama xúc tiến đàm phán với 11 quốc gia còn lại trong TPP.

    Tuy vậy, trong quá trình đàm phán, mỗi quốc gia đều đưa ra những điều kiện riêng để xem xét có nhượng bộ hay không. Chẳng hạn theo tin từ Nikkei, đến chiều 31/7 (theo giờ Việt Nam), Malaysia và Việt Nam vẫn chưa nhất trí với các nước còn lại về việc mở cửa cho nhà thầu nước ngoài cung cấp sản phẩm cho Chính phủ, đưa doanh nghiệp nhà nước vào khu vực tư nhân và áp dụng các biện pháp bảo hộ quyền sở hữu trí tuệ ngặt nghèo trong lĩnh vực dược phẩm.

    Trao đổi cùng ngày với VnExpress, Thứ trưởng Công Thương - Cao Quốc Hưng cũng xác nhận một số thoả thuận về vấn đề lao động cũng chưa được thông suốt, song Việt Nam và các nước vẫn đang tiếp tục đàm phán để tìm được tiếng nói chung.

    TPP được đàm phán từ tháng 3/2010, gồm 12 quốc gia - Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Nhật Bản, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Mỹ và Việt Nam. Các vấn đề được nêu ra trong hiệp định gồm quyền sở hữu trí tuệ, luật đầu tư nước ngoài, tiêu chuẩn môi trường và lao động, chính sách thu mua, cạnh tranh và công ty quốc doanh, quy trình xử lý tranh chấp. TPP sẽ bao phủ 40% kinh tế toàn cầu và được dự báo bổ sung cho GDP thế giới thêm gần 300 tỷ USD mỗi năm.

    Tuần sau dệt may đại diện có TCM, thủy sản đại diện có HVG AVF sẽ tăng trần cả tuần. Anh em có hàng chuẩn bị lướt trên con sóng lớn :D
    npp2010 đã loan bài này
  2. votuyet

    votuyet Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com Not Official

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    Cầu mong cho nó xong. Ko xong là mấy bác ôm dệt may ,thủy sản tuần sau đj nặng.
    KenHiraiNHATVECHAI thích bài này.
  3. KenHirai

    KenHirai Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    Những phút đàm phán cuối cùng
    Trans-Pacific Partnership trade talks hit last-minute hurdles




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    [​IMG]
    CTV News Channel: Too much momentum?
    Protesters gather against TPP talks in Hawaii
    PHOTOS

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    Trade ministers from 12 Pacific Rim nations negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement pose for a group photo at a meeting in Lahaina, Hawaii on Thursday, July 30, 2015. (AP / Audrey McAvoy)

    Earlier this week, a trade envoy from New Zealand said Canada's refusal at the bargaining table to offer more foreign access to its dairy market could slow up negotiations.

    On Friday, the U.S. Trade Department delayed a scheduled news conference on the progress of negotiations from 7:30 p.m. ET until 10 p.m. ET.

    Ottawa says the countries in the partnership represent some 800 million people with a combined gross domestic product of roughly 40 per cent of the global economy.

    Harper has also said Canada "cannot be left out of this kind of trade arrangement."


    Supporters of the deal say it would create openings for Canada in dynamic Asian markets for the first time and, in particular, Japan -- the world's third-largest economy.

    Trade experts argue Canada can't afford to miss out on a massive deal they say would help many domestic industries, including the services sector as well as beef and pork producers.

    But a decision by the Harper government to loosen supply management of the dairy sector would be politically sensitive, particularly with the ruling Conservatives expected to kick off an election campaign as early as Sunday.

    The prospect of opening up access to the market has been met by strong opposition from dairy farmers and has even led to protests.

    http://www.ctvnews.ca/business/tran...trade-talks-hit-last-minute-hurdles-1.2497494
    khanhloan03 thích bài này.
  4. NHATVECHAI

    NHATVECHAI Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com Not Official

    Tham gia ngày:
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    Còn bất đồng cả đống lần này thất bại rồi. Về sở hữu trí tụê dược phẩm, đấu thấu chính phủ, bất đồng khối Nhật - Úc ....v....v...
    KenHirai thích bài này.
  5. KenHirai

    KenHirai Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    Mỹ chống lưng, tất cả bất đồng và vấn đề xung đột sẽ đc gạt qua 1 bên. Các tiếng nói phản đối đều trở lên yếu ớt. 9h Việt Nam sẽ thông qua TPP.
    Ông nào phản đối loại luôn. Mỹ sẽ ép tất cả phải theo.

    http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07-...ed-at-us-backflip-on-tpp-negotiations/6664264
    Australian dairy industry disappointed at US 'backflip' on TPP negotiations
    By the National Reporting Team's Helen Brown
    Updated about an hour ago

    [​IMG]PHOTO: Australian dairy farmers are seeking better access to the US market. (Warwick Long)
    RELATED STORY: Bitter battle continues to get sugar deal in Trans Pacific Partnership
    RELATED STORY: #TalkAboutIt: Five ways the TPP could affect you
    MAP: United States
    The Australian dairy industry has expressed "extreme disappointment" over what it calls a back-flip by the United States in negotiations over a major regional trade deal.

    According to industry figures currently in Maui, Hawaii, for talks on the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP), the US is not sticking to a position agreed to 18 months ago which was to be the starting point for this round of negotiations.

    "When we heard, we were absolutely devastated by it because it put us back so much," Australian Dairy Council chairman Noel Campbell said.

    "We thought 18 months ago we had moved a long way, and not to understand it was changing right at the last minute was really distressing."

    Australian dairy farmers are seeking better access to the US market as part of talks around what could possibly become a major trade and investment agreement for the Pacific Rim.

    The industry is looking for access into a huge consumer market currently subject to a regime of quotas and tariffs.

    But the industry also expects the US, which initiated the TPP, to take the lead in breaking down trade barriers.

    According to Mr Campbell the US now will not budge unless Canada opens its markets.

    Meanwhile US officials have said they do not believe the previous position with Australia "had been agreed to".

    "We were totally surprised. It came out of left field. The government — exactly the same," Mr Campbell said.

    The week-long discussions are supposed to close this weekend and are considered one of the final chances to seal an in-principle agreement before upcoming elections in the US and Canada.

    "So when you've got a very short time to negotiate these sorts of things it's absolutely what you don't need," Mr Campbell said.

    "I guess it's always going to be an issue with the Canadians in dairy with how they operate in dairy and other things so it's not unexpected but certainly the US thing is unexpected."

    First trade talks since US senate handed power to president
    The talks are the first since the US senate gave the president the power to negotiate trade agreements such as the TPP without them being picked apart later by lawmakers.

    The deal is meant to be one of Barack Obama's signature policies to strengthen US economic ties and presence in the Asia Pacific region.

    There are 12 nations involved in the negotiations, including Japan.

    On that front, Australian dairy farmers could have reason to feel more confident.

    "With respect to some of the other markets, it's moved more substantially and we believe we'll be able to have a deal with Japan, which is one of our major markets, which is superior to what we've currently got under the Economic Partnership we had with Japan last year," Mr Campbell, who is also the president of the Australian Dairy Farmers Association, said.

    He said the changed US position could not be accepted and had undermined confidence in the proceedings.

    He also said Trade Minister Andrew Robb and the negotiating team had done a good job and would take the dairy industry's position significantly into account.

    Mr Robb said dairy remained an important consideration and the Government was "continuing to push for meaningful gains in both the US and with other TPP countries".
    Polarbear2012khanhloan03 thích bài này.
  6. TrumBDS

    TrumBDS Thành viên tích cực Not Official

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    Đàm phán TPP thất bại rồi, bán thôi. Bán cho mấy thằng kêu còn bất đồng, thất bại. \:D/
    Polarbear2012KenHirai thích bài này.
  7. Lamexpo

    Lamexpo Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    Bán hết
    Tuần sau bank, bh, ck lên ngôi
    KenHirai thích bài này.
  8. KenHirai

    KenHirai Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    99% sẽ được thông qua vì cả ý nghĩa Kinh tế lẫn Chính Trị. Nếu ai nghĩ rộng 1 chút sẽ thấy TPP là ko thể ko thông qua.

    http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/national/280132/the-tpp-a-guide-for-the-perplexed
    The TPP - a guide for the perplexed

    Updated at 7:30 pm on 31 July 2015

    Patrick O'Meara, Economics Correspondent - patrick.omeara@radionz.co.nz

    As the final round of talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership winds up in Hawaii, Economics Correspondent Patrick O'Meara provides a beginner's guide to the deal.

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    Photo: RNZ / Anusha Bradley

    Negotiators from the 12 countries involved are meeting at a Maui resort in an effort to wrap up the deal this week.

    But there are fears for New Zealand's main export industry, with Andrew Hoggard of Federated Farmers saying he had received reports from the meeting that did not looking promising for the dairy sector.

    Critics have raised concerns over the ability of corporations to sue the Government, and there have been warnings from health experts that New Zealanders could face higher costs and a longer wait for medicines.

    The Waitangi Tribunal is among organisations that have also questioned the secrecy surrounding the deal.

    What is the Trans-Pacific Partnership?
    The Trans-Pacific Partnership, or TPP, is a set of trade and investment negotiations among 12 Asia-Pacific countries to cut tariffs and improve access to markets, as well as set common ground on issues such as environmental standards and intellectual property protections for 40 percent of the world economy.

    One contentious but influential study forecast the TPP would raise the economic output of the 12 nations by US$285 billion by 2025.

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    TPP opponents in the United States have mounted campaigns including ads on the streets of Washington, DC.

    Photo: AFP

    Who's in the TPP?
    The world's biggest economy, the United States, and the third largest, Japan, along with Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam.

    Collectively, the 12 TPP economies represent more than US$27 trillion in Gross Domestic Product.

    South Korea has also expressed interest in joining, as has China.

    How long have the TPP talks been going?
    The TPP started in 2006 as an expansion of the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership Agreement, or P4, which was made up of Brunei, Chile, Singapore and New Zealand.

    More and more countries joined, including the United States in 2010, and Japan in 2013.

    The participants had hoped to wrap up the negotiations by 2013, but that's proven easier said than done, with a number of self-imposed deadlines being missed.

    Why?
    The deal is complex, and reaching agreement among the 12 nations has proven elusive as issues such as market access for agricultural goods, tougher intellectual property rules and investor state dispute rules have proven politically sensitive.

    The issue also raises questions of national sovereignty, and that has raised fears among a number of groups, including unions, and consumer and environmental organisations, that corporations, not workers or consumers, will be the winners.

    [​IMG]
    Photo: RNZ / Anusha Bradley

    Sounds tricky to sort out - what are the main issues of contention for New Zealand?
    For New Zealand, it's market access, particularly for dairy products.

    It's facing considerable resistance from Japan and Canada, which are loathe to open up their dairy markets to cheaper producers like New Zealand and the US.

    It's complicated further by Canada holding an election later this year, and the Prime Minister, Stephen Harper, is thought to be reluctant to antagonise the country's powerful dairy sector.

    As yet, a dairy offer has yet to be tabled.

    New Zealand's dairy industry spokespeople say they don't expect the New Zealand Government to sign a TPP deal if it doesn't include a comprehensive deal for the dairy sector.

    Is that all?
    No. Another contentious area is intellectual property, and protections for pharmaceuticals.

    Leaks indicate the US has demanded pharmaceutical patents apply for up to 12 years before generic drug can be used.

    That's been opposed by a number of countries, and TPP opponents argue any deal should not limit access to life-saving medicines.

    New Zealand's Prime Minister, John Key, concedes the country will have to pay more for some medicines under the TPP, though he's promised the Government would give Pharmac extra money.

    [​IMG]
    John Key has conceded the TPP may increase the costs of medicines.

    Photo: RNZ / Alexander Robertson

    Rules around investors suing Governments is another thorny issue.

    Australia does not like a US push to set up TPP tribunals to resolve disputes investors might have with government decisions, called the Investor-State Dispute Settlement.

    Other nations are also opposed to any rules that would limit their ability to set environmental, health and other policies in the public interest.

    OK, enough for now. Can a deal be done then?
    You wouldn't think so, would you?

    But yes, an agreement could be reached.
    While it's a trade and investment deal, it's also a political deal. And hard decisions will require compromise that only politicians can deliver.

    Indeed, the rhetoric from New Zealand's Government surrounding the deal has changed over time.

    The Prime Minister, John Key, and Trade Minister, Tim Groser, have sought, and demanded, a high quality and comprehensive deal.

    Not any more.

    As the TPP gets down to the nitty gritty of reaching agreement, the bar has fallen.

    The Government's now talking of a deal that is of net benefit to New Zealand. What that means in practice is hard to know, since the TPP talks are secret.

    [​IMG]
    An anti-TPP protest in Washington DC, earlier this year.

    Photo: AFP

    What are the chances then of a conclusion in Maui?
    The stakes are high.

    The US President Barack Obama has made TPP one of the highest priorities of his presidency, and he's determined to get an agreement before the US becomes immersed in the 2016 presidential campaign.

    Analysts says Mr Obama still has to go through a number of steps before Congress gets to vote on the deal, and an agreement this week would help keep that timetable on track.

    But time is running out.

    There are a lot of issues to sort out, and no dairy offer on the table.

    Analysts are hedging their bets, saying the likelihood of a deal is 50-50.

    Certainly, there may be scope for the talks to continue for a couple more weeks, if ministers feel they are close to a deal.

    The TPP meeting in Hawaii is expected to wrap up on late Saturday afternoon (NZT).
    --- Gộp bài viết, 01/08/2015, Bài cũ: 01/08/2015 ---
    Tuần sau thủy sản dệt may sàn cả tuần do.... TPP đã được thông qua :D
    --- Gộp bài viết, 01/08/2015 ---
    Thông qua thì ăn lớn. Ko thông qua thì bớt lãi. Anh em lên tàu sớm bác ạ :D
    Polarbear2012 thích bài này.
  9. TrumBDS

    TrumBDS Thành viên tích cực Not Official

    Tham gia ngày:
    04/07/2015
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    Bậy tuần sau, CK, BH, Bank lên ngôi. Tụi nó ôm này đói lắm rồi, nên giờ cắn bậy thấy topic nào cũng sủa sập. :D
    Polarbear2012KenHirai thích bài này.
  10. stocktrader2015

    stocktrader2015 Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com Not Official

    Tham gia ngày:
    14/02/2015
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    1-8 là sao bác? Vịt Ngan đc 1 thua 8 à? Thế thì nguy hiểm quá.
    KenHirai thích bài này.

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