“Made in Vietnam 2025” Fair draws nearly 100 businesses

At the fair, consumers and visitors can explore and purchase a wide range of specialties and OCOP (One Commune, One Product) products, spanning food items, traditional handicrafts, as well as textiles, garments and leather goods.

Garment and fashion products by Vietnamese enterprises are showcased at the fair. (Photo: VNA)
Garment and fashion products by Vietnamese enterprises are showcased at the fair. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) – The “Made in Vietnam 2025” Fair, which officially opened in Hanoi on December 12 evening, is featuring more than 300 booths with the participation of nearly 100 manufacturing enterprises.

Held at the Hoa Binh Park, the expo forms part of a series of trade promotion programmes implemented in the capital towards the end of the year. It aims to promote Vietnamese-made products, stimulate domestic consumption and help stabilise the market, particularly during the year-end period when consumer demand rises sharply.

Participating manufacturers, cooperatives and representatives of industry associations come from 15 provinces and cities, including Dien Bien, Lai Chau, Ninh Binh, Hanoi, Thanh Hoa, Nghe An, Nha Trang and Ca Mau.

At the fair, consumers and visitors can explore and purchase a wide range of specialties and OCOP (One Commune, One Product) products, spanning food items, traditional handicrafts, as well as textiles, garments and leather goods.

According to Nguyen The Hiep, Deputy Director of the Hanoi Department of Industry and Trade, the event provides a valuable opportunity for businesses and localities to promote made-in-Vietnam products and regional specialties to domestic and international consumers and visitors, while participating more effectively in supply and consumption chains in the capital’s market. It also serves as a platform for distributors to identify and select reliable sources of goods, while enabling consumers to access products with clear origins and reasonable prices during the year-end shopping season.

The fair runs until December 15./.

VNA

See more

Local residents and visitors tour and shop at a fair. (Photo: VNA)

Made in Vietnam Fair set to open in Hanoi

The Made in Vietnam Fair will showcase a wide range of products, including industrial and consumer goods, processed foods, agricultural produce and handicrafts, with the participation of distribution systems, e-commerce platforms, digital platforms and digital financial solution providers operating in Vietnam.

2025 a good year for Vietnam’s securities sector: SSC

2025 a good year for Vietnam’s securities sector: SSC

During the year, the SSC made significant progress in improving the legal and policy framework. Institutional work was implemented in a coordinated manner, including the issuance of two decrees, one resolution, seven circulars and three major schemes. At the same time, the regulator strengthened policy dialogue and expanded cooperation with international organisations to support the market upgrade process.

Vietnam shows strong FDI performance in the first 11 months of 2025 (Source: vtv.vn)

Vietnam shifting FDI attraction focus from volume to quality

As production relocation to Southeast Asia accelerates and competition for FDI intensifies, Vietnam faces increasing pressure from regional rivals such as India, Malaysia and Indonesia, which are offering bold tax incentives and developing specialised industrial parks. This reality requires Vietnam to shift its focus from attracting large volumes of capital to drawing high-quality investment, prioritising core technologies, innovation, value chain linkages and higher localisation rates.

Vice Chairman of the Ho Chi Minh City People’s Committee Hoang Nguyen Dinh inspects IUU fishing prevention efforts at Hung Thai Port in Long Hai commune. (Photo: VNA)

Ho Chi Minh City steps up oversight of unqualified fishing vessels

HCM City currently has 4,475 fishing vessels, all of which have been registered and updated on the VNFishbase system. Among them, 4,268 vessels, or 95.37%, have been granted fishing licences, while 207 unqualified vessels are being strictly managed and kept ashore.

Airlangga Hartarto (fifth from right), Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs, and CEO of VinFast Asia Pham Sanh Chau (sixth from right) at the plant opening ceremony on December 15. (Photo: VinFast)

VinFast inaugurates EV plant in Indonesia

The VinFast Subang plant was completed and put into operation just 17 months after groundbreaking, demonstrating the company's rapid execution capability and strong implementation capacity. This is VinFast's fourth operational facility worldwide, and its first plant in Indonesia and Southeast Asia outside of Vietnam.

From early December, major retail chains in Ho Chi Minh City have recorded a noticeable increase in shoppers seeking Tet products. (Photo: VNA)

HCM City businesses ramp up production to meet Lunar New Year demand

From early December, major retail chains in the city have recorded a noticeable increase in shoppers seeking Tet products. Many consumers are taking advantage of promotional programmes to purchase gift items with long shelf lives, such as confectionery, soft drinks and processed foods, well ahead of the holiday peak.

Workers process fish to be tinned for export at KTC Canned Food Factory under Kien Giang Trading JSC. (Photo: VNA)

Vietnam to host seminar on export growth strategies

Vietnam's exports rose 16.1% to 430.2 billion USD in the first 11 months of 2025, while total trade hit 839.8 billion USD during the same period. This strong performance shows that exports remain a key driver of economic growth, boosting Vietnam's standing on the world stage in recent years.

The vessel carrying the 2 millionth TEU arrives at Hai Phong Port. (Photo:VNA)

Hai Phong Port reaches 2-million-TEU milestone

Handling the 2 millionth TEU in 2025 not only demonstrates Hai Phong Port’s operational capacity and the collective efforts of its workforce, but also highlights its increasingly important role in regional and global supply chains, the confidence of shipping lines, logistics firms and the business community, and the effectiveness of policies to improve the investment climate and strengthen maritime infrastructure and services.

Melons labelled with traceability codes on display at the Song Van agricultural produce store in Ninh Binh city, Ninh Binh province. (Photo: VNA)

Tracing origins hindered by fragmented data systems

As the Government accelerates the digital economy, establishing a unified national traceability system has become a crucial move to end data fragmentation and disconnection among ministries, sectors and localities.