-
International Financial Reporting Advisory Services
IFRS reporting advisory serivces of Grant Thornton are carried out by our dedicated team with expertise in IFRS implementation.
-
Audit Services
• Statutory audit • Review of financial statements and financial information • Agreed-upon procedures • FRAS services • Compilation of financial information • Reporting accountant • Cross-border audit • US GAAP audit
-
Audit Quality
We have various methods of monitoring our system of quality control and engagement quality, including real-time involvement of coaches and national office personnel on select audit engagements, reviews of issuer audit engagements prior to archiving by someone outside of the engagement team, and internal inspections of assurance engagements and the system of quality control.
-
Audit Approach
Audit Approach
-
Licensing services
Licensing services
-
International tax planning
Our extensive international network provides us with significant resources to meet all your expansion goals. We strive to develop commercially focused and tailored tax strategies to minimise tax exposures and maximise business efficiency.
-
Expatriate tax planning
We have a broad knowledge base and skills to assist you keep your personal income taxes to a legitimate and reasonable level, while remaining compliant with legislation. We can develop a personalised package for each key employee to take maximum advantage of the exemptions and incentives available.
-
Tax advisory
We will review the proposed business model and transactions and advise on tax implications and recommendations to optimize the tax opportunities under the local regulations and treaties which Vietnam entered into. Furthermore, we coordinate with our GT global tax team to provide a comprehensive tax advisory for the countries involved in the business model and transactions.
-
Tax compliance services
This service is designed to assist enterprises to cope with the statutory tax declaration requirements in line with the Vietnamese tax laws as well as the frequent changes and updates in tax laws.
-
Tax health check
Our Tax Health Check involves a high-level review of specific tax areas to highlight the key issues that need to be rectified in order to reduce tax risks. Through our extensive experience, we have identified key risk areas in which many enterprises are not fully compliant or often overlook potential tax planning opportunities. Our tax health check service represents a cost-effective method to proactively manage risks and reduce potential issues arising as a result of a tax inspection.
-
Transfer Pricing
Transfer pricing is a pervasive tax issue among multinational companies. In Vietnam, the tax authorities require special documentation to report related party transactions. Compliance with transfer pricing regulations is an important aspect of doing business effectively in Vietnam as failure to do so may result in significant penalties.
-
Tax due diligence
We conduct tax due diligence reviews of target companies to analyse their tax exposure and position in relation to acquisitions, mergers or consolidations. We are able to integrate this service with our Advisory Services department in order to offer a comprehensive, holistic due diligence review.
-
Customs and international trade
Our experienced professionals can help you manage customs issues more effectively through valuation planning and making use of available free trade agreements. We also assist Clients in optimising their customs procedures by making use of potential duty exemptions and efficient import-export structures. Risk mitigation activities include customs audit defense and compliance reviews.
-
M&A Transaction
We advise numerous foreign investors on efficient tax structures for their investments. Our experience allows you to consider all the options and set up a corporate structure that meets both operational and tax efficiency requirements. In short, the structure that is best for you.
-
Industrial Zones – Picking A Location For Your Business
Grant Thornton Vietnam’s one-stop services are designed to provide comprehensive support to both new and current investors who are planning to expand or restructure their business in Vietnam. Our professionals have established strong working relationships with landlords, property developers and authorities at various localities. With extensive experiences in liaison with the relevant agencies, we offer assistance including negotiation on land rental rates and efficient management of licensing process. Our customized and flexible solutions can bring benefits of cost efficient location, accelerate licensing process, and optimize tax opportunities while remaining in compliance with legislation.
-
Tax Audit Support
Tax audit support services provide comprehensive assistance to your business in Vietnam. Recent tax practices have shown the general tendency of launching routine tax audit on yearly basis. Tax authorities have been effectively using more sophisticated methods to identify target entities from across different industry sectors.
-
Business Risk Services
Business Risk Services
-
Transaction Advisory Services
Transaction Advisory Services
-
Valuation
Valuation
-
Business consulting services
Finance Management Advisory
-
Accounting services
Accounting services
-
Taxes compliance within outsourcing
Taxes compliance within outsourcing
-
Payroll, personal income tax and labor compliance
Payroll, personal income tax and labor compliance
-
Secondments/Loan staff services
Secondments/Loan staff services
-
Compilation of the financial and non-financial information
Compilation of the financial and non-financial information
-
Accounting systems review and improvement
Accounting systems review and improvement
-
Initial setting-up for accounting and taxes systems
Initial setting-up for accounting and taxes systems
-
Management accounting and analysis
Management accounting and analysis
-
Comprehensive ERP system solution
ERP software is a tool for business operations, production management, order processing and inventory in the business process. Today, ERP software for small and medium businesses has been greatly improved to help businesses manage their business better. The article below will answer all relevant information about what ERP software is and offer the most suitable ERP solution for businesses. Let's follow along!
-
Analyze Business Administration data
We believe in the value that data can bring to the success and development of every business. Our team helps design data architecture supported by tools, to support business governance and provide useful information to management.
-
Financial reporting compliance solution package
Putting financial issues at the heart, this service helps ensure that financial reports for customers comply with both the requirements of Vietnamese accounting regulations and standards (VAS) as well as reporting standards. international finance (IFRS).
-
Third-party ERP extensions
ERP is a long-term solution that requires long-term travel, not short-term. We understand that many businesses cannot deploy the entire ERP system at once due to many different reasons, instead businesses can deploy each part. Over time, these solutions can be expanded to accommodate improved business processes or can even link completely new processes across different departments.
-
Localize, deploy and rebuild the project
Quite a few ERP projects need to be implemented according to current Vietnamese requirements and regulations, but still comply with common international business requirements. These projects need some improvements and adjustments in the right direction.
-
Consulting on technology solutions
We support the selection and implementation of the most suitable solutions, ensuring business efficiency and performance. We will work closely with customers to plan, evaluate and implement the right technology investment strategies and solutions to meet the development needs of businesses.
-
Offshore company establishment service
Using the offshore company model will facilitate the owner in the process of transaction and expand overseas markets, take advantage of the tax policy with many incentives and protect the value of the family enterprise's assets.
-
Private Trust Advisory
The development of the economy with many modern financial instruments has brought many advantages and opportunities for the enterprises, but there are still certain potential risks in any type of business. So how to protect your asset value with an appropriate company structure while stay compliance with relevant regulations?
-
Our values
We have six CLEARR values that underpin our culture and are embedded in everything we do.
-
Learning & development
At Grant Thornton we believe learning and development opportunities help to unlock your potential for growth, allowing you to be at your best every day. And when you are at your best, we are the best at serving our clients
-
Global talent mobility
One of the biggest attractions of a career with Grant Thornton is the opportunity to work on cross-border projects all over the world.
-
Diversity
Diversity helps us meet the demands of a changing world. We value the fact that our people come from all walks of life and that this diversity of experience and perspective makes our organisation stronger as a result.
-
Contact us
Contact us
-
Available positions
Experienced hires
-
Available positions
Available positions
Poised to be every bit as disruptive as the internet revolution, is your business ready for the rise of the sharing economy?
Managing excess capacity is nothing new. Goods and services have long been traded in mutually beneficial ways, often on a supply-and-demand basis, and resources have been shared to bring costs down.
Traditionally, however, this has mainly been done at a local, informal level. But developments in technology are allowing the sharing economy (see below: 'What is the sharing economy?') to operate on a much larger scale.
“Fixed goods being used on a part-time basis has always been an issue,” says Steven Perkins, global leader for technology at Grant Thornton. “But two things have changed. First, there’s been an extraordinary confluence of technology – mobile, social and analytical – that has made sharing small amounts of excess capacity practical. The second is social change: a move from ownership to access mentality.”
Technology has given consumers the ability to research, discuss and make purchasing decisions in real-time, according to Perkins, while the social change creates a willingness to buy services in non-traditional ways. Together, they create a user feedback loop, driving the sharing economy forward.
What we are facing, says Perkins, is not an incremental change to business models but a massive and disruptive change more akin to a revolution. “It can seem quite strange to those from a generation, mine, for whom ownership and control – of houses, cars or consumer goods, for example – was a touchstone. For millennials, however, there is a greater willingness to participate in the sharing economy and to trust the technology.”
Pros and cons
For the entrepreneurs who spotted the trend and responded with smart technology solutions, the results have been extraordinary. Eye-popping valuations – Uber at $40 billion and AIRBNB at $13 billion – have earned the interest of the media and the attention of governments and regulators.
Many businesses have had to consider the sharing economy early. “If they didn’t, there was a risk that they wouldn’t be around in a few years’ time,” Perkins says. “We’re already seeing people move past trying to ignore the sharing economy or deny its viability and into a period where they are first fighting it and then adopting it.”
While the low cost of entry for new sharing businesses can be seen as a threat to traditional organisations, established firms have advantages of their own – their brands, their deep customer knowledge and their understanding of quality and customer service. Ultimately, much will depend on whether they can import technology into the mix to deliver a smooth, convenient customer experience. If they can, sharing could produce enormous cost savings, particularly in the use of energy and raw materials.
Take BMW’s investment in DriveNow, a car-sharing joint venture with Sixt. Serviced by an app, customers can locate, unlock and drive vehicles in city environments, charged by the minute without the need to drop the vehicles off at the point where they collected them. For BMW it looks like a classic example of building your worst enemy before someone else does. Going head to head with services like Zipcar and Uber, it’s striking for many reasons, not least that it’s helping BMW reach a demographic that’s more than 10 years younger than its traditional customer.
As with the adoption of internet technologies, the biggest challenge for traditional businesses is finding the right expertise. “The ability to reinvent a business and manage change on a constant basis is a core competency of successful organisations,” says Perkins. “Understanding the radical possibilities of technology and analytics is no longer something that needs to be found among functions, such as marketing or logistics, it’s something that has to live at board level.”
In other words, businesses must find individuals who are technology- and business model-savvy, with the risk-taking profile to help them reinvent themselves.
But what of regulation? Complaints from existing operators about rules being flouted and concerns from governments about lost revenues are focusing attention on how to respond to the sharing economy. From Perkins’ perspective, however, he sees no sign that it’s hampering investment: “Many of the concerns are legitimate, of course. However, some regulators, such as those in London, San Francisco, Paris and Amsterdam, have already shown their intent by relaxing rules around home sharing, while also ensuring safety and taxation norms are met. The key for businesses is to build capacity so they can engage early with governmental institutions.”
A much bigger question is where the sharing economy will go in the medium term. The pace of technological change, along with our willingness to try new ways of working and consuming, means it no longer makes sense to believe that there’s a limit on the business applications of technology.
“You used to hear analysts saying ‘people will never buy clothes online’ or ‘people will always want to own music’,” says Perkins. “But now people are increasingly comfortable flying to a city on business and not booking a room until they arrive. With this attitudinal change and the impending arrival of technology - such as 3D printers and the Internet of Things - you should be sceptical of anyone who says ‘here’s a line that will never be crossed’.”
What is the sharing economy?
The global sharing economy – whereby businesses are built on the sharing of resources, allowing customers to access goods only when needed – is growing at pace. The market is dominated by start-ups, including AIRBNB, car hire business ZipCar and SnapGoods, which facilitates the sharing of household goods.
Another example is Uber, an app-based business that provides an alternative to traditional city taxis. It pairs drivers with ride-seekers, bypassing the cab companies altogether. Uber’s success has been built on a combination of convenience and competitive pricing, both fuelled by the model of the sharing economy.
Providing taxis with the location of nearby customers and informing them how long they have to wait has removed the ambiguity of waiting for a passing taxi. Cars and drivers are in good supply due to far less stringent testing and licensing requirements. And the lower cost of becoming an Uber driver allows for lower fares.
As with any market disrupter, Uber has faced challenges. Questions have been raised about the quality of its drivers. And it has faced legal threats in countries including the US, Germany, India and France, where its Paris operation was banned following protests by incumbent firms. However, with 8 million users worldwide, Uber is certainly maximising the potential of the sharing economy.
But this is not just about start-ups. China-based Haier Group is a long-established white goods manufacturer that has adapted its business model to take advantage of the sharing economy. It delivers thousands of washing machines and fridges across China every day, but has replaced its fleet of vehicles with an online platform that lists planned deliveries for each day. Local people with delivery vehicles can then bid for customer orders – a review system has been put in place to help protect against any potential drop in service and quality.