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Trump Organization to break ground on golf club in Vietnam amid trade talks
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Trump Organization to break ground on golf club in Vietnam amid trade talks

Reuters

HANOI—The Trump Organization and its local partner will hold a groundbreaking ceremony on Wednesday for a luxury golf resort close to Vietnam’s capital Hanoi, according to invitations to the event seen by Reuters.

Vietnam’s government approved the plan last week and the ceremony will be attended by US President Donald Trump’s son Eric Trump, organizers said. The event comes as the Southeast Asian country negotiates with Washington to avoid punitive tariffs.

Its developers have said the $1.5-billion project will include when completed in 2027 three 18-hole golf courses and a residential complex, and could be followed by additional multi-billion-dollar investments.

Local authorities of the Hung Yen province, where the golf club will be built, have also invited Vietnam’s leaders to the event, including the head of the ruling Communist Party To Lam, who was born in the province, according to the invitation.

It is unclear whether he will join the event. Vietnam’s state news agency said Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh will participate in a groundbreaking event on Wednesday in Hung Yen, without specifying for which project.

Apart from the ceremony, Eric Trump is also set to meet Ho Chi Minh City officials on Thursday to explore plans for a possible skyscraper in Vietnam’s southern business hub, according to an internal schedule seen by Reuters.

‘Tremendous potential’

“Vietnam has tremendous potential for luxurious hospitality and entertainment,” Eric Trump, who is a senior vice president of the Trump Organization, said in October when the president’s family business announced a partnership with Vietnamese real estate firm Kinhbac City.

“We are incredibly excited to enter this dynamic market.”

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The strategic collaboration, whose terms are not public, “will focus on developing five-star hotels, championship-style golf courses, and luxurious residential estates and unparalleled amenities in Vietnam,” the consortium said in a statement in October.

It is unclear how the two partners share costs and revenues, and what conditions have been set for use of the Trump franchise.

Vietnam has made multiple pledges to the White House to avoid 46-percent “reciprocal” tariffs that would kick off in July after a global pause if no bilateral deal is reached.

They include lower tariffs and nontariff barriers, an intensified fight against trade frauds and counterfeiting and favorable conditions to Starlink, owned by Trump’s close ally Elon Musk, to roll out satellite internet services in the country.

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