at 43 yo already a tycoon...
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Vietnam property tycoon bets big on new airline
By AFP August 1, 2018 | 04:10 pm GMT+7
Trinh Van Quyet is confident that his new airline will turn a profit 'as soon as we start flying' in October. Photo by AFP/Nhac Nguyen
Bamboo Airways will come up against heavyweights such as AirAsia and Thai Airways as well as local players Vietnam Airlines and VietJet.
Pressed by poverty into work when he was 14, Trinh Van Quyet now presides over a Vietnamese property empire and is betting billions on a new airline in Southeast Asia's crowded aviation sector.
The 43-year-old tycoon clawed his way up from a tough start in the Vietnamese countryside, his modest aspiration back then to become a civil servant.
But from lowly beginnings -- his first job was in his mother's shop -- he now oversees the FLC Group empire that includes luxury resorts and golf courses, mining and vocational training.
He says he gave up his youth to get where he is today.
"I dared to sacrifice my childhood... when you're supposed to be able to play, study, and later, fall in love," he told AFP from his polished high-rise office in Hanoi this week.
His company has a market capitalisation of around $200 million and he is branching out, taking a punt on Bamboo Airways, a new airline set for its maiden flight in October and a first foray into a business that can be unforgiving to newcomers.
"We will be huge, right when we launch... we will make a profit as soon as we start flying," the bullish executive says.
His master plan is to lure piles of passengers to "undiscovered" holiday destinations -- many in spots he has resorts -- offering high-quality service on the cheap.
But he's got a lot going against him.
Bamboo Airways will come up against heavyweights such as AirAsia and Thai Airways as well as local players Vietnam Airlines and VietJet.
With a mushrooming middle class hungry for travel, Vietnam's aviation market has soared in recent years.
Passenger numbers jumped to 62 million last year from just 25 million in 2012, according to the Civil Aviation Administration of Vietnam.
But Southeast Asia's once red-hot sector is showing signs of cooling while airport capacity is being squeezed across much of the region.
"It's not realistic to think that the kind of growth that we've seen in Vietnam.