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What do Starbucks and China have in common? A lot! Both
got us hooked on consumption: one of fancy, expensive caffeinated liquids; the
other on cheap foreign made goods. Both have defied the conventional wisdom -
they grew faster and longer than common sense told us was possible. They also
share another striking commonality: both are suffering from late stage growth
obesity (LSGO).
The Starbucks story
With the beautiful benefit of hindsight we know what
happened to Starbucks - it grew too fast, opened too many stores, and sacrificed
its own standards to meet unrealistic targets. The company first claimed that
it only had a few hundred stores that it needed to close, and then the few
hundred spilled into six hundred. Weak consumer spending will likely push Starbucks
to re-examine its store count again, doubling or tripling the store closures.
Starbucks percentage of new stores growth in 2007 was
only slightly lower than it was in 1999. But in 1999 it had 2,000 stores; in
2007 it was pushing a 10,000 company owned stores mark. Let's put this in perspective:
in 1999 Starbucks opened 447 stores - 1.8 stores per working day; in 2007 that
number more than tripled to 1,403 stores a year - 5.5 stores per working day.�
At this level of growth physical limitations come in: there is only so much
real estate that fits a company's criteria at a certain point in time. Management
started sacrificing
on the quality of their decisions, compromises were made that were
unthinkable several years before. Stores were opened too close to each other
or on the wrong side of the street, expensive leases were signed, they even hired
baristas that would have fit in better at McDonalds - you get the idea.
Unfortunately the present and the future will pay
for the decisions of the past: stores will need to be closed, long-term leases
terminated, charges taken, corporate costs created in hopes of high growth eliminated,
and corporate culture of partnership strained by barista layoffs.
Starbucks needs to go on a permanent growth diet (at
least in the US), and realize that it has the metabolism of a 37 year old and
can digest fewer new stores. By tightening its standards for opening new
stores the company will be on the way to recovery, though at slower growth. Starbucks
is blessed with financial strength, capable management and unbelievable brand.�
If management admits to themselves that the heydays of growth are behind,
recovery should be fairly painless. Starbucks generates tremendous operating
cash flows, which in the past were completely consumed by opening new stores.�
If the company were to go on the LSGO diet, its capital expenditures would
decline and free cash flows balloon - the value unlocked.
But this discussion is not about Starbucks, it is about
what is taking place in China.
The Great China story
The benefit of hindsight that provides clarity in analysis
of Starbucks today is not there for China, at least not yet. But if you were
to open your mind and look past today's cheery newspaper headlines you'd see
that China is suffering from a severe case of LSGO.
Ten for ten.�
Since 1998 its GDP has grown at about a 10% annual real growth rate, and its
economy more than tripled in size (in real terms). There were no recessions,
just expansion - the Chinese miracle growth? The origins of China's tremendous growth are well known: large population migrating from low (farming) to higher
productivity (manufacturing) activity, cheap labor, a capitalism-friendlier
communist government, and insatiable demand from the US and the rest of the
developed world for cheap goods.
Unlike Starbucks - a private enterprise that has
free market principles deeply inbred in its DNA - China is a communist country.�
Though it is moving towards free market capitalism, it is not there yet. The
rule of law is weak, the country infested
with corruption, and due to central planning and tight government control
of the banking system capital is often allocated based on cronyism (or
political relationships) not merit.
Prolonged high growth in this environment results in
inefficiencies that are compounded year after year. In other words, though
the growth is high, the quality of growth is low, thus asset allocation
decisions are likely to be poor. The ten year super-high growth marathon put China at high risk, actually more likely of a certainty, of a severe case of LSGO.
From today's perch we can only guess of the consequences
of LSGO, but we'll gain that clarity after the fact - a luxury we don't have. Newspapers
that are praising the Chinese growth miracle today will write exposes on what went
and is going wrong in China.
I have absolutely no facts to back up what I am
about to say, but it is not hard to imagine future stories about poverty
stricken farmers that moved to big cities for a better life and found despair; or
that inland migration (from farming to factories) only brings a onetime
productivity jump as poorly educated farmers-turned-factory-workers add little to
productivity improvements afterwards; or how weak and debt ridden the financial
system is; or the devastating impact that pollution has on health and
productivity; or how the biggest shopping mall in the world, that happens to be
in China, is almost completely empty.
Oh wait, the story about the shopping mall is not a figment
of my imagination (I am not that good) but has already taken place. �In 2005 NY
Times ran an article titled China,
New Land of Shoppers, Builds Malls on Gigantic Scale, it talked about the
biggest shopping mall in the world that happened to be in Dongguan, China. The article said:
"Not
long ago, shopping in China consisted mostly of lining up to entreat surly
clerks to accept cash in exchange for ugly merchandise that did not fit. But
now, Chinese have started to embrace America's modern "shop till you
drop" ethos and are in the midst of a buy-at-the-mall frenzy.... by
2010, China is expected to be home to at least 7 of the world's 10 largest
malls... Already, four shopping malls in China are larger than the Mall of
America. Two, including the South China Mall, are bigger than the West
Edmonton Mall in Alberta, which just surrendered its status as the world's largest
to an enormous retail center in Beijing." (emphasis added)
Fast forward three years and you find a
very different story: the biggest mall in the world - the South China mall,
with space for fifteen hundred stores, only has a dozen stores open for
business - it is empty. Shoppers never materialized. Billions of dollars have
been wasted.
Analyzing the Chinese economy while it is growing at
superfast rates is like analyzing a credit card company or a mortgage
originator during an economic expansion - all you see is reward - the growth.�
But the defaults - the risk - are masked by a healthy economy and constantly
increasing new business that is profitable at first. The true colors of that
growth only appear after the economy slows down and new accounts mature. �(In
fact, the banks or credit card companies in the U.S. that showed the lowest loan
growth during last expansionary cycle have a lot fewer credit problems than those
that did - U.S. Bank Co comes to mind here.)
The consequences of LSGO are likely to be very
painful for China. As of today we don't know how much of the recent growth
came from wasteful, unproductive growth. Only after a slowdown will the true
problems surface.
The Speed.�
What makes things even worse is that China cannot afford a slow down. I
discussed this in the past but it is worth repeating. The Chinese economy is like the bus from the movie "Speed". In
the movie the bus is wired by a villain (played by Dennis Hopper) with
explosives, and will explode if its speed drops below 50 miles per hour. The
Chinese economy has 1.3 billion unsuspecting people on board. It could blow if
economic growth drops below its historical pace.
A combination of high
financial and operation leverage sprinkled with past high growth rates will
send this economy into a severe recession if growth rates slow down. Let me
explain:
High operational leverage. China has become a de facto manufacturer for the world. With the
exception of food products, it is difficult finding a product that was not, at
least in part, manufactured in China. Industrial production accounts for 49%
of GDP, double the rate of most developed nations (i.e. industrial
production for the United
States is 20.5 % of GDP, UK
18.2% , and Japan
26.5%).
Chinese miracle
growth is largely driven by the manufacturing sector; historically its
industrial production grew at a faster rate than GDP. The manufacturing
industry is very capital intensive. Building factories requires a large upfront
investment. High commodity prices and rapid wage inflation has driven those
costs up. Once a factory is built the costs of running it are to a large
degree independent of the utilization level - they are fixed - a classical
definition of operational leverage. On top of these factors, laying-off
workers is a politically sensitive process in China, which creates another
layer of fixed costs.
High
financial leverage. Debt is the instrument
of choice in China. Due to a lack of equity-fund- raising alternatives (their
stock market is very young), bank debt and underground finance companies that
charge very high interest rates are the predominate sources of capital in China
- this generates a great degree of financial leverage. (Though
according to my friend Bill Mann, The Motley Fool's advisor of Global Gains
newsletter, a frequent visitor to China, state owned enterprises are much more
leveraged than private enterprises.)
Total
operational leverage. Large piles of debt
(financial leverage) combined with high fixed costs (operational leverage)
create a very high total operational leverage.
Total operational
leverage in China is elevated further as factories are built to accommodate
future demand - this is a classical byproduct of LGSO. It is a human tendency
to draw straight lines and thus making linear projections from the past into
the future. During the fast growth period the angle of the straight lines is
tilted upward, causing an over investment in fixed assets, as inability to keep
up with demand may cause manufacturers to lose valuable customers. (Fear of over
investment is overrun by fear of losing customers.)
This type of
thinking results in tremendous overcapacity when demand cools. Here is an
example: let's say a company saw demand for its widgets rise 10% year after
year. It builds a new factory to accommodate future demand, let's say five
years. It will likely model a 10% annual increase in demand as well. But what
if demand comes in at 6% a year over the next five years? This will translate
into overcapacity - not 4% but 20% (4% per year times five years). Suddenly
you don't need to build factories or add capacity for awhile.
This greatly
leveraged growth is terrific as long as the economy continues to grow at a fast
pace: sales rise, costs rise at a slower rate (in large they are fixed) - margins
expand - the beauty of leverage. However, leverage is not so sweet and soft
when sales decline. Overcapacity is a death sentence in the manufacturing
(fixed costs) world. As companies face overcapacity or slowdown in demand, they
try to stimulate sales by cutting prices, which in part lead to price wars
(similar to what we observed in the U.S. between Sprint, MCI and AT&T in the
long distance business during the mid 90s) and to a fatal deflation. Sales
decline, costs remain the same - margins collapse.
The weakness in the US and European economies will temper demand for Chinese made goods. China is already showing first
signs of slow down - inflation is increasing and rate of real growth is decreasing.�
It gets worse: high commodity
prices
Chinese demand for stuff (oil,
metals, machinery etc...) has a tremendous impact on commodities, driving their
prices many fold. High (and rising) commodity prices are negative for
developed world economies but they are catastrophic to developing economies -
they bring comparatively higher inflation and often stagflation. Here is why:
Inflation is sourced from
two broad categories: commodities (stuff) and wages. Emerging markets are
twice as cursed when it comes to inflation:
- Commodity prices
(less shipping costs and government controls - the Chinese government
limits price increases on certain commodities, but we know that doesn't
work in the long-term) are the same around the world. Thus the U.S. and China will see a similar increase in commodity prices (at least in dollar terms). But the commodity
component represents a larger portion of the total product cost in China than in the U.S., as wages in China are a less significant component of a total cost. For
instance, bread baked in the U.S. and China will require the same amount
of wheat and wheat will cost as much. But baker wages will be
significantly larger in the U.S. than in China and will result in a much higher
cost of the finished product. Therefore, a spike in wheat prices will
have a larger impact on the loaf of bread in China than in the US.
- Wage inflation: the
US and Europe have little wage inflation, as rising unemployment has diminished
the already weak bargaining power of the labor force, keeping wages in
check. Economic expansion has put significant upward pressure on wages inflation
in China (and India as well).
In combination, these two
factors were responsible for inflation in high single
digits in China, double the rate of inflation in the U.S.
China is not the cheapest place in the world to manufacture, not
anymore. To its benefit, cheaper countries (Singapore, Vietnam etc...) are not
big enough to steal a significant amount of capacity and the US
in many cases doesn't have the needed infrastructure to bring manufacturing
back. Appreciation in the renminbi and high oil prices (which are driving
shipping rates up, placing a significant premium on the distance factor) are making
Chinese produced goods even less attractive. Something has to give: either the
U.S. will consume less or China will keep prices low to stimulate the demand,
swallowing the loss, or a combination of both.
It gets even worse...
I constantly catch myself
wanting to say "the story only gets worse", but unfortunately it does. The US
and Europe can cope with energy and food inflation a lot better than China and
other developing nations, as we spend a lot less on food and energy as a percent
of our income and have a lot more discretionary income. (Just take a look at
magazine section in the book store. There is probably a fishing magazine for the
left handed fishermen.)
Though the Chinese consume
a lot less gasoline than Americans. They don't have as many cars and don't
drive as much, but they do have stomachs - they eat. High energy prices have
translated in food inflation that in China runs in the high teens. The average
American family spends only 15%
of their household budget on food, whereas the Chinese
spend 37% . Maybe this is one of the reasons their shopping malls are
empty. People that pay high gasoline prices but are full don't riot, but
hungry people do. The current situation raises political risk in China and also the chances that government (social) intervention will rise. This also puts
in doubt the significant development of a Chinese middle class, at least in the
near future.
When I wrote an article for
Financial Times in May discussing risks in stuff stocks (commodities, energy
and industrials) I called today's environment "a global commodity bubble". I
was imprecise, after a conversation with the brilliant Ed Easterling of
Crestmont Research (by the way, Ed wrote "Unexpected Returns" - a must read)
and reading a wonderful interview with James
Montier by Kate Welling, I'd like use James' more precise definition of
today's environment: a "global growth expectations" bubble. After all, it is
the supply demand (to a large degree) that was responsible for this
unprecedented growth in "stuff", shifting the mentality of the market into "this
time is different" gear. It is not.
In the past "stuff" stocks
were cyclical, their margins played a very predictable foxtrot of bouncing
together with the whims of the US economy. Today they are behaving if as
Google is their middle name - their sales are climbing in double digits,
margins keep expanding and now they are called "growth" stocks. They are not.�
It is just Chinese late stage growth obesity, which has disproportionately
impacted the demand for stuff, creating an expectation that the "growth story"
will continue forever. Nothing is forever. Starbucks discovered that and so
will China. China is likely to have a bright future, but it doesn't consist of
straight to the sky growth trajectories.
Implications. Demand for commodities will decline, while more supply from
past investments (there is a significant lag) will be coming to the market - they'll
come crushing down to earth. Companies that make stuff will suffer,
their margins are at multi-multi-multi-year highs, margins pendulum will swing
the other way, to the other extreme. Suddenly they won't appear to be as
cheap. (Take a look at my January Barron's
article in which I discuss the risk in corporate margins and May Financial
Times article which explores China and stuff stocks.)
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