Deep Thoughts from the Beach
April 2nd, 2009 by Kent KedlNo More Vacations For Me
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Sheesh … can’t a guy get away for holiday without the world falling apart?? I go for 10 days of sun, sand and minimal Internet and come back to find the world upside down. AIG needs more money (to fund bonuses? foreign banks? Liddy’s baseball card collection?) and President Obama is firing CEOs (not that many others have wanted to do the same in the past but lacked the political will and cajones). China dope-slapping Coke in its attempted acquisition of Huiyuan is counter-slapped by Australia for Minmetals attempted investment in OZ Minerals. An apt description from Dr. Venkman in Ghostbusters: “Cats and dogs living together! Real wrath-of-God stuff!!”
Not that the situation would be any different if I would have been on the frontlines last week, bravely Podcasting and blogging about the world from my 5th floor Shanghai office … but I do have a bit of a Rip VanWinkle feeling about it all. To have so much happen in the space of just over a week makes my head spin (causing the too-small brain inside my rather large cranial capacity sound like some Cinco de Mayo maraca jam session).
The suddenness of all this – and too much free time on a beach – has led me to think of three deep thoughts:
Deep Thought Number One: the age of dominance of the western multinational company (MNC) is over. Actually, I think this dominance has been over for some time but we’ve been so busy kicking the body and yelling “Look! Its moving!” that we’ve not realized its dead. Certainly this is true in manufacturing … that happened some time ago when we started worshiping at the alter of the god Wal-Mart to receive the deity’s blessings that came from cheap products manufactured in low-cost countries. I am not saying we would/could/should have done anything differently, but we are where we are.
So maybe the proper way to say this is that we Westerners need to lose the illusion that we are in total control of the world. We are not. And the last stand where at least Americans could claim dominance – the financial sector – has completely lost its mojo (and most of its money). The title “Bank Manager” has become the new oxymoron replacing “student-athlete” and “country-music”.
Practically speaking, this means that Western companies will now be the seller as often (or even MORE often) than they are the buyer. For every Coke-Huiyuan situation we will find Chinese companies buying medical companies (ala Mindray), mining rights (ala Minmetals) or car companies (ala a billion rumors in the market about various GM divisions being schlepped to the Chinese ). Certainly, there are massive financial and cultural hurdles to overcome for Chinese companies and institutions to become major buyers, but there is definitely the motivation here and there are certainly enough Western assets – distressed and otherwise – for them to pursue.
Deep Thought Number Two: China WILL become a stronger global player in several sectors. This is a natural result of the first … if there is a leadership vacuum created by the decline of Western firms, someone will step into their place. And the Chinese seem to be the most likely to come off the bench and make the winning basket. I see three sectors to keep our eyes on – two are no-brainers and one might be a long-shot.
The first sector where China will begin to gain global leadership is, obviously, automotive. Already the second-largest auto market in the world, China is also the leading supplier of auto parts and components to the world. China will begin to leverage this supply chain dominance into actually creating cars to sell into other markets. It is already happening in southeast Asia where a number of Chinese suppliers are exporting cars. And Chery attempted a distribution agreement for small cars with Chrysler in the U.S. before the U.S. auto world turned upside down. Finally, China has declared that they WILL be the global leaders in electric cars and technology – in the next three years. That is very aggressive but it seems the entire economic and political system is focused on doing this. Look for the leading China auto companies – SAIC, FAW, Dongfang, Changan, Chery and the cheeky BYD – to flex their muscles internationally.
The second sector is medical device. Again, China is a leading player in the supply chain of components to the global medical industry but strict regulatory requirements have kept them largely from being very strong in Western medical markets. The Mindray acquisition of Datascope last year was their attempt to change that – Mindray is the biggest Chinese medical device company, competing against the big boys of GE, Philips, Toshiba and Siemens. Their acquisition of Datascope, a mid-sized U.S. player in the patient monitoring device sector, was Mindray’s first entry point into the U.S. market. Look for them and others to follow. But look particularly at China becoming an even stronger growth market for medical companies of all kinds. China will be investing a big chunk of their economic stimulus package in their medical sector in an attempt to rapidly upgrade the penetration and quality level of medical care for their 1.3 billion population. As they do this, there is going to be a lot of money out there to purchase medical devices, pharmaceuticals, lab equipment and even healthcare management solutions. Any medical company of any size should be looking at China as their key growth market in the mid-term.
The third sector to keep your eyes on – and I know I am out on a limb here – is the financial sector. What?, you say. A centrally-controlled, socialist system with a partially convertible currency is going to become a leader in global finance?? Yes, that is exactly what I am saying. I am not saying “tomorrow” or even “in the next 20 years”, but all you have to do is follow the money and the motivation. China certainly has the money – both in cash and U.S. T-bills – and their motivation is repeatedly being articulated – the latest has China’s leadership saying that they hope to build Shanghai into a major financial sector by 2020 and that “the Chinese Yuan will become a new world-favored currency by then”. Gutsy? Sure. Possible? Maybe. But are they going to work on it? You can bet on it!
This all leads us to my Third Deep Thought: When it comes to the future, we don’t know JACK!! I know … as the proprietor of a leading market strategy consulting company in China whose very JOB it is to predict market futures for our clients, it is counter productive to admit this. But c’mon … consider the situation. If, 18 months ago, you would have told anyone with half a brain and a cable TV subscription that Lehman Brothers, Bear Sterns and AIG would be toast at the start of 2009, we would have assumed you had only a quarter of a brain. Two years ago – even in the midst of big changes already happening in the automotive market – if you would have said that the U.S. Big Three would be on the edge of global collapse and that BYD (hitherto known as a battery maker) would make the biggest splash at the Detroit Auto Show, we would have taken away the last 25% and made you ride the little bus.
The truth of the matter is that we – meaning pundits, consultants, politicians, TV news anchors, banking regulators (if there are any left) – have NO idea what is going to happen next. Sure, we know that “down” is still the trend and that “flat” is the new “growth”, but the details of which movers and shakers will actually be the ones shaking and moving is a complete mystery. So let’s give up trying to predict where things are going and start act like they are going to go somewhere.
This means that we – and by “we” I mean “we Westerners” – get it through our neatly coiffed (but thick) skulls that we are not going to be returning to “normal”. This economic crisis is not just a speed bump on the journey that we’ve been on since the dawn of the industrial age … it is a fork in the road with a car-swallowing pothole in it, at the bottom of which is a pack of very hungry lions who have been subsisting only on lettuce and Fruit Roll-ups. OK … that metaphor needs a bit more work, but the bottom line is that EVERYTHING has changed! The products, pricing, distribution, supply chain, competitors and even regulatory environments of your business are changing radically. New players – many of them Chinese – are not just playing in the shallow end of the business pool; they are swimming in the deep end and, frankly, many of them look pretty good.
What has not changed is the advice for Western companies regarding China – we have been saying this for a LONG time and, in fact, we can maybe put a sharper point on that advice which is: your company’s future WILL be involved somehow with China so find out what it is now and start working on it. In the midst of the global economic meltdown, China is still one of the best places for pure growth in most sectors. You are probably not going to find growth in your home markets in the U.S. or Europe so why keep banging your head against that wall? Net-net: if China is not at the top of your list of “Ways to save your corporate ass and position yourself for the future”, then you are missing the boat. That is a fact that I feel 100% confident in predicting.

April 3rd, 2009 at 7:33 am
Kent, We missed you while you were away, but you’ve come back with a thought provoking and delicious blog that I will be sharing with colleagues. We’ve got a number of once dominate businesses that are perfect examples of the metaphor about kicking a dead horse.
Thannks for sharing your thoughts and perspecives, I watch for a “Kent fix’ every day
April 3rd, 2009 at 3:13 pm
Thanks, Dave! Its good to be home.
May 31st, 2009 at 2:20 am
Dave,
I was researching podcasts to discuss in an English Corner here in Qingdao, and that’s how I found you. I’ve been looking for an old China hand with your kind of analysis for some time, so I’m very happy to read your blog. I’ll recommend that my business students listen to your podcast.
October 28th, 2011 at 1:09 pm
This post is quite enlightening. Everyone loves how we create this.
November 26th, 2011 at 8:25 am
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