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The road to nowhere

Andrew Sawers, Financial Director, 27 Mar 2006

Building new businesses in emerging economies is fraught with risk. We report on how you can avoid some of the biggest commercial dead-ends.

Emerging markets offer many challenges, some of which are very different in nature from those found in developed economies, while others are simply different in scale.

In evaluating the risks, it’s worth learning from the experience of Malcolm Wyman, FD of the brewing giant SABMiller. His company has made acquisitions or entered into joint ventures almost everywhere from Colombia to China, with a bias towards countries that are hardly renowned for their economic or political stability. In evaluating an opportunity, the risk-appraisal process doesn’t try to forecast what’s going to happen, Wyman explains. Instead, he says: “We’ll run multiple scenarios to try and build in the risk and we won’t try and guess which one is going to be right. What we’ll do is take a couple of scenarios – such as what are the risks around them? Which do we believe are likely? – and then we’ll price [the deal] accordingly.”
Here’s a handful of the risks that need to be borne in mind.

Political & economic risks

One of the risks that businesses face in emerging markets is that they can be more vulnerable to economic shocks than deeper, more mature economies.

Major currency swings, surging oil prices, sudden outbreaks of disease, or consumer markets ‘spooked’ by bank failures can all cause great problems in countries from Argentina to Thailand.

But there’s good news. The 2005 annual report of the Bank for International Settlements – the central banks’ central bank – says, however, that emerging economies are becoming more resilient these days. After a period of economic growth, it found that many countries now have:

- Stronger domestic growth (which helps offset any export weakness);
- Better government budgetary positions; and
- More stable inflation on the back of more credible monetary policy.

Likewise, a report by the Economist Intelligence Unit, CEO Briefing: Corporate priorities for 2006 and beyond, also argued that the most dynamic emerging markets are becoming less volatile as growth continues and as reform and liberalisation programmes roll out.

There are still dangers. The collapse of the tiger economies in the late 1990s showed how quickly the wheels can come off the economic juggernaut, while the outbreak of SARS impacted on business travel to China a few years ago.

In both China and India, the authorities are concerned about the growing disparity between the fast-growing, increasingly wealthy industrial and urban areas, while poverty is still at unimaginable levels in the rural districts.While China has the most profoundly Communist government, India has the world’s largest democracy: similar grounds for discontent on the part of the rural poor could manifest themselves in quite different ways.

Alun Jones, partner in charge of PricewaterhouseCoopers’ emerging markets practice in the UK, agrees that there is greater stability in emerging markets: “As the growth benefits the population more widely, then you should see some increased stability through greater consumer satisfaction.” But, he adds: “One of the things that happens is that people then see more of the disparity between the haves and the have-nots and that can create instability.”

Trading partners

Joint venture or go-it-alone? A perennial problem when considering how to enter a new market, not least when language, culture and management skills are all very different from what you are used to.

“Going in completely fresh means you don’t have any bad baggage, but you do have to make all your own relationships,” says Jones, “from making sure your utilities work 24/7 and that you have the local party official on board.”

He adds that there is a greater propensity in these markets for local firms to have “less integrity” when working with westerners than with fellow nationals. All the more reason, then, to work as hard on the business and personal relationships as on the cold logic of the strategy.

Work that his firm has done to ensure that licensors are being paid in full has unearthed great volumes of ‘under-reporting’ by licencees – in amounts typically equal to about 16 times PwC’s fees, Jones says.

Aside from all the usual problems that can develop between joint venture partners, there can also be problems in which ‘related party transactions’ can affect the profitability of a deal. It may suddenly become apparent, for example, that a key supplier who is making excessive pricing demands is, in fact, partly-owned by your JV partner.

In other instances, there is simply a difference in approach to corporate governance. A senior manager in the Shanghai office of a JV between a US advertising agency and a local firm said that the Chinese partner didn’t see any need to pay its half of the Sarbanes-Oxley compliance costs for which the US partner was liable.

Legal

There are all sorts of reasons to avoid litigation in emerging markets. The relative immaturity of the legislation or case law, particularly where commercial, property or insolvency laws are concerned; the glacial pace of legal process; and the uncertainty of the outcome in court. Better to have international arbitration clauses in contracts, though even then it can be a lottery as to whether they are recognised or enforceable. The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development gave a presentation with KPMG recently in which it advised delegates to be both principled and pragmatic when seeking redress, adding that “reconstructions, workouts and amicable solutions are the preferred route”.

It’s also imperative to think about how you can protect your intellectual property. Anyone in the business of making things other than luxury goods or easily-copied DVDs and software might think that this isn’t a real worry for them. Think again. An Economist Intelligence Unit report in 2004, Coming of Age: Multinational companies in China, said that there was a factory in China producing 100,000 rip-off Volkswagen Jettas. Almost incredible.

The perils of corruption and bribery loom large and companies will have to determine their policy at the outset, if only to avoid making early mistakes that become difficult or impossible to reverse out of. Managers whose companies are, by virtue of being subsidiaries of US companies, subject to the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act would do well to remember that the discovery of any unacceptable practice is likely to result in US investigators being unleashed against almost the whole of the rest of the company, anywhere in the world.

Corporate governance

Different business cultures have different approaches to financial controls, which can create difficulties in trying to conduct due diligence in the acquisition process, as well as in the post-acquisition phase when local managers have the buyer’s big system imposed on them. Many of our following case studies make the point about the need to get local managers to buy into the process and again, that involves a process of building up trust as well as putting effort into training.

Easier said than done, though, as, in many jurisdictions, the role of finance – and the financial director – is seriously underdeveloped. Accounting often means little other than bookkeeping, usually for regulatory or tax purposes or to keep track of debtors. Apart from that, the books serve little purpose as part of the management decisionmaking process.

Of course, the biggest risk surrounding emerging markets may well be the risk of missing out altogether. Or as Malcolm Staff, managing director of Halifax Fan, puts it: “Leave your cultural mistrust at home. It hinders you from making decisions.”

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