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This essay originally appeared at The Daily
Reckoning.
"When customers start demanding things, you know it's going to start topping
out," says Arnold Van Den Berg, the 64-year-old founder of the eponymous money
management firm that has soundly beaten the market averages since 1974. The
investment business "is the only business where the customer could be wrong."
Investors have been clamoring for Chinese stocks like children pining for
more dessert. But unlike dutiful parents, the market is giving them what they
want - even though some of these companies are not quite ready for life as
publicly traded companies.
Recently, I've written about how China was the "Big Story" and cautioned that
China, as an emerging market, was likely to suffer some gut-wrenching peaks
and valleys. It didn't take long for the market to provide a fresh example
in the plight of China Aviation Oil (CAO), the monopoly provider of jet fuel
to China.
China Aviation Oil collapsed after disclosing losses of $550 million stemming
from oil derivatives trading. It was the biggest scandal to hit the Singapore
exchange since rogue trader Nick Leeson felled the venerable Barings Bank.
Worse, the state-owned parent company apparently knew about the losses before
it sold a 15% stake in the company to unwary investors.
Is CAO a portent of things to come or just an aberration?
On the one hand, say some officials, this is something that could have happened
anywhere. Indeed, it could have; trading losses in derivatives are not a uniquely
Chinese occurrence. Corporate skullduggery is a universal pursuit. But when
the CAO event happens in a larger pattern of fraud and deception, one has to
wonder if CAO's problems are not isolated, but endemic.
"The company's troubles follow a string of embarrassing disclosures at big
Chinese state enterprises," writes Peter Wonacott for The Wall Street Journal.
He goes on to name recent troubles at China Life Insurance and BOC Hong Kong
- victims of poor disclosures and corruption.
Disclosures are not the best in China. "It's very hard to figure out what's
going on in these companies. They are a complete black box, maybe a black hole," says
Fraser J.T. Howie, co-author of a book on the Chinese stock market and corporate
reform.
Particularly galling for investors was the fact that CAO was widely regarded
as exemplary of good governance. "It was feted by the local press as a model
of corporate governance, and investors eagerly bought its shares," reports
The Financial Times. CAO shares surged 215% from the start of 2003 to last
Monday, when the scandal broke.
Popularity is like arsenic to healthy investment returns. In the case of China,
its popularity is unquestioned, as foreigners have been pouring billions into
Chinese state enterprises. A consensus has congealed around China - marking
it as the hot investment nightclub of the town. But new research from China
Economic Quarterly (CEQ) sheds some light on who is making money in China so
far.
Joe Studwell, the editor-in-chief of CEQ, summarized the latest research in
a column appearing in the Financial Times. He looks to answer the question
of how individual companies are faring in the frontier of Chinese capitalism.
To preview his conclusion, his answer is "not that great."
Studwell readily concedes that his conclusion "runs counter to the received
wisdom about the abundant and lucrative opportunities for foreign companies
in China." Given my interest in all things counter to received wisdom, I diligently
read on.
The main point of the CEQ is that yes, profits from U.S. affiliates in China
have been rising. In 1999, they were basically zero. By 2003, they were around
$2.4 billion. CEQ estimates that counting total profits - including profits
for U.S. affiliates as well as profits booked in Hong Kong and Singapore -
and a variety of licensing and royalty fees, that number swells to about $8
billion in profit.
But lets give that some perspective. As Studwell points out, "In 2003, U.S.
companies made $7.1 billion in Australia, a market of only 19 million. They
earned $8.9 billion in Taiwan and South Korea, emerging economies with a combined
population of 70 million." Studwell even points out that U.S. companies made
$14 billion in Mexico, which, in his words, "is considered by many people to
be something of an investment dud compared with China." Be we know otherwise.
The steadiest earners among U.S. companies in China have been American automakers
and fast food chains. General Motors earned $437 million alone. Yum! Brands
- with 1,200 restaurants in China - and McDonald's earned about $200 million.
Together, these two sectors accounted for nearly one-third of total U.S earnings
in China.
Moreover, these companies are achieving profit margins no better than their
global averages. While this indicates a number of things, it is obvious that
it is harder to make money in China than widely believed. The cost of doing
business there is perhaps higher than advertised. By all accounts, China is
still heavily regulated and deeply bureaucratic.
For some reason, commodity profits were not included in the survey. But as
Studwell points out, the biggest beneficiary of increased Chinese demand for
metals draws only 10% of its earnings from mainland China.
For all this, there is no denying that China is the workshop of the world
- the cheapest manufacturer of many things on the planet. "The people who make
the real money in such an economy," Studwell concludes, "are the ones who buy
from it, rather than the ones who invest in it." China as supplier is an instant
money saver.
Plus, China as a heavy consumer of commodities is undeniable. News on Chinese
consumption of copper or coal can send those commodities rising or falling
10-15% in a matter of days. China holds more potential than perhaps any other
market in the investment universe. "Potential" is the key word, however. Reality
says something different - at least today. There will be more scandals and
more disappointments, but there is a prize to be won in China. It simply may
not be in buying Chinese stocks, and the profits may come more slowly than
commonly thought.
The emergence of China as an economic power is not preordained. There is still
much that has to happen before that becomes a reality. Today, China lingers
in the foothills of prosperity, but the peaks - "the Alp at the end of the
street," as poet Wallace Stevens wrote - loom beyond.
Regards,
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