Gallup, known for its
polling business, also has a blog on its website. In a recent
posting, Jim Clifton, the Chairman and CEO of Gallup discussed why Corporate
America is failing. Let's look at what he had to say:
"Companies are
failing to grow organically. CEOs talk a big customer game and then go back to
their offices, acquire their competitors and lower prices.
Shockingly, boards of directors encourage
this.
Acquisitions are the current growth strategy
of Forbes Global 2000 companies. As a result, the number of publicly listed
companies traded on U.S. exchanges has been cut in half in the past 20 years --
from about 7,300 to 3,700.
According to the World Bank, the number of
listed companies on all global exchanges -- currently 44,000 -- has flatlined
since 2006, with a recent two-year decline.
The herd is getting pretty small. At some
point, this acquisition strategy hits a wall. It makes you wonder how long
we'll need the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq.”
Here is a graphic from Bloomberg showing how the
number of publicly listed companies in the United States has changed since
1975:
A 2015 paper by Craig Doidge, G. Andrew Karolyi and Rene M
Stulz looks at what they term the "listing gap".
They note that the listings per capita has also fallen from 30 listings
per million Americans in 1996 (when the number of U.S. listed companies peaked) to only
13 listings per million Americans in 2012, a decline of 56 percent. Companies
delist from stock exchanges for one of three reasons:
1.) as a
result of a merger
2.) as a
result of being forced to delist
3.) as a
result of voluntarily delisting (i.e. going private)
The
authors' analysis suggests that missing new listings explain 54 percent of the
listing gap while delistings explain 46 percent of the listing gap. From
1997 to 2012, the United States had 8327 delists in total of which 4957 were
due to mergers. If the U.S. merger rate over the period from 1997 to 2012
had been the same as the average from 1975 to 1996, the United States would
have had 1655 fewer delistings. Had the United States retained the
same historical merger rate as in the years from 1975 to 1996 and the same
number of delistings for cause, the United States would have gained back almost
45 percent of the listings it lost in the post-peak period.
A rising
number of mergers appears to be the key to the issue. Rather than
innovate, companies expand their market share by getting rid of their
competitors. By getting rid of competition, they can raise prices on
their existing product lines, with the ultimate hope of boosting their profits by eliminating their
competitors. Unfortunately, mergers tend to result in "corporate
realignments", in other words, staff cuts, office and factory closures
etcetera. The biggest upside, however, is found in the small print in
most annual reports. Named Executive Officers generally have post-merger
compensation packages that result in massive payouts of cash (generally
multiples of their base salaries) as well as immediate vesting of stock options
and performance benefits.
Let's look
at an example. Back on April 25, 2014, Microsoft acquired
substantially all of Nokia Corporation's stock for a total purchase price of
$9.442 billion as shown here:
At the time
of the acquisition, Microsoft hired 25000 Nokia employees as part of its business
plan.
Despite
that, Microsoft declared the true value of the intangible assets that they
acquired:
In Q4 2015,
Microsoft recorded $7.5 billion worth of goodwill and asset impairment charges
related to their Phone Hardware business (i.e. the Nokia acquisition). In
addition, they cut 788 jobs in an attempt to "refocus its phone
efforts". In May 2016, Microsoft gutted its phone business,
laying off a further 1850 workers and writing down an additional $950 million.
In July 2016, Microsoft announced that it would
cut an additional 2850 workers, mainly in its smartphone hardware business and
global sales unit. So much for that acquisition!
In November 2015, I posted at article on
total factor productivity (TFP). TFP is defined as...
"…the
portion of economic output that is not explained by the amount of inputs used
in production. As such, its level is determined by how efficiently and
intensely inputs are used in production.
In its
simplest terms, total factor productivity can be thought of how technologically
dynamic an economy is or the rate of technical change in an economy. TFP plays
a very important role in economic fluctuation and economic growth and is
strongly correlated with output and hours worked. A large portion of TFP
growth is created by innovations that have significant implications for the
business cycle.
Here is a
graph showing how total factor productivity has grown on a year-over-year basis
since 1990:
According
to the Conference Board Total Economic Database, TFP
in the United States is far below trends seen in the early 2000s:
Perhaps it
is the lack of technological dynamics that has resulted in Corporate America
choosing to merge rather than innovate.
Let's close
with an addition quote from Jim Clifton’s blog posting:
"Gallup analytics find most companies can
double their revenue by simply selling more to their existing customer base.
There are tens of millions of dollars of lost growth opportunities in single
customers, let alone hundreds of millions of dollars throughout your customer
base.
Note to boards of directors: Rather than pay
unrecoverably high prices for acquisitions, Gallup recommends that all our
clients immediately implement a hardworking, authentic organic growth strategy
-- one that requires a comparatively tiny investment."
Organic
corporate growth is what contributes to a healthy and growing economy. As
we can see in the Microsoft - Nokia debacle, mergers and acquisitions create
nothing and ultimately result in a shrinking contribution to the global and
domestic economies.
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