gai webinar 15 sep 2011 - 11 09 13 ep
TRANSCRIPT
Financing the Automotive Sector in Emerging Markets …
… in this incredibly fast changing world !
Emmanuel POULIQUEN
Principal Industry Specialist, Energy Efficient Machinery
Global Auto Industries Webinar Series
15 Sept 2011
Japan 2007-2018
8.7- 11.0 M
Korea 2007 - 2018
3.7M - 4.5 M
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•2007 -
8.3M
•2011 -
18.3M
•2018 - 31.9M
•2007 -
21.9M
•2011 - 19.7M
China
•2018 - 26.9M
European
Cluster North
America
•2011 -12.8M
•2007 -
15.0M
•2018 -16.5M
Mercosur
•2007 -
1.9M
•2011 - 3.8M
•2018 -
10.4M
India •2007 –
2.2M
•2011 –
3.8M
•2018 –
6.0M
ASEAN
•2007 –
3.2M
•2011 –
4.6M
•2018 –
5.9M
How fast things go ….11 years analysis …
Source: JD Power 2011
Sub-Saharan
Africa 2007-2018
0.7M- 1M
So China will make 32 M Cars ? Well, you know …
• “… Chinese cars are not American cars ! (and even less
European or Japanese ones !)”
Crash test !
Emissions !
Quality !
Bells and whistles (?)
Efficiency (!?)
• “Anyway, China is still an emerging country for long and they
only make cheap cars for lower income people !”
• … but, well, perhaps we should pay attention a bit more ?
BYD ?
Tibet ?
Africa ?
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China emerging country for long …
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… but should not we look a bit closer ?
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The path to 50 M Chinese Cars per year
• How many cars per year in China in the end ?
• In 2010:
Japanese model: 128.3 M People – 60 M Car Parc – 5 M Light Vehicles Sold
Car Sales = Car Parc (U.S. model: Car Sales = Car Parc / 20)
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China: 1 331.4 M People – 40 M Car Parc
• The Japanese model would give 622 M Car Parc in China 50 M Light
Vehicles Market (U.S. model: 30 M Light Vehicles Market)
• How long will the growth last ?
2003: 2.36 M Cars Sold 2010: 9.6 M Cars Sold CAGR = 22.1% !
At 22.1% growth per year, 50 M Cars yearly sales would be reached in less
than 9 years
… 600 M cars on the Chinese roads by the end of next decade ???
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How fast ? The E-Bikes model
• 2009, China's output of electric bikes (E2W) reached 22.2 M
• 2011, about 120 M e-bikes on Chinese roads, more than 30 M produced
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Not a Chinese Tsunami ! (but …)
• 中国 = Country in the Middle = Self Centric – and pragmatic !
• Not a Japanese or Korean export model
Largest internal market in history
No former American protectorate
• 1980-2000: Get hard currencies to pay for technology
Export whatever you can (From Barbie dolls to TV sets and PCs)
Import technology and business know-how
• 2000-2010: Prime the internal demand era
Grow the industry and expand technical know-how towards hi-tech
• 2011 and later: Internal demand attractiveness beats all markets
Similar to the U.S. from 1900 to 1929 … but 15 times larger
Exports still needed for offsetting raw materials/energy imports
Flows of exports accelerate with Africa and South-America in line with imports
Yuan becomes the reference trade currency for Africans … and others (?)
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In the mean time …
• Confederate Europe expands its cluster to Middle east (500 M consumers
with Oil, Gas, Solar and Nuclear Energy)
North Africa and Turkey complement Eastern Europe as growth centers
Cluster stability around the Euro
Internal cluster industrial exchanges most important
• Astonished America challenged as number one and must turn to frugality
The Illness:
• Hardest hit by inflation of oil and raw materials
• Hardest hit by the diminishing power of the Dollar
• Hardest hit by its national deficit
Cures: Considers “the confederation of NAFTA” - Strengthened Cluster – Open borders
• South-America (Brazil cluster) grows well and learns to love China
• Japan and Korea towards China economic protectorates
• India continues a difficult adolescence and re-explores links with Russia
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Cars: Enough oil for the world ?
Oil prices will keep growing robustly
China can’t afford a petrol/diesel engine model for long term growth
China will be THE driving market for (H)EVs
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Fossil-fuel CO2 emissions, 2007
•World emissions: 30.7 billion tons CO2
Implications – Macro Level • For China:
Control of strategic raw materials sources
• Oil ? Yes, but it’s not the long term solution
• Batteries, permanent magnets: Lithium, rare earths Western China
• Grid electricity: Uranium Western China
• Others: (Copper, Iron, Lead, Nickel, etc …) Africa, Latin America, Australia
“Thrifty” high-tech to save as much energy and material as possible
ICE cars Serial Hybrids, E-Cars – Top-Down and Bottom-Up
E-Bikes E-Micro-Cars (or “Segway-QiChe” ?)
• For developed countries:
Cars downsizing
Some hybrid
Europe, Japan used to smaller cars, dear oil, Nuclear energy Easier adaptation
North-America issues – Lobbies, Driving Distances, “Big and Plentiful” mentality
• For India and Russia:
India comes years after China “first come, first served” natural resources policy in
Africa and South America and could turn to Russia
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Scenario for 2010-2030
• A decade of inflation worldwide (2010-2020)
• 2020: Yuan challenges the USD as the preferred currency for
commodities
• 1 USD = 1 EUR = 2 CNY ?
• Western countries and Japan GDP per head stagnant since 2010
• India “Small Car Hub” for Developed countries
• 2015-2030: Africa economy booming
• Global Industry Growth will stay dynamic – but driven essentially by
Emerged (China) or Emerging Markets
• Boom in Energy management, Electricity Grids, E-Cars supply Chain
• Wind+Solar+Atomkraft ? Ja Bitte ! (or we’ll all suffocate !)
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What does this mean for the Car Industry ?
(… and how can my automotive business survive ?)
• Thrifty, Thrifty, Thrifty (even if you make Ferraris !)
Know your shop floor, look for Muda !
• Serial Hybrids or EVs (small ones preferred)
• Light weighting, compatible with EV architecture
Technology will evolve very fast BUT Quality will still stay paramount !
“Reserved for future use”
• Cluster organization
One Head Quarter in each cluster + Global R&D, Purchasing & Finance
coordination – Strong, empowered China HQ
Looking for Low Cost should be next door ! (Logistics, Currency Zone)
Next door emerging market have still growth potential !
• … and integrate Chinese, Spanish/Portuguese, Arabic and Russian !
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Finance: manage in a wild world
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• Currency fluctuations (not-so-low cost sourcing)
• Market fluctuations
• Accelerate in emerging markets – with the right Banker
Bankers support (Knows east/west/south)
Hands on experience in your trade
Development AND investment banker
Present in all emerging countries
World class understanding of your industry
Long term view
• Promoting efficient products and processes
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• IFC, part of the World Bank Group, is the largest global development
finance institution focused on the private sector – the global leader in
private sector development finance
• We create opportunity for people – to escape poverty and improve
their lives
• Driven by our vision and purpose, we make a unique contribution
to development
• We invest, advise, mobilize capital, and manage assets – providing
solutions for an inclusive and sustainable world
Who We Are, What We Do
Expertise: How we can help • Financial expertise
55+ years focused on sustainable projects financing in emerging markets
• Country expertise
Part of the World Bank - hands on experience in fast growth countries and
access to governments
• Industries expertise (Manufacturing, Infrastructure, Retail, VC )
Unique combination of manufacturing expertise with VC experience
A different VC model …
• Not just technology but scaling up operations
• Higher variable costs (hardware) and higher breakeven points
• Requirement for a global understanding of combined emerging and
developed market
Evolution of grids and automotive energy issues are closely monitored
• Renewables (Wind, Solar, Biomass, …)
• Batteries (Vehicles, Grid storage)
• Inverters, BMS, smart meters, RFID, Billing …
• H-EVs/EVs
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IFC’s Business (What we do) Investment Services
• Loans and intermediary services
• Equity and quasi-equity
• Syndications
• Structured and securitized products
• Risk management products
• Trade finance
• Subnational finance
• Treasury operations
• CleanTech Venture Capital
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IFC Strategic Priorities
• Strengthening the focus on frontier markets – IDA countries,
poorer regions of middle-income countries, conflict affected
and fragile states, and industries with the broadest potential
for development impact
• Building enduring partnerships with emerging market players
• Addressing climate change and ensuring environmental and
social sustainability
• Promoting private sector growth in infrastructure, health,
education, and the food supply chain
• Developing local financial markets
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Combating Climate Change
• The developing world has great
demand for energy, but cannot
afford to increase emissions due
to climate change concerns.
• Solar, wind and other forms of
renewable energy pose great
opportunities for private
investors – if risks can be
overcome.
• IFC invested $1.6 billion in
renewables in fiscal 2010,
a 60 percent increase from
the previous year.
What we can do together (Feature) • Help grow your business overseas in Emerging Markets
• “Neutral Broker” with local partners
Joint-Ventures, Clients, Suppliers
Corporate Governance (JVs)
Transparency
Intellectual Property
Ethics and Social dimensions
• First range knowledge of policies – means to influence
Ex: World Bank report on China New Energy Vehicles program …
… triggering policy support project on EV deployment in WuHan and ShenZhen
Close follow-up from WB shareholders at board level - United States (15.85%),
Japan (6.84%), China. (4.42%), Germany (4%), Britain (3.75%) and France (3.75%).
• Look for win-win cases
Sustainable economic growth effects in emerging countries
Dividends in capital, experience and technology in developed countries
Climate change mitigation
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What can be expected (Benefits)
• Financing solutions not readily available elsewhere in those markets
Long tenor, grace periods
Equity, Quasi Equity
Syndication
Local currency (when regulations allow)
Global facilities
• World Bank stamp of approval
Sustainable development
Corporate image
Credit enhancement
• Industry, Financial and Global expertise sharing
Cross-fertilization
VC / PE partnership approach on a global scale with ethics
Portfolio supervision / follow-up
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Virtuous partnership in the development cycle
A case study Example:
• Core technology and industrial practices from a U.S. company
Core system components from the best of U.S. technology
Patents combined with “secret sauces” in key areas
• Tap into huge potential emerging market (ex: China)
Localize labor intensive, bulky product processes, local deployment
Leverage lessons learned to better U.S. products and operations
Second financing round to expand in
• Other emerging countries (cheap, trimmed down solutions)
• Developed countries (upscale solutions)
• Raised VC (Mezzanine) Quasi-Equity financing from IFC
Co-investor joined IFC benefitting from due diligence and risk mitigation
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Our Vision
That people should have the opportunity
to escape poverty and improve their lives
We foster sustainable economic growth in developing
countries by supporting private sector development,
mobilizing private capital, and providing advisory and risk
mitigation services to businesses and governments.
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• IFC provides more than money
•We blend investment and advice, helping the private sector find solutions
•We spread innovative ideas, mobilizing money for clients from many sources
•As results come in, we influence the policy debate and share our learning for wider impact
Questions ?
Mr. Emmanuel POULIQUEN (普迈新)
Principal Industry Specialist
IFC - Global Manufacturing & Services – Energy Efficient Machinery
Financing production and deployment of equipment that
efficiently generate, store, transport or transform energy
http://www.ifc.org/ifcext/gms.nsf/Content/EEM_Overview
2121 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20433
Tel: +1 (202) 473-9114 Fax: +1 (202) 974-4394
Email: [email protected]
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Appendixes
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Investments by Industry, FY10
Global Financial
Markets 54%
Commitments for IFC’s Account: $12.7 Billion
Global Information and
Communication Technologies 4%
Infrastructure 12%
Subnational
Finance 1%
Health and
Education 3%
Oil, Gas, Mining
and Chemicals 8%
Private Equity and
Investment Funds 3%
Agribusiness 4%
• Global Manufacturing and
Services 11%
• Low emissions Cars, EVs
• Wind, Solar, Grids, Batteries
• Low Emissions Machines
• Other …
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Investments by Region, FY10
Commitments for IFC’s Account: $12.7 Billion
Sub-Saharan Africa 19%
East Asia and Pacific 13%
South Asia 8%
Europe and Central Asia 23%
Latin America and the
Caribbean 24%
Middle East and North Africa 12%
Global 1%
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IFC Financing
* “Mobilization” includes syndicated loans, structured finance, IFC initiatives and other, and IFC Asset Management Company.
IFC’s own account Mobilization* Loan Participants
$20bn
$15bn
$10bn
$5bn
$0
IFC Offers to Clients (What we bring) Unparalleled Expertise
• Knowledge of global industries and local markets
• Financial sector influence
• Long-term partnerships; countercyclical role
• Sustainable investments
• Leadership on corporate governance
• Value-adding expertise
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IFC Offers Clients A Unique Role
• Emphasis on development impact
World Bank affiliation
• Market discipline
• Risk-taking and risk management
• Preferred creditor status
• Political risk cover
• IFC can provide debt, equity, or a combination of both depending on the client’s needs
• IFC has a longer investment horizon (5-7 years) and is less cyclical than most financial investors
• With its equity investments, IFC can act as an “honest broker” in joint venture situations,
give additional comfort for minority shareholders, and be a catalyst for other investors.
• Leading multilateral source of development finance – IFC’s breadth of investment expertise
and years of experience in emerging markets add value to its clients
• IFC strong reputation adds credibility to investee companies that access international
capital markets
• Best practice know-how on corporate governance, environmental management, local communities,
and insurance requirements
How IFC differs from other Investors
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What IFC brings to an investment Multinational Regional Local
Quality stamp of approval
Country risk mitigation
Exposure to country risk volatility
Good contacts/knowledge
Competitive cost
Long tenors
Access to local currency funding
Complementary funding source
•What is important about IFC to a company, by size and location
•Always
•Often
•Sometimes
IFC Customer Profile: Multinationals, Regional and
Local