National Post (National Edition)

Corporate America in 'K-shaped' recovery

Largest businesses get bigger

- ANDREW EDGECLIFFE-JOHNSON

NEW YORK • “These are times when the strong can get stronger,” Nike Inc. chief executive John Donahoe said in September, as he celebrated the digital investment­s and robust brand that helped the sportswear group to increase its earnings even as COVID-19 closed its stores.

Nike was far from the only household name boasting of resilient profits and a growing share of a market it already leads. From Amazon to Starbucks, McDonald’s to Mondelez, many of America’s biggest businesses got bigger this year, even as the turmoils of COVID-19 plunged smaller rivals into crisis.

Just as Blackstone had been “a huge winner coming out of the global financial crisis,” chief executive Steve Schwarzman told analysts who follow the private equity group recently, “I think it’s going to turn out to be another one of those accelerati­on moments.”

The unequal, “K-shaped” recovery that economists fear is dividing the wider U.S. economy is also playing out across Corporate America, as the pandemic deepens the gulf between the largest, best-financed firms and those lacking scale, leading brands or robust balance sheets.

Bank and central bank policies coupled with shifts in consumer behaviour have accentuate­d trends that were already putting more wealth and growth in the hands of a few large companies, according to academics, consultant­s and corporate advisers.

That, some of them warn, threatens to reduce competitio­n, stifle innovation and hold back smaller businesses that are supposed to be sources of job creation and economic dynamism.

“The last year's clearly been K-shaped,” said James Manyika, chair of the McKinsey Global Institute, noting an MGI analysis found almost all of the “superstar” firms became stronger in 2020. That partly reflected the fact that the group featured many technology and pharmaceut­ical companies, and that most of its members had the global reach to ride out local COVID-19 waves.

But the year's winners had also typically invested more in the digital tools which became critical as employees and customers scattered.

Even within sectors, “the variations between the most and least digitized companies were huge,” Manyika said. From retailers forced to step up their e-commerce offerings to banks needing to move more transactio­ns online, “the digitally enabled ones were ready for this moment.”

The trend toward corporate concentrat­ion began long before the pandemic, with large U.S. public companies seizing a growing share of economic activity since the mid-1990s, Dartmouth professor Vijay Govindaraj­an and colleagues found in a study last year.

Small companies have found it increasing­ly hard to “escape their class,” they wrote, while the biggest businesses have had the resources to invest in assets including their brands.

The companies that went into the pandemic with the strongest brands mostly extended their lead, as customers retreated to familiar suppliers.

“Consumers are really looking during this time for brands they trust,” Michele Buck, Hershey chief executive, said on the chocolate maker's last earnings call. Dirk Van de Put, CEO of Mondelez, which owns Cadbury, attributed its market share gains to the same phenomenon: “Consumers . . . went to brands that they felt comfortabl­e with. It reminds them of their childhood.”

Safety-conscious consumers also frequented fewer stores, favouring companies that could supply a wide array of goods. Walmart and Target both cited such “trip consolidat­ion” as playing to their advantage.

U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data show the human impact of a divergence that happened partly along sectoral lines.

Courier and warehousin­g companies fuelling the e-commerce boom, tech groups, and big banks and insurers were among the few to add jobs in 2020. In the more fragmented arts and entertainm­ent world, and at hotel and airline companies which were singularly stricken by the pandemic, the layoffs fell heavily.

The same data set also reveals the divide between winners and losers within certain sectors. The only retailers beyond those selling food and alcohol to have created jobs in the year to November were big box retailers such as Walmart and Costco, and those selling building materials and garden supplies, such as Home Depot.

In their latest earnings statements, Walmart, Costco and Home Depot reported year-on-year sales increases of 5.3 per cent, 16.9 per cent and 23 per cent respective­ly.

Each has seen its shares rise more than 20 per cent this year, even as Amazon's growing e-commerce dominance lifted its stock more than two-thirds.

Much of the divergence stems from bigger companies' easier access to capital, according to Olivier Darmouni, a Columbia Business School economics professor.

Large public companies with investment-grade credit ratings led a record US$2.5 trillion of corporate borrowing this year. That positioned industry leaders such as Ford and GM to be ready when demand began to recover.

By contrast, a study led by Darmouni showed that the more costly bank loans on which smaller companies are more dependent became much harder to access this year as banks tightened their lending standards. The increase in bank credit in the first half of 2020 “came almost entirely from drawdowns by large firms on pre-committed lines of credit,” his research concluded.

“There's a very clear premium from being large,” he said. “The contracts that were signed in good times are ... only reliable if you're a big firm.”

The past year has shown not only how unequally credit flowed, but also how policy responses to the crisis risked amplifying the trend, Darmouni said. “The Fed and the Treasury are used to helping big companies like big automakers and big banks. They're not used to dealing with smaller companies. The big lesson there is it doesn't trickle down,” he said.

The biggest corporate casualties of 2020 were those which went into the pandemic with fragile balance sheets, such as Hertz, the car rental company, and out-offavour operators in markets such as retail, restaurant­s and property which suffer from overcapaci­ty.

“The pandemic has exacerbate­d the strength of the good and similarly highlighte­d the weaknesses of the worst companies,” said Mohsin Meghji, chief executive of the restructur­ing advisory group M-III Partners.

Poorly capitalize­d firms outside their industry's top two or three competitor­s could “muddle along” in a strong economy, he said, but now “people will direct their capital to the survivors and remove it from the ones that shouldn't survive.”

Meghji now expected “significan­t rationaliz­ation” in those overcrowde­d sectors, with some weak firms selling to their industries' winners and others collapsing.

If that happened, he argued, “COVID could end up being a significan­t catalyst for making the American economy a lot more clear and competitiv­e because it's forced what should have taken place over five, seven or 10 years to happen much faster.”

 ?? VALENTYN OGIRENKO / REUTERS FILES ?? The companies that went into the COVID-19 pandemic with the strongest brands mostly extended their lead
as customers retreated to familiar suppliers, business analysts say.
VALENTYN OGIRENKO / REUTERS FILES The companies that went into the COVID-19 pandemic with the strongest brands mostly extended their lead as customers retreated to familiar suppliers, business analysts say.

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