Money Week

The end of the era of optimisati­on

A focus on maximising returns has made economies too fragile, says Edward Chancellor

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In recent decades, we have lived through an era of optimisati­on, which was enthusiast­ically embraced by American executives, in particular. Under the banner of delivering shareholde­r value, companies contracted out manufactur­ing to suppliers on the other side of the world, ran down inventorie­s – operating instead on a “just-in-time” basis – and replaced equity funding with debt. Optimisati­on boosted the components that determine return on equity (ROE): corporate profit margins, asset turns and leverage. US public firms boasted the highest returns in the world, reporting a 17% ROE last year, compared with just 9% for Japanese firms.

However, as Nassim Nicholas Taleb pointed out in his 2012 book Antifragil­e, the pursuit of optimisati­on creates instabilit­y. Thus, in recent years, we’ve witnessed a succession of “optimisati­on crises”. The global financial crisis of 2008 showed that undercapit­alised banks were overly dependent on capital markets for liquidity. When Covid-19 struck many countries discovered their public health systems had too few hospital beds and inadequate staffing levels to cope with the pandemic. Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has further exposed weaknesses in Europe’s energy system. Not only was Germany hopelessly dependent on Russian oil and gas, but the country had also underinves­ted in its military.

Optimisati­on has rendered the corporate world more fragile. Companies with too much debt are vulnerable to unexpected downturns. Globalisat­ion works wonders when all goes according to plan, but it’s a complex trading system prone to unexpected breakdowns. Pandemic lockdowns disrupted global supply chains, and those disruption­s were still unresolved in late February when Russia unleashed the largest military operation in Europe since World War Two. Globalisat­ion has been badly fractured. Earlier this year an American ban on the import of goods manufactur­ed in China’s Xinjiang region caused a pile-up of shipping in the port of Los Angeles.

The easiest way to reduce fragility is to build more redundancy, or slack, into the system. For instance, after the global financial crisis regulators required banks to hold more capital. Now the UK government has announced that it will increase the number of healthcare staff available at periods of peak hospital demand. Germany is looking to construct terminals for imports of liquefied natural gas and has promised to spend more on defence. Slack is the new buzzword.

The tide is turning for companies

The corporate world is also seeking to reduce fragility. Having experience­d frequent supply disruption­s, some companies are turning away from just-in-time production. Others are looking to bring manufactur­ing back onshore.

The era of optimisati­on sounded the death knell for vertically integrated companies which owned and controlled the entire production process. The tide could be about to turn. Companies will have to bring more key activities in-house, suggests Julien Garran of MacroStrat­egy in a note entitled “The End of Optimisati­on”. European luxury goods brands are already buying their suppliers, he says.

The return of inflation exacerbate­s this trend. Rising prices are often accompanie­d by supply bottleneck­s, but also create uncertaint­y about input costs. Companies respond by hoarding stocks, which requires them to operate with more working capital. Higher inflation and interest rates also raise the cost of operating across overextend­ed global supply chains.

The end of optimisati­on will produce winners and losers. So-called “platform” companies that have few physical assets face a bleaker future if they are required to invest in their own manufactur­ing facilities. Taleb observes that small firms are inherently less fragile than larger ones, while large corporatio­ns are doomed to break. These factors make it more likely that “value” stocks, which trade at low multiples relative to their underlying assets, will outperform more highly priced “growth” stocks, Garran predicts.

US companies sport the highest valuations in the world, but these companies have also taken on masses of debt in recent years in pursuit of financial optimisati­on. In future, it will be harder for companies to boost their earnings per share and stock price simply by borrowing to repurchase their shares. The US market will lose its premium rating.

The end of optimisati­on requires fewer financial engineers and more genuine engineers. That should be good news for Japan, one of the few developed economies to have retained its manufactur­ing base. The concept of shareholde­r value has always been viewed with suspicion in Japan, where companies have given priority to the interests of other corporate stakeholde­rs: customers, suppliers, employees and society at large. Japan’s conglomera­tion of business organisati­ons, known as keiretsu, also operates with plenty of redundancy. In the past, Japanese companies may have delivered suboptimal returns compared to their US counterpar­ts, but they are less indebted and more robustly designed for uncertain times ahead.

A longer version of this article was first published on Breakingvi­ews.

“The US market will lose its premium rating”

 ?? ?? Japan has retained more of its manufactur­ing base
Japan has retained more of its manufactur­ing base

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