Title: Contents of the course
1International Finance
Part 2 International Corporate Finance
- Lecture n 7 FDI Theory and Strategy
2Why do firms become multinational?
- Five categories of strategic motives
- Market seekers
- Raw material seekers
- Production efficiency seekers
- Knowledge seekers
- Political safety seekers
- In markets where oligopolistic competition
subclassified into proactive and defensive
investments
3Why do firms become multinational?
- Markets imperfections a rationale for the
existence of multinational firms - Imperfections in the market for products
translate into market opportunities for MNEs. - Sustaining and transferring competitive advantage
- First step Identification
- The competitive advantage must be firm-specific,
transferable, and powerful enough to compensate
the firm for the potential disadvantages of
operating abroad. - It implies for an MNE to have one or several of
the following elements, that would give them an
edge over their local competitors to exploit
these market opportunities.
4Why do firms become multinational?
- Sustaining and transferring competitive advantage
- The superiority of a MNE may come from
- Economies of scale and scope
- Managerial and marketing expertise
- Advanced technology
- Financial strength
- Differentiated products
- Competitiveness of the Home Market
- It can increase firms competitive advantage in
operating abroad. - Referred to as the diamond of national
advantages.
5Why do firms become multinational?
- Diamond of national advantages
- Factor conditions availability of appropriate
factor production - Demand conditions demanding customers increase
marketing and quality control skills. - Related and supporting industries
- Firm strategy, structure and rivalry a
competitive home market forces firms to fine tune
their strategy and operational effectiveness. - Global competitions in oligopolistic industries
may substitute for domestic competition
telecom, high-tech, cosmetics...
6Why do firms become multinational?
- The OLI paradigm and internalisation
- Creates a framework to explain the prevalence of
FDI over other forms of international expansion. - The conditions for a successful investment
require a competitive advantage to be - O owner-specific can be transferred abroad.
Ex. Product differentiation. - L location-specific will be exploitable in
the targeted market. Ex. Market imperfections or
competitive advantage. - I internalisation the competitive position is
preserved by controlling the entire value chain
in the industry. Ex. Proprietary information and
human capital control in research-intensive
industries.
7Where to Invest ?
- In theory, a firm should search the best location
world-wide to take advantage of market
imperfections and enjoy its competitive
advantages. - In practice, firms have been observed to follow a
sequential search pattern. This relates to two
behavioral theories of FDI - Behavioral approach firms tend to invest first
in countries that are not too far in psychic
terms and for limited investments. Psychic
distance is defined in terms of cultural, legal
and institutional environment. As firms learn,
they are willing to take more risks, both in
terms of distance and size of investments. - International network theory sees MNE as a
member of an international network with nodes
based in each of the foreign subsidiaries,
competing with each other and influencing the
strategy and the reinvestment decisions.
8How to Invest Abroad ?
- Modes of Foreign Involvement
- Exporting versus Production Abroad
- Exporting none of the risks faced with FDI
- Disadvantages of exporting inability to
internalise and exploit the results of RD
investments. - Risk of losing markets to imitators and global
competitors. - Licensing and Management Contracts vs. Control of
Assets Abroad - Licensing popular method to take advantage of
foreign markets without committing sizeable
funds. Political risk is minimized. - Disadvantages of licensing license fees lower
than FDI profits
9How to Invest Abroad ?
- Licensing and Management Contracts
- Other disadvantages
- Possible loss of quality control
- Establishment of a potential competitor
- Risk of technology stolen, or becoming outdated
- High agency costs
- In practice, MNEs use licensing with foreign
subsidiaries or with joint ventures. - Management contracts are similar to licensing in
terms of cash-flows, and reduce political risk
since repatriation of managers is easy. - Cost effective of licensing with regard to FDI
depends on the price host countries will pay for
the services. - Since MNE continue to prefer FDI, the price is
assumed to be too low (due to the lack of
synergies in licensing?) - MINI - CASE Benecols global licensing
agreement.
10How to Invest Abroad ?
- Joint Venture vs. Wholly Owned Subsidiary
- Partially owned foreign business termed as
foreign affiliate (case of a joint venture).
Foreign business owned at more 50 foreign
subsidiary - Key success factor of a joint venture find the
right local partner. - Some advantages of a local partner
- Better understanding of the local market
- Provision of competent management, and/or
appropriate local technology - Enhanced contacts and reputation, eased access to
the local financial markets. - Potential disadvantages
- Risk of conflicts and difficulties, divergent
views, decreased control over financing or over
production rationalisation - Increased political and reputation risk, if the
wrong partner is chosen.
11How to Invest Abroad ?
- Greenfield investment vs. Acquisition
- Greenfield investment establishing a production
or service facility starting from the ground up. - Cross-borders acquisitions quicker, could be
more cost-effective in gaining competitive
advantage such as technology, brand names,
logistic and distribution. - Disadvantages of cross-borders acquisitions
- Problems of paying a too high price (but some
undervaluation cases, too, especially in crisis
situation), - Difficulties on the post-acquisition process, and
the merger of different corporate cultures. - Additional difficulties from host governments
intervention in pricing, financing, employment
guarantees
12How to Invest Abroad ?
- Strategic alliances - different stages
- Simple exchange of share ownership (as a takeover
defense) - Establishment of a separate joint venture to
develop and manufacture a product or a service
(common in high-tech industries) - Joint marketing and servicing agreement (often
forbidden by national laws)
13Multinational Capital Budgeting
- Multinational Capital Budgeting
- Same theoretical framework
- The net present value criteria can be applied
based on the expected cash flows of the project,
like in case of a domestic investment. - Complexities of budgeting a foreign project
- Parent cash flows must be distinguished from
project cash flows, each contributing to a
different view of value - Financing mode, remittance of funds, tax systems,
differing inflation rates and foreign exchange
rate movements must be taken into account - Political risk and government interference should
be included in the analysis - Terminal value is more difficult to estimate,
because of various potential purchasers, in host
country or abroad, public or private.
14Multinational Capital Budgeting
- Project versus Parent Valuation
- Strong theoretical statement to analyse the
project from the point of view of the parent,
since it is the ultimate basis for dividend
payments and other reinvestment decisions. - However, this violates the rule that, in capital
budgeting, financial cash flows should not be
mixed with operating cash flows. - Evaluation of a project from a local viewpoint
serves some useful purposes and should be
subordinated to evaluation from the parents
viewpoint. In practice, firms use both viewpoints
for evaluation. - General rules
- Almost any project should be at least giving the
same return to that on host government bonds,
that is generally the local risk-free rate
including a premium reflecting the expected
inflation rate (Ex. 33 in India). - Multinational firms should invest only if they
can earn a risk-adjusted return greater than
their locally based competitors.
15Multinational Capital Budgeting
- Illustrative case Cemex enters Indonesia
- See reference textbook Eiteman et al. pp 409 -
420 - For information and illustration
- Project valuation sensitivity analysis
- First valuation is made on a set of most likely
assumptions. - Next, and in particular in uncertain
environments, a sensitivity analysis is required,
under a variety of what if scenarios. - For example, in international projects
- Political risk what if the host country imposed
controls on dividend payment, what if funds are
blocked? - Foreign exchange risk how is the value of the
project affected by a x decrease (increase) in
the host currency rate? What about the relative
impacts of competitiveness and cash flows
changes? - Other sensitivity variables change in the
assumed terminal value, the capacity utilisation
rate, the initial project cost...
16Multinational Capital Budgeting
- Real Option Analysis
- For investments that have long lives, cash flows
returns in later years, or higher levels of risks
compared to the current business of the firm, are
often rejected by the DCF approach. - When MNEs evaluate competitive projects, DCF
analysis fails to capture the strategic options
that an investment may offer. - Real option analysis overcomes this weakness by
applying option theory to capital budgeting
decisions. It is a cross between decision-tree
analysis and pure option-based valuation. - Very useful when analysing investment projects
that can take very different values depending on
the decisions made at certain points in time
(defer, abandon, reduce capacity,..). The range
of values give the volatility of the projects
value. - MINI-CASE Tridents Chinese Market entry.
17Adjusting for Risk in Foreign Invt
- Defining risk
- One-sided risk only potential for loss. Example
expropriation, blocked funds. Often described
in probabilities of occurrence, qualitative in
character. Best thought of as acceptable /
unacceptable. - Two-sided risk risk of loss or gain. Example
foreign exchange, host government economic
policies. Often assessed through statistical
analysis, allowing rank-order of investments
alternatives. - Risk measurement origins
- From the market credit spreads, sovereign
spreads. - From institutions constructed indices ranking
countries on the basis of their macro risk
fundamentals, i.e. political and economic
stability. Inherently subjective.
18Adjusting for Risk in Foreign Invt
- Defining Foreign Investments Risks
- Firm-specific risks micro risks, at project or
corporate level - Country-specific risks macro risks, affecting
the project, but originated at the country level - Global-specific risks
- see illustration
19Foreign Investment Risks
20Adjusting for Risk in Foreign Invt
- Strategies of Foreign Investments Risks
Management - Sensitivity Analysis
- Minimize Assets at Risk
- Diversification
- Insurance
- see illustration
21Risk Management Strategies
Sensitivity Analysis Minimize Assets at Risk
Simulating business plans Minimize equity in
subsidiary Adjusting discount rate Borrow
locally Adjusting cash flows
Diversification Insurance
Plant location Hedging currency risk Source of
debt equity Risk-sharing agreement Currency
of denomination Country investment
agreements Supply sources Investment
guarantees Sales locations
22Adjusting for Risk in Foreign Invt
- Measuring and Managing Foreign Investments Risks
- Business risk project viewpoint measurement vs.
parent viewpoint measurement (adjusting discount
rates or adjusting cash flows), and portfolio
risk measurement - Foreign exchange risk see previous lectures
- Governance risk management
- Negotiate investment agreements
- Investment insurance and guarantees specific
institutions - Operating strategies after FDI decisions local
sourcing, facility location, control of
transportation, control of technology, control of
markets, brand name and trademark control, thin
equity base, multiple-source borrowing.
23Adjusting for Risk in Foreign Invt
- Country-specific risks
- Transfer risk limitations on the MNEs ability
to transfer funds into and out of the host
country without restrictions. Restrictions
usually decided by a government running out of
foreign currency reserves. Most severe form of
restriction is non convertibility. - Three types of reactions for MNEs
- Prior to investment analyse the risks and their
effects in the project design - During operations move funds using various
techniques - If movements of funds are impossible, find the
best reinvestment alternatives in the host
country.
24Adjusting for Risk in Foreign Invt
- Country-specific risks
- Moving blocked funds techniques
- Use of alternative conduits
- Adapt transfer pricing of goods and services
between parent and subsidiaries - Use leading and lagging payments
- and
- Fronting loans parent to subsidiary loan
channelled through a financial intermediary in a
third country (link financing) - Create unrelated exports help easing the
currency shortage for the host currency - Obtain special dispensation possible for some
key industries.
25 Country-Specific Risks
Country-Specific Risks Measurement and Management
26Adjusting for Risk in Foreign Invt
- Global-specific risks
- Terrorism
- Anti-globalization movement
- The role of international institutions such as
the IMF and World Bank - Environmental concerns
- Poverty
- Cyber attacks