The New Investment Rules For China

October 23rd, 2008  by China Business Success Stories

By Paul Denlinger 

Following on the global credit crisisFollowing on the global credit crisis, many have come to me to ask how these changes will affect China. As I have said earlier, China and the US are two sides to the same coin, and it pays to look at them as one economy, as this Newsweek article does. It goes without saying that this crisis will have a profound effect on China, and I’m not optimistic about the capability of the Chinese central government in Beijing to deal with it as quickly as it should.

Michael Pettis, who lives and teaches in Beijing, has been a persistent advocate of stimulating more domestic spending from Chinese consumers, and continues to advocate that position. I agree that this is necessary; I don’t think that this will happen quickly or on an even basis. There is a simple reason for this: stimulating consumer spending depends, to a large extent, on the rollout of a national healthcare system; this is something which Beijing has tried to do since the early 90s, all without success. When it comes to the lack of a national healthcare system, the US and China are in the same boat, and the national governments are equally ineffective.

So what are some investment rules you can use? Let me list seven below:

• Avoid Shanghai and Beijing. Both have excellent universities, and Beijing has central government ministries while Shanghai is the commercial capital of China. In IT, companies have preferred to hire from Tsinghua for smart technology people. But there are major problems with both cities. First of all, staff turnover is too high, and costs are too high. In the past few years, staff have routinely asked for 20-30% raises just to stay in the same company! And with all the western companies constantly going into those cities, there has been a bidding war for staff. We are in tough times now, so do you really want to get involved in bidding wars over your local staff and deal with staff turnover issues? I don’t think so. And when it comes to Internet/IT, I say that the Internet already has become a platform and there is plenty of talent around.

Do you really need expensive people from the very best universities in China who may prove a pain to manage? If you don’t, second-tier people who are reliable and don’t ask for huge pay raises are good enough, and maybe even better. When hiring local talent, look for tortoises, not hares. We are heading for much tougher times, and you need a good stable team. Beijing and Shanghai have too many hares. Your most loyal people will be the ones you hired and trained on the job. They will also be the ones who understand local market and conditions and connections. Another major issue about Beijing and Shanghai is that they are geared for exports, especially to the US. Do I need to tell you what happened to that export market?

• Instead of going to Beijing and Shanghai, look at the 20 major city markets in China if you are thinking of selling to Chinese consumers. Now is a good time to get into services for Chinese consumers. Think of cities like Dalian, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Xiamen, Guangzhou, Wuhan, Nanchang, Chongqing, Chengdu, Fuzhou, Kunming, Nanning, Nanjing, etc. If you want to get into China under the radar (in my opinion, always a wise strategy), these are places to look at very seriously. If you need knowledge workers, as in programming or game production or pharmaceuticals, pay special attention to the local universities, and partnering with them to hire their graduating students. If you show the cash and commitment, and can guarantee jobs for their students, you will get multiple offers of good deals.

• Guangdong and Zhejiang are the two largest manufacturing provinces in China. Guangdong’s factories depend on a huge pool of unskilled immigrant laborers, mostly young women, from Sichuan and other provinces. These factories and workers are going to be hit hard because of their dependency on the US market. There is too much overcapacity, too little value-added, and too little profit for most of these factories to move up the value chain. Unemployment in Guangdong and Sichuan will become a major issue. Zhejiang’s factories are mostly family-owned, and it has less reliance on immigrant workers. Because of Zhejiang’s strong private sector and private wealth, they will be able to make the adjustment in market demand from exports to domestic Chinese consumption more quickly.

• If you are a private equity or hedge fund investor, you need to think about investment horizons. In order to make up for the drop-off in exports, Beijing and provincial governments would naturally think of investing more in infrastructure. So far, most of this money has gone into infrastructure, manufacturing and real estate. The problem is that these areas are already built up and have over-capacity. They are really at a loss about what to do. If you can help and offer investments which create jobs and upgrade the skill force, you are in a good position. Be sure to get your money and profit back within 15 years (by 2023). That is because if you are selling to Chinese consumers, you are selling to the current group who are in their 20s - 40s. By 2023, China’s demographics will fall off a cliff because of the one-child policy, and they will be in savings mode instead of spending mode.

• When it comes to modernization, China is crossing a 30-foot chasm with a 20-foot rope, with each foot representing one year. China’s hardware development and infrastructure are very impressive and are the most modern in the world, as the Beijing Olympics showed. The hardest part to modernize is peoples’ mentality as the tainted milk scandal has shown. China’s aging demographics do not give it enough time to cross the chasm, so Chinese will get old before they get modern. When that happens, China will look like a bigger version of Japan, and will have all the problems Japan has today. Just hope that China has a national healthcare system in place by then.

• The wealth gap will become wider over the next 10 years between the cities and the countryside, then stabilize for five years, then shrink as the city worker bees retire in 15 years. Rural infrastructure is less developed, and so far, the Chinese government has made all the wrong moves in rural development by not supporting the development of rural collectives for the farmers. There is an excellent article (in Chinese, h/t to Stan C) about the failure of China’s rural development, and how Chinese rural development will look like the Philippines with large food processing companies employing poor farmers. This organization is partly responsible for the Sanlu tainted milk scandal, and is copied from the US. But the US has a surplus of land and shortage of farmers, while China has a shortage of land and excess of farmers! If you are interested in macroeconomic issues, this is worth more study. Its view converges very well with the view of Yasheng Huang in his new book Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics, which I have also mentioned in my previous article.

• The dumb money has already been made in China. It’s time to rebalance your portfolio to make smart money. It can be done, but it won’t be easy. Think smart, work smart, and invest for 15 years. By that time, you should be able to retire.

Paul Denlinger, The China Vortex

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12 Responses to “The New Investment Rules For China”

  1. Ryan Zhao Says:

    Impressive article!
    “Invest for 15 years”? When I see more Western kids learning Mandarin Chinese these days, I suppose they may want to continue their parents’ business till then. :-)

  2. b bodecker Says:

    Avoid local HR people like the plague, we joke about them here in Beijing as no one is sure what they do. They do not check resumes, the do not verify anything. I help people and companys with jobs and internships and I’ve not met a HR person who really knows what the job is really about (western standards). They tend to stack the company with their friends (I can tell you some shocking 1st hand stories). When you hire people, if you are in Beijing, hire a lot of local people (and same for other cities). They can get things done quicker, have friends, family’s and contacts that will save you a lot of time and money.

    The down side is they will also do business with friends to get/give kick-backs, but this can be a positive thing as well.

  3. muller-margot stephane Says:

    good morning

    i think china will be hit the next 6 months but CHINA is big and can invest domestically in many province,counties many places need to be developed.

    domestic market is big enough to balance business
    from international to domestic.

    CHINA has a chance to have a central government full of experts to manage this crisis and balance the trend in good favor for china economy

    also they can take the advantage to have participation in many international corporate firm over the world at low price.

    tks stephane

  4. b bodecker Says:

    Steph - Let’s agree to meet back on this blog in 6 months and see how the govt “experts” do, ok?
    ;)

  5. Jay Says:

    Very good article! However, as for Zhejiang, investors should keep in mind that this province has a very bad reputation for private - government collusion to rip off investors. Contracts are not observed and foreign businesspeople seem to find themselves kidnapped in this province more than in others.

  6. Ryan Zhao Says:

    Hope to see more valuable articles and comments from this website as “China Success Stories”, rather than too much “China Risks Stories”, hehe.

  7. Nicholas Says:

    Good articles on the website. LOL Ryan about China Risk Stories. Maybe a alternative perspective website ChinaRiskStories.com in 6mths?

    Seriously, hopefully not.

  8. muller-margot stephane Says:

    good morning

    yes the first trimester will be bad for few reasons
    -toys,clothes, for few reasons
    -Less exportation
    -but also overcapacity

    we will see the amplitude of the crisis in CHINA and also the world

    But China knows already the problem and take the right step

    I believe when we read the result of 2nd trimester we will see CHINA still has a decent growth of his GNP (6-8% is still great)

    but as mr Zhao said let see the sucess stories of CHINA there are many many.
    -healthcare
    -space
    -agriculture
    -green city (trees in each street in some towns)
    etc…
    -mini-insurance for peasants
    -better life for chinese people
    etc….

    People have short memories no-one imagine CHINA 20 years ago to now HUGE PROGRESS.HUGE SUCESS

    tks

  9. b bodecker Says:

    To ryan and steph…. So would you go and buy a car and hope you only hear the good news about it and none of the problems? I want to hear the good and bad of situations and then make an informed decision for myself.

    I think many people in China are pleading to “give us credit for what we have done”, like this is enough and China need not continue to grow and improve. Why stop improving? What is wrong with wanting things better?

    Though I’ve worked with many bosses in China who refuse to listen to any bad news and the employees are trained to only tell the boss positive things, even if they are lies.

  10. aussidave Says:

    Jay
    interested in your comments on Zhejiang as negotiating to move a foreign JV there.
    do you have further infomation to justify your statements

  11. Thomas Says:

    Good writing, thoroughly agreeable.

    I tend to disagree on the big city labour market thing. I have seen a lot of countryside talent moving to Shanghai, quitting their jobs in Wuhan, Chongqing, Chengdu… Among qualified personnel hares outnumber turtles 10:1, IMHO.

    Regarding the comments on HR: In a medium size enterprise I would never allow anyone but myself to hire, after personally screening all CVs. It is really a fact that Chinese HR managers bring in people whom they owe favours, relatives or friends, mostly utterly unqualified.

    In large foreign enterprises it sometimes can’t be helped, resulting in massive corruption and embezzlement, which gives you a mild idea on what is going on in state-owned enterprises.

  12. Ibo Says:

    SO, what are the real foreign investments rules in China. Our company First Prime Tradings is operating a shipping service includes China, and considering to have its own sales offices there…

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