Though Chile’s Consumption Story Remains Solid, Multinationals’ Supply-side Costs Are Likely to Rise

With the second quarter now well under way, Chile continues to outperform, though downside risks loom on the horizon as the outlook for copper prices weakens. Internal demand remains a key growth driver and continues to outpace top-line growth, raising fears that the economy may be on the verge of overheating. In our view, such fears are overblown at present, given that increased consumption has been driven in large part by rising real wages rather than increased borrowing.

Rising labor costs, increased potential for skilled labor shortages, and more restrictive credit conditions do, however, represent supply-side risks for multinationals already hard-hit by rising energy costs and the potential for strike-related supply chain disruptions as the electoral cycle kicks into gear.

Trend #1: Near-term Supply Chain Disruptions Likely as Election Year Politics Take Hold

  • In recent weeks, strikes have broken out in a number of different sectors in Chile. Port workers have disrupted copper and fresh fruit exports, miners at the state-owned copper company Codelco demanded higher wages, preschool teachers from Fundación Integra called a 24-hour strike, and LAN airline workers have publicly protested against firings. These strikes are timed to capitalize on the electoral cycle, and while the volume is expected to decline following November’s election, multinationals may experience supply chain disruptions as a bandwagoning effect plays out across various sectors of the economy

Trend #2: A Stronger Peso Will Fuel Capital Investment Over the Near-Term

  • The Chilean peso appreciated 7.8% against the US dollar in 2012, and as of mid-April, has appreciated 2.2% in 2013. The sustained real appreciation of the peso has strengthened domestic purchasing power, benefitting companies importing consumer durables and capital goods into the Chilean market, while taking a toll on commodity exporters. Multinationals with local operations and/or production are likely to face rising costs as the prices of non-tradable inputs (i.e. labor, real estate, water, and electricity) rise in USD terms, even against a backdrop of muted inflation.
  • While the peso will remain strong against the dollar in historical terms, moderation is anticipated over course of 2013, given a weaker outlook for copper demand and expectations that the Fed will scale back bond purchases.

Trend #3: An Uptick in Immigration Will Offset Chile’s Increasingly Tight Labor Market

  • While multinationals are concerned about the potential for shortages of skilled labor and rising labor costs as the Chilean economy approaches full employment, a recent uptick in arrivals of skilled immigrants from the distressed economies of Spain and Argentina may help fill critical capability gaps. Currently, companies with more than 25 employees can only fill 15% of positions with foreign hires. However, our expectation is that reform efforts will aim to raise this cap and streamline the visa process, while increasing inter-agency cooperation to ensure that policy is optimized to meet the country’s labor and technical needs.

FSG clients may click here to access a full report for further reading on FSG’s quarterly market view of Chile.

 

Latin America’s Moment: Making the Case and Capturing Opportunity

Making the Case for Latin America Has Historically Revolved around the Region’s Untapped Growth Potential

Making the case for resources has long been a challenge for emerging markets executives—while emerging markets represent tremendous growth opportunities, they have historically been viewed as risky, volatile, and fragmented, undermining corporate willingness to commit large amounts of resources. On a regional level, many of the Latin America executives we work with have expressed frustration at having to defend the region’s potential when top-line growth has been higher elsewhere in the world, particularly in Asia.

At Frontier Strategy Group, we have long strived to help our clients overcome such skepticism and communicate upwards effectively by emphasizing the region’s hard-won macroeconomic stability, relatively under-penetrated markets, and growing middle class. While these drivers remain in place and multinationals’ growth targets for Latin America are now on par with those seen in Asia, sluggish global growth has raised the stakes, and emerging markets are increasingly expected to deliver both top- and bottom-line growth.

However, Sluggish Global Growth & Underperformance in 2012 Have Undermined Confidence in Latin America

In the wake of Venezuela’s recent devaluation and the death of President Hugo Chávez, as Argentina continues to impose heterodox capital and import controls and Brazil edges towards stagflation, it is easy to understand why multinational executives face growing skepticism from risk-averse corporate centers as they strive to make the case for resources in Latin America.

Fortunately, Executives Compelled to Reassess the Region’s Potential Can Walk Away Reassured

While we certainly acknowledge the endogenous and exogenous factors undermining Latin America’s near-term outlook, we remain bullish about the region’s potential over the medium-to-long term, and our optimism is grounded in a demonstrable belief that the region’s core advantages have in fact remained intact, and will be reinforced by positive secular trends.

Not Only Do Latin America’s Core Advantages Remain Intact…

Latin America’s core advantages can be divided into four buckets, including profitability, relative growth, stability, and concentrated financial resources. Of these four advantages, profitability stands out as the most salient given the pivot to profitability that emerging markets executives are experiencing. As growth remains stalled in developed economies and corporate places increasing pressure on emerging markets, 73% of FSG clients in Latin America have experienced or expect to experience a shift in corporate emphasis towards bottom-line growth over the near-term. With this in mind, it is certainly reassuring to consider that available data on publicly traded companies indicate that average operating margins in Latin America are 55% higher than in the BRICs excluding Brazil.

At present, Latin America derives its profitability advantage vis-à-vis other emerging market regions primarily from a host of demand-side factors which allow multinationals to sell at higher margins and maximize the gains associated with realizing economies of scale. However, these advantages have the potential to diminish over time as competition within the region increases, meaning the time to build market share and brand loyalty is now.

When it comes to GDP growth, while the pace of growth in other emerging markets is expected to decelerate in comparison with pre-crisis rates, LATAM has remained relatively resilient and will accelerate in the coming years.

If you’re tempted to dismiss growth and profitability out of fear of resurgent instability, think again. More conservative corporate centers have historically associated Latin America with hyperinflation, uneven growth, and overexposure to commodity boom-and-bust cycles. Part of the story we’re striving to help our clients communicate is that while these sorts of risks persist in specific markets, the region as a whole has progressed tremendously thanks to orthodox macroeconomic reforms.

Inflation targeting regimes, reduced deficit spending, and the liberalization of trade and capital flows have brought down inflation, empowered consumers and provided the stability necessary for sustained growth. Latin America also remains well-positioned to ride out any future global downturn, as its economy is less dependent on trade than APAC, and less integrated into the global financial system, reducing the risk of Eurozone contagion. Concentrated financial resources also bode well for B2C and B2B multinationals—per capita private consumption spending and government expenditure in LATAM outpace other EM markets including India and EMEA, and are on par with China.

But investment and reform are positioning the region to build on these strengths moving forwards, unlocking new opportunities for multinationals:

Most importantly, Latin America is well-positioned to build on these core advantages, and secular trends are already yielding proof points. Trends we’re tracking range from Peña Nieto’s ambitious reform agenda and the resurgence of manufacturing in Mexico to Colombia’s peace dividend and Peru’s rapid rise. On a pan-regional level, energy resources will bolster government coffers and empower investment in infrastructure and human capital, while the rise of the Pacific Alliance will provide a decidedly pro-business counterweight to the increasingly anachronistic Mercosur. The region is on the rise, and there has never been a better moment to make—and win—the case.