KTG w/ John Doggett 4.13.10- "Global Trade Outlook"

60
McCombs Knowledge To Go April 13, 2010

description

We are in the eye of a hurricane in global trade, unlike anything anyone has seen in recent history. Andy Grove calls this time a strategic inflection point, “a time in the life of a business [or country] when its fundamentals are about to change. That change can mean an opportunity to rise to new heights. But it may just as likely signal the beginning of the end,” (Grove, Only the Paranoid Survive). Our rules of thumb and assumptions are no longer valid, and countries we hadn’t considered to be competitors in the past are emerging ahead of the US. Listen and learn as Professor Doggett examines recent global trends and zeroes in on the future global economy as impacted by recent Chinese economic growth.

Transcript of KTG w/ John Doggett 4.13.10- "Global Trade Outlook"

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McCombs Knowledge To Go

April 13, 2010

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Global Trade Outlook

by Professor John Doggett

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We Are In The Eye of a S.I.P.

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S.I.P.’s Are Scary

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Birth of the BRICs In 2001, as the Internet Bubble was

collapsing and the stock market was imploding, Goldman Sachs predicted that four countries would dominate global economic activity in the 21st Century.

Brazil Russia India China

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The Axis of the Future

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Are These Guys Crazy?

6,100% Annual Inflation (1994)

Shock Therapy and the Oligarchs (1990s)

Two Weeks of Foreign Reserves (1991)

The Cultural Revolution (1966-1976)

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Largest Countries By Population1. China 1,338,612,968 (slightly smaller than the US)

2. India 1,156,897,766 (slightly more than one-third the size of the US)

3. United States 307,212,123 (6.25% of the earth’s land mass = 424,378,888)

4. Indonesia 240,271,522 (slightly less than three times the size of Texas)

5. Brazil 198,739,269 (slightly smaller than the US)

6. Pakistan 174,578,558 (slightly less than twice the size of California)

7. Bangladesh 156,050,883 (slightly smaller than Iowa)

8. Nigeria 149,229,090 (slightly more than twice the size of California)

9. Russia 140,041,247 (approximately 1.8 times the size of the US )

10.Japan 127,078,679 (slightly smaller than California)

11. Mexico 111,211,789 (slightly less than three times the size of Texas)

12.Philippines 97,976,603 (slightly larger than Arizona)

13.Vietnam 88,576,758 (slightly larger than New Mexico)

CIA World Factbook - April, 2010

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National GDP in 2009 (purchasing power parity)

Country GDP 2009 Growth %1. United States $ 14,260,000,000,000 - 2.4%

2. China $ 8,789,000,000,000 8.7%

3. Japan $ 4,137,000,000,000 - 5.3%

4. India $ 3,560,000,000,000 6.5%

5. Germany $ 2,811,000,000,000 - 5.00%

6. United Kingdom $ 2,149,000,000,000 - 4.3%

7. Russia $ 2,116,000,000,000 - 7.9%

8. France $ 2,110,000,000,000 - 2.2%

9. Brazil $ 2,025,000,000,000 0.2%

10.Italy $ 1,760,000,000,000 - 4.8%

11.Mexico $ 1,482,000,000,000 - 7.1%

12.Spain $ 1,368,000,000,000 - 3.6%

13.South Korea $ 1,356,000,000,000 0.2%

14.Canada $ 1,285,000,000,000 - 2.5%

CIA World Factbook – April, 2010

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Elephants Emerging from the Mist Total World Population = 6,790,062,216 BRIC Population = 2,834,291,250 (41.7%)

Total World Land Area = 174,814,000 sq. km. (- oceans)

BRIC Land Area = 38,471,715 (22%)

Total World Gross Domestic Product = $58.07 Trillion (Official Exchange Rate)

Total World Gross Domestic Product = $70.29 Trillion (Purchasing Power Parity) (p.p.p.)

BRIC Gross Domestic Product (p.p.p.) = $ 16.49 Trillion (23.5%)

Source: CIA World Factbook – April 2010

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Today, The BRICs Have Arrived BRICs Economies collectively are now 23.5% of

global GDP, which is $2.2 trillion larger than America’s GDP.

China is the second largest economy in the world. Today!

India is the fourth largest economy in the world. Today!

The Trade Implications are Obvious

CIA World FactBook, Goldman Sachs and Professor Doggett Analysis

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China is On the Move Goldman Sachs says that China can

become the largest economy in the world by 2035 by growing by 5% a year.

What does the world look like when China’s economy is 9x bigger than it is today?

What opportunities does this represent for American entrepreneurs?

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India is Rising Goldman Sachs says that India can

challenge the US for #2 by 2040 by growing by 6% a year.

What does the world look like when the Indian economy is 12x bigger than it is today?

What opportunities does this represent for American entrepreneurs?

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Here Comes The BRIC Middle Class Goldman Sachs predicts that the BRIC Middle

Class could grow 4x in the next decade

Never before have we seen the addition of 750 million new members of the middle class in one decade.

Goldman says that the BRIC Middle Class could grow from 250 million in 2005 to 3.5 billion by 2050*

Jim O'Neill, Managing Director & Head of Global Economic Research, Goldman Sachs, 5/06

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Future GDP (PPP) Estimates

Source IMF (Oct 2009)

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GDP Predictions

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Dr. P. Konana, McCombs Business School, University of Texas at Austin

A Swarm of Inflection Points

India - Total Trade

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How Far The BRICs Have Come In 2006 the G7 (US, Japan, Germany, France, Britain,

Italy & Canada) held $1,253,900,000,000 in FOREX

By the end of 2007 China’s FOREX reserves had passed $1,500,000,000,000

China spent $65 billion for the Olympics. 5x the cost of the Athens Olympics.

China’s China Investment Corporation is a $300 billion State VC Fund

Today, China has $2,400,000,000,000 in FOREX reserves.

Professor P. Konana, McCombs School of Business, University of Texas at Austin & Goldman Sachs

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Go Where the Market Is 756 million Mobile Phone Users in

China (January, 2010)

Only 56.3% of China’s population

550 million Mobile Phone Users in India

19,000,000 Indians signed up for cell phone service in January, 2010 . . . for the first time ever

612,903 new subscribers every day of the month

All of Motorola’s mobile phone ads are developed and designed in Beijing They outsource to the US and Europe for

“localization”

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Exports in 2009 (Trillion US $)1. China $1.194

2. Germany $1.121

3. U.S.A. $0.995

4. Japan $0.516

5. France $0.457

6. Netherlands $0.398

7. Italy $0.369

8. South Korea $0.355

9. United Kingdom $0.351

10.Hong Kong $0.317

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Exports, continued13. Russia $0.296

14. Singapore $0.269

15. Mexico $0.230

17. Taiwan $0.204

21. India $0.165

23. Brazil $0.159

24. Malaysia $0.156

25. Thailand $0.151

30. Indonesia $0.116

Greater China $2.270

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Export Partners (2008) China

USA 17.7% Hong Kong 13.3% Japan 8.1% South Korea 5.2% Germany 4.1%

India U.A.E. 12.3% USA 11.7% China 5.4% Singapore 4.5%

United States Canada

20.1% Mexico

11.7% China 5.5% Japan 5.1% Germany 4.2% United Kingdom 4.1%

Brazil USA 13.7% Argentina 8.7% China 8.1% Netherlands 5.2% Germany 4.4%

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Imports in 2009 (Trillions US $)1. USA $1.445

2. Germany $0.931

3. China $0.922

4. France $0.532

5. Japan $0.491

6. United Kingdom $0.474

7. Netherlands $0.3589

8. Italy $0.3587

9. Hong Kong $0.345

10.Belgium $0.315

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Imports, continues14. India $0.254

15. Singapore $0.245

16. Mexico $0.234

17. Russia $0.197

19. Taiwan $0.175

25. Brazil $0.136

26. Thailand $0.132

28. Malaysia $0.120

31. Indonesia $0.087

Greater China $2.407

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Import Partners (2008) China

Japan 13.3% South Korea 9.9% Taiwan

9.2% USA 7.2% Germany 4.9%

India China 10.8% Saudi Arabia 6.9% USA 6.7% U.A.E. 6.7% Iran 4.2%

United States China 16.4% Canada

15.7% Mexico

10.1% Japan 6.6% Germany 4.6%

Brazil USA 14.9% China 11.6% Argentina 7.9% Germany 7.0%

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LET’S FOCUS ON CHINANow

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Welcome to the New China

copyright - John N. Doggett, 2008

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Growth at Warp Speed

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The People’s Republic of Communist China?

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www.lenbracken.com/images/china31

Shenzhen in 1979

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30,000 people lived here in 1983

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:57440.jpg

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China’s Exploding Middle Class

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Chinese Banks and The World

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GDP Growth Rate

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Exports as percent of GDP

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Imports as percent of GDP

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GDP vs. Exports (% of GDP)

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

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GDP vs. Imports (% of GDP)

Source: World Bank World Development Indicators

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US Trade (Im)Balance with China

http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html

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Who Owns Our Debt? (Billion US$) May 2008

China = $506.8 Japan= $575.3 Caribbean Banking

Centers = $104.5 Oil Exporters = $164.2 UK = $271.2 Brazil = $151.4 Russia = $63.7 Luxembourg = $75.2 Hong Kong = $61.4 Taiwan = $38.9

January 2010 China = $889.0 Japan = $765.4 Oil Exporters = $218.4 UK = $206.0 Brazil = $169.1 Hong Kong = $146.6 Caribbean Banking

Centers = $143.5 Russia = $124.2 Taiwan = $119.6 Switzerland = $84.4

http://www.treas.gov/tic/mfh.txt

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Who is Our Banker? In May, 2008, we owed China, Inc.

$607.1 billion.

By January, 2010, this number had grown to $1.16 trillion

We borrowed an additional $552.9 billion in 1 ½ years. This is a 91.07% increase in their “line of credit”

to US

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What Are They Buying Now? Majority Share of GM China & GM India Hummer from GM (Not anymore)Hummer from GM (Not anymore) Volvo from Ford 15% of the Cleveland Cavaliers 20% of Fisher & Pavkel (New Zealand) Oz Minerals (Australia) for $1.4 billion Addax Petroleum (Swiss oil company)

for $7 billion Access to Kurdish & Nigerian oil fields

9.9% of Morgan Stanley & Citibank

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Rank Country Volume % change over 2008

1 United States 298.3 -10.6

2 Japan 228.9 -14.2

3 Hong Kong 174.9 -14.1

4 South Korea 156.2 -16.0

5 Taiwan 106.2 -17.8

6 Germany 105.7 -8.1

7 Australia 60.1 0.7

8 Malaysia 52.0 -3.0

9 Singapore 47.9 -8.8

10 India 43.4 -16.3

Source: PRC General Administration of Customs, China's Customs Statistics

China’s Top Trade Partners (2009 US $ Billions)

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China’s #1 Trading Partners Australia 15.4% Bangladesh 15.8% Benin 36.1% Burma 31.3% Equatorial

Guinea 18.2% Ethiopia

16.3% Gambia

21.6% Ghana 16.0% Guinea 15.4% Hong Kong 46.6% Japan 18.8% North Korea 57.0% South Korea 17.7%

Lesotho26.3%

Macau 31.1% Madagascar 20.1% Malaysia 13.9% Nigeria

16.1% Pakistan 14.3% Paraguay 30.0% Sierra Leone 10.2% Sudan 20.3% Tanzania 13.7% Togo 35.3% U.A.E. 12.9% USA 16.4% Vietnam 22.4%

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China’s #2 Trading Partners Angola

15.2% Argentina 12.4% Armenia 8.6% Brazil 11.1% Canada 9.8% Chile 11.9% Columbia 11.5% Comoros 12.5% Democratic

Rep of Congo18.7%

Cuba 11.8% Egypt 9.9% Germany 8.2%

Indonesia 11.8% Iran 12.6% Jordan 10.4% Kazakhstan 25.0% Kyrgyzstan 17.9% Laos 10.4% Libya 9.3% Mauritania 8.9% Mexico 13.5% Mongolia 27.8% Netherlands 10.1% New Zealand

13.2% Niger 11.0%

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China’s #2 Trading Partners, cont. Peru 10.5% Saudi Arabia 10.4% South Africa 11.0% Sri Lanka 12.4% Syria 8.7% Taiwan 14.0% Tajikistan 11.9% Thailand 12.7% Turkmenistan 16.7% Uzbekistan 15.3% Yemen 11.8% Zimbabwe 4.2%

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Income per Capita in 2050 (2006 US$)

The “Rich Club” United States $92,000 Korea $90,000 United Kingdom $80,000 Russia $78,000 Canada $75,000 France $74,000 Germany $68,000 Japan $67,000

Upper Middle Income Group

Mexico $62,000 Italy $58,000 Brazil $50,000 China $48,000 Turkey $45,000

Goldman Sachs BRIC Book (2007) - page 155

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Income per Capita in 2050 (2006 US$)

Lower Middle Income Group

Vietnam$35,000

Iran$32,000

Indonesia$20,000

India $18,000 Egypt $17,000 Philippines $16,000

Low Income Group

Nigeria $10,000 Pakistan $5,000 Bangladesh $4,000

Goldman Sachs BRIC Book (2007) - Page 155

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Dr. P. Konana, McCombs Business School, University of Texas at Austin

Energy per Capita Rising with Incomes

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1,000

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Energy Consumption and GDP per Capita: 2002

Energy usage per capita (oil equivalent litres per person per year)

GDP per capita (1990 US dollars per person per year)

India

South Korea

China

Japan

UK

Australia

US

Source: GGDC, BP, GSJBW

Source: Roopa Purushothaman, Goldman Sachs, BRICs Report 2003

Japan

UK

South Korea

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Unprecedented Energy Growth China became the World’s Largest Emitter of

energy-related CO2 in 2008.

China will become the World’s Largest Consumer of Energy in 2010.

From 2007 and 2030, China will install more new electricity generating capacity than exists in the United States in 2007

World Energy needs in 2030 will be 55% higher than in 2006

China and India will = 45% of this new demand

World Energy Outlook - 2007

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China’s Exploding Energy Demand China’s Primary Energy demand will more

than double from 1,742 million toe in 2005 to 3,819 million toe in 2030 ( 3.2% annual growth rate)

In 2005, the United States used 1/3 more energy than China

By 2010, China will use more energy than the United States

China’s primary energy demand will grow by 5.1% until 2015

World Energy Outlook - 2007

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Who is Worried About IP? Thermal Power Research Institute is

China’s world-leading laboratory on cleaner coal, has just licensed its latest design to Future Fuels in the US. Future Fuels will pay about $100 million to import

from China a 130-foot-high maze of equipment that turns coal into a gas before burning it. This method reduces toxic pollution and makes it easier to capture and sequester gases like carbon dioxide under ground. Future Fuels will ship the equipment to

Pennsylvania and have Chinese engineers teach American workers how to assemble and operate it.

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China Drawing High-Tech Research Mark Pinto, Chief Technology Officer of

Applied Materials moved to Beijing in January

Applied Materials is building its newest and largest research labs in China

Applied held its annual shareholder’s meeting in Xi’an, China. Applied’s global headquarters are in Santa Clara,

California

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Applied’s New Xi’an R&D Plant

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This Will Be China’s Century

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The Ball is In Your Court You Control the Future

You Will Be The Captains of The Future

Your Children Will Either Cheer or Jeer

It’s Show Time!

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