10 ★ FINANCIAL TIMES Thursday9 April 2020
COMPANIES & MARKETS
Henny Sender
Markets Insight
W
hen one Hong Kong-
based hedge fund
founder was reviewing
the prospectus for
Xiamen-based Luckin
Coffee’s New Yorklisting n May lasti
year, his first thought was the revenue
numbers were exaggerated. “The
performance seemed overdone,” he
recalled.“Overdone—butnotcriminal.”
Anybody familiar with consumer
tech companies, a group in which
Luckin claimed to belong thanks to its
cashless stores, will recognise that
investmentmanager’sassessment.
Until recently, many of these busi-
nesses — whether in ride sharing, food
delivery or online education — boasted
of their sales prowess, even as they
heavilysubsidisedthosesales.
Theywerecaughtinatrap—themore
they sold, the more money they lost,
whether the product was cars or coffee.
Revenuesneverturnedintoprofits.
The listing of Uber — down more than
40 per cent from its float price last May
— was the first sign that public market
investors were less forgiving of such
business models than investors in
private markets. But with the debacle of
thescrapped eWork initial publicW
offering and its effect on the fortunes of
SoftBank, sentiment began to shift.
Moneybegandryingup.
Luckin — which said last week that
hundreds of millions of dollars of sales
had beenfabricated should prove to—
be another nail in the coffin of the
growthwithoutprofitsbusinessmodel.
The effects ofits fraud ill have pro-w
found reverberations, particularly in
the private market for young start-ups
in Asia and for the venture capitalists
whoinvestinthem.
A public company, especially one
listed in the US, has strict rules to follow
onsalesvolumesandrevenues.
To make up numbers is to take a step
across a red line into accounting fraud.
Yet the line in private markets, pre-
listing,tendstobemoreblurred.
If, for example, a client cancels a con-
tract with an online education company
midway through the stipulated period,
how promptly does a company reverse
thesaleandtherevenueitrecorded?
A lot of the numbers “do not pass the
eye test,” said the head of south-east
Asia for one major private equity firm
thatinvestsinyoungtechcompanies.
Some of them “juice” results, the
investor said, with metrics like
WeWork’s notorious “community
adjusted” ebitda. “These are disinfor-
mation campaigns and sometimes their
investorscondoneit,”theinvestorsaid.
Had Luckin stayed private, it might
have been able to get away with its
fictitious numbers for longer. From its
debut on Nasdaq 11 months ago, it was
clearthattheexecutivesatthecompany
hadbeeninahurrytogopublic.
On the sidelines of the listing cere-
mony in New York, I asked finance chief
Reinout Schakel why the chain was sell-
ing $561m of shares at a time when its
losses were widening and it still had not
received regulatory approvals for many
of its facilities, according to its own dis-
closures.Buthedeclinedtoanswer.
He also declined to comment on curi-
ous related-party transactions such as a
Rmb148m ($21m) loan to a group affili-
atedwiththechairman.
After years of venture capital invest-
ment, the deflation of China’s start-up
valuation bubble is combining with the
effects of the pandemic to inflict even
more hardship on many consumer tech
firms. Investors will be faced with
difficult choices on which ventures to
supportandwhichtoabandon.
“We will see internal rounds at a
discount,” predicts the head of Asia for
one Silicon Valley-based investor. “And
entrepreneurs will resist because they
won’twanttobediluted.”
Big investors will still be there to offer
covertosomebusinessessufferinginthe
consumer demand slump. Last month,
for example, Sequoia led a $200m
follow-on investment in the business
behindGuazi,ausedcarplatform,inthe
faceofaneconomicdownturn.
But other start-ups may struggle.
Most investors say they expect distress
both from companies that lack a clear
path to profitability or a deep-pocketed
backer. Many fundraisings, both for VC
firms and newly minted entrepreneurs,
areonholdatatimewhenfinancialcen-
tresremaininlockdown.
There will also be consolidation as the
strong acquire the weak, whether the
predatorsarefinancialinvestorssuchas
buyout firms or strategic investors such
astechgiantsTencentorAlibaba.
In the past, investors took comfort
from another tech behemoth, Amazon,
whichburntcashprodigiouslybeforeits
cloud services division provided
anotherfirmproptoitsbusinessmodel.
There is no such salvation for Luckin
—oritsinvestors.
[email protected]
Luckin puts another
nail in coffin of growth
without profits model
The listing of Uber
was the first sign that
public market investors
were less forgiving
Marathon Petroleum ed energy stocksl
higher as hopes that Opec’s meeting
today will conclude with a production cut
helped to rally oil prices.
Wider market demand was focused
among this year’s worst performers such
asAlliance Data, the loyalty card scheme
operator, and retailers such asGap nda
Nordstrom.
Travel companies extended a recent
rally withWynn Resorts,Royal Caribbean
Cruises nda United Airlines ll climbing.a
Zoom, the video conferencing app
maker widely criticised for security and
privacy failings, surged after hiring Alex
Stamos, Facebook’s former head of
security, as an adviser.
Height Analytics argued that, while the
claims against Zoom had “more hype
than substance”, the company’s
potentially deceptive promises around
encryption meant it was still likely to face
the Federal Trade Commission.
Depending on the number of users
affected, the FTC would probably accept
a settlement in the tens of millions of
dollars, it said.
Aerospace engineerTransDigm oser
after Canaccord Genuity repeated “buy”
advice on the back of a recent debt
offering.
Liquidity looks enough to get through
the crisis while cost cuts should help
margins, Canaccord said.Bryce Elder
Wall Street Eurozone London
Heineken dged lower after withdrawinge
all 2020 guidance.
Its first-quarter beer volumes were
down about 2 per cent and that trend was
likely to worsen in the current quarter.
Kepler Cheuvreux forecast that
Heineken volumes would drop by 26 per
cent this quarter after Mexico, a key
market for the Dutch brewer thanks to
brands such as Dos Equis and Sol,
declared beer a non-essential product.
ICA, the Swedish supermarket operator,
dropped after cautioning that a sharp
acceleration in sales through March had
not been sustained.
Swedbank umbled after warning thatt
both costs and loan loss provisions will be
higher than expected in 2020.
The lender blamed higher costs and
remediation work tied to anti money-
laundering probes, loan loss provisions,
and Covid-19 disruption to its back office
systems and foreign exchange hedges.
Deutsche Post etreated afterr
postponing its annual meeting, which
pushed back a dividend payment.
Telecoms groupOrange Belgium ellf
after the Belgian regulator proposed
raising wholesale fibre pricing.
“We view this as a negative for Orange,
which is hoping for more favourable
wholesale pricing to be able to compete
successfully in the fixed broadband
market,” said Barclays.Bryce Elder
UK insurers dropped afterAviva,Direct
Line,Hiscox nda RSA ll bowed toa
regulatory pressure and scrapped
dividends to protect capital.
This raised fresh doubts about peers
such asLegal & General, which pledged
last week to retain its 2019 payout.
J Sainsbury as weakest among thew
supermarkets afterTesco arned that itsw
banking division would be lossmaking in
the current year as the pandemic affects
demand for credit cards, loans and travel
money.
Tesco itself ended little changed on
in-line full-year figures and cautious
guidance with management saying sales
were stabilising following the March rush.
A rally among the year’s biggest fallers
meantWhitbread, the Premier Inn owner,
was lifted to the top of the FTSE 100.
The rebound came even after weekly
lodging industry data showed UK
occupancy and revenue per available
room dropping 83 per cent and 87 per
cent, respectively.
Hyve, the events and exhibitions
group, gained after setting out cost-
cutting measures and saying talks with its
lenders had been constructive, with a
covenant test for June now waived.
Restaurant Group, the Wagamama
owner, rallied sharply ahead of news after
the close of trade that it would raise
funds with an share placing.Bryce Elder
3 Wall Street climbs on hopes that the
rate of coronavirus cases is peaking
3 Gloomy GDP predictions hit European
markets
3 Crude oil clings on to gains ahead of
crunch producer meeting
Stocks on Wall Street edged ahead of
European peers yesterday as investors
kept a close watch on the spread and
repercussions of the pandemic.
A two-day rally for Frankfurt’s Xetra
Dax ended after the release of data
showing Europe’s largest economy was in
the grips of a historic recession.
Germany’s economy was set to shrink
almost 10 per cent in the three months to
June, according to the country’s economic
research institutes — the sharpest
decline since quarterly national accounts
began in 1970.
In Paris, the CAC 40 edged up 0.1 per
cent following grim projections for
France’s gross domestic product. French
economic output was expected to fall by
its sharpest rate since the second world
war, said Banque de France, which
forecast that GDP would contract 6 per
cent in the first three months of the year.
Also weighing on market sentiment
was the failure of EU finance ministers to
agree a package intended to support the
region during public health crisis.
“The impression it gives the world is
that Europe is disjointed and that will
reinforce the view that the overall
response will be slower and less
impressive than elsewhere,” said Kit
Juckes, an analyst at Société Générale.
Across the Atlantic, Wall Street was
higher by midday on hopes that the
country’s virus cases were nearing a peak.
Cases in the US increased 8.1 per cent
yesterday, marking a fifth straight decline
in the rate of those infected.
Both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones
Industrial Average were up 2.5 per cent
while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite
was 2 per cent higher.
But Marija Veitmane, multi-asset class
strategist at State Street Global Markets,
warned that the optimism driving equity
markets would “be difficult to maintain
until we see more clarity on the corporate
earnings outlook”.
In an unscheduled update, McDonald’s
shelved $1bn worth of upgrades and
openings after coronavirus disruption
caused sales at the fast-food chain to
slump more than a fifth last month.
Stocks were mixed in Asia with Tokyo’s
Topix rising 1.6 per cent while Hong
Kong’s Hang Seng slid 1.2 per cent.
Ahead of a pivotal meeting today
where the world’s leading oil producers
will discuss cutting global output, the
price of crude clung on to recent gains.
Brent, the global benchmark, rose 0.
per cent to $32 a barrel while WTI, the US
marker, climbed 2 per cent to $24.10 a
barrel.Ray Douglas
What you need to know
Grim growth forecasts weigh on Europe’s largest economies
Indices rebased
Source: Refinitiv
Jan Apr
Germany’s Xetra Dax France’s CAC
The day in the markets
Markets update
US Eurozone Japan UK China Brazil
Stocks S&P 500 Eurofirst 300 Nikkei 225 FTSE100 Shanghai Comp Bovespa
Level 2716.11 1282.95 19353.24 5677.73 2815.37 77739.
% change on day 2.13 -0.16 2.13 -0.47 -0.19 1.
Currency $ index (DXY) $ per € Yen per $ $ per £ Rmb per $ Real per $
Level 100.067 1.086 108.745 1.238 7.068 5.
% change on day 0.167 -0.184 -0.229 0.569 0.187 -0.
Govt. bonds 10-year Treasury 10-year Bund 10-year JGB 10-year Gilt 10-year bond 10-year bond
Yield 0.748 -0.307 0.012 0.380 2.513 7.
Basis point change on day -2.880 0.800 1.000 -2.800 -1.400 18.
World index, Commods FTSE All-World Oil - Brent Oil - WTI Gold Silver Metals (LMEX)
Level 302.72 32.43 24.37 1649.25 15.08 2338.
% change on day 1.31 0.00 0.29 0.06 3.57 2.
Yesterday's close apart from: Currencies = 16:00 GMT; S&P, Bovespa, All World, Oil = 17:00 GMT; Gold, Silver = London pm fix. Bond data supplied by Tullett Prebon.
Main equity markets
S&P 500 index Eurofirst 300 index FTSE 100 index
| |||||||||||||||| |||
Feb 2020 Apr
1920
2560
3200
3840
| ||| |||||||| ||||||||
Feb 2020 Apr
960
1280
1600
1920
| |||||| |||||||| |||||
Feb 2020 Apr
3840
5120
6400
7680
Biggest movers
% US Eurozone UK
Ups
Transdigm 14.
Alliance Data Systems 14.
Gap (the) 12.
Hanesbrands 12.
Marriott Int 11.
Seadrill 6.
Infineon Tech 6.
Dassault Systemes 5.
Edenred 5.
Airbus 4.
Whitbread 9.
Itv 7.
Hargreaves Lansdown 5.
Aveva 5.
Evraz 5.
%
Downs
Carrier Global -7.
Kroger Co (the) -2.
Cabot Oil & Gas -1.
Vertex Pharmaceuticals -1.
Otis Worldwide -1.
Prices taken at 17:00 GMT
Adp -4.
Bureau Veritas -4.
Commerzbank -4.
Cnp Assurances -3.
Novozymes -3.
Based on the constituents of the FTSE Eurofirst 300 Eurozone
Fresnillo -5.
Rsa Insurance -5.
Aviva -4.
Vodafone -4.
Sainsbury (j) -3.
All data provided by Morningstar unless otherwise noted.
APRIL 9 2020 Section:Markets Time: 4/20208/ - 18:56 User: stephen.smith Page Name:Markets-002, Part,Page,Edition:EUR , 10, 1