64 Business TheEconomistJune11th 2022
memosenttoemployeesthismonthElon
Muskrevealedplanstotrimsalariedhead
countatTesla,hiselectriccarcompany,by
10%.Digitaldarlings,manyofwhichhad
boomedduringthepandemic,collectively
sackednearly17,000workersinMayalone.
Aftertemptingworkerswithincreasedpay
andperks,inthelatestquarterlyearnings
callsmoreAmericanceos havebeentalk
ingupautomationandlabourefficiencies.
Inthecurrentclimate,though,hard
headed (and hardhearted) cost control
won’tbeenoughtomaintainprofitability.
The remaining cost inflation must be
pushedthroughtocustomers.Manybusi
nessesareabouttolearnthedifficultyof
raisingpriceswithoutcrimpingdemand.
Thecompaniesthatwieldthissuperpower
oftensharea fewattributes:weakcompeti
tion,customers’inabilitytodelayoravoid
thepurchase,orinflationlinkedrevenue
streams.Astrongbrandalsohelps.Star
bucksboastedonanearningscallinMay
that,despitecaffeinatedpricerisesforits
beverages,ithasstruggledtokeepupwith
“relentlessdemand”.
Recent data hint at softer consumer
sentiment,however.Thismakesitriskier
forfirmstorolloutfrequentpriceincreas
es.Amberlightsare blinking,fromMc
Donald’s,whichhasspeculatedabout“in
creasedvaluesensitivity”amongburger
munchers,toVerizon,whichdetectedcus
tomer“slowness”inthemostrecentquar
ter. The ability to push through price
increasesascustomerstightentheirbelts
requirescarefulmanagement.Incontrast
tothelasthighinflationera,managerscan
use realtime algorithmic price setting,
constantlyexperimentingandadjustingas
consumersrespond.Nonetheless,allfirms
willstillhavetotakea longertermviewon
howlonghighpriceswilllastandonthe
limitsofwhattheircustomerswilltoler
ate.Thatisfingerinthewindstuff.
Eveniftheykeeprevenuesandcosts
undercontrol,ceos arediscoveringwhat
theirpredecessorsknewalltoowell:infla
tionplayshavocwiththebalancesheet.
Thatrequireseventightercontrolofwork
ingcapital(thevalueofinventoriesand
whatisowedbycustomersminuswhatis
owedtosuppliers).Manyfirmshavemis
judged demand for theirproducts. Wal
martlostalmosta fifthofitsmarketvalue,
oraround$80bn,inmidMay,afteritre
porteda cashflowsqueezecausedbyanex
cessbuildupofinventories,whichroseby
a thirdyearonyear.OnJune7thitssmaller
retailing rival, Target, issued awarning
that its operatingmargin willfall from
5.3%lastquarterto2%inthecurrentone,
asitdiscountsgoodstoclearitsexcessin
ventories.Paymentcycles—ie,whena firm
payssuppliersandispaidbycustomers—
becomemoreimportant,too,asthepur
chasingpowerofcashdeliveredtomorrow
withersininflation’sheat.
All this makes a business’s perfor
mancemoredifficulttoassess.Forexam
ple,calculationsofreturnoncapitallook
moreimpressivewithaninflatednumera
tor(presentreturns)andthedenominator
(capitalinvestedinthepast)inolddollars.
Between 1979 and1986,duringthelastbout
ofhighinflation,Americanfirmswerere
quired by law to present income state
mentsthatwereadjustedforrisingprices.
Thisedictisunlikelyto berevived.But
evenasbosses boastofhighernominal
revenuegrowth,investmentandcompen
sationdecisionsshouldaccountforsuch
artificialtailwinds.JustaskMrBuffett.In
hislettertoshareholdersfor 1980 here
mindedthemthatprofitsmustriseinpro
portiontoincreasesinthepricelevelwith
outanincreaseincapitalemployed,lest
thefirmstarts“chewingup”investors’cap
ital.Hismissivetoinvestorsin 2023 may
needtocarrythesamemessage.n
That’70sshow
UnitedStates,%changeona yearearlier
Source:WellingtonManagement
1
15
10
5
0
-5
-10
221020009080701961
GDP
Consumerprices
Marginal evolution
United States, after-tax corporate profits
As % of GDP
Sources:FederalReserve Bank of St Louis; Goldman Sachs
2
10
8
6
4
2
0
22102000908070601950
↓ Inflation % or more
Fastfashion
A pretty picture
“F
or the last two months it has been
busy like the weekend every day,”
sighs a sales assistant at a large Zara store
on Tauentzienstrasse, a shopping street in
the centre of Berlin. On the Tuesday after
the long Pentecost weekend about a dozen
ladies were queuing for the fitting room,
each carrying several items, many of them
in hot pink or canary yellow, colours en
voguethis season. They don’t seem to be
deterred by Zara’s higher garment prices.
At least not yet.
Shoppers are still “revenge buying” to
make up for all the time when shops were
closed and socialising banned amid waves
of covid19. After grafting pajama bottoms
onto their legs over the past two years, buy
ers are snapping up office and party wear.
On June 8th Inditex, which own Zara,
Bershka and Massimo Dutti, among other
brands, reported glittery results for its lat
est quarter. Revenues rose by 36% year on
year, to €6.7bn ($7.2bn), surpassing levels
before the pandemic. Net profit jumped by
80% year on year. Online sales dipped
compared with the same period in 2021,
when the internet was the only place to
shop for clothes owing to lockdowns in
America and Europe. But the decline of 6%
was much slower than expected, which
suggests that people have got used to buy
ing garb on the internet. In another boost,
China is reopening after the latest bout of
lockdowns. Only four of Inditex’s Chinese
outlets remain closed, down from 67 in the
three months to April. h&m, Inditex’s
Swedish fastfashion rival, is expected to
report similarly perky results on June 15th.
The big question for Óscar García Ma
ceiras, who took over as chief executive of
Inditex in November, and his opposite
numbers at other fastfashion firms, is
whether the party can last. The short an
swer is that it probably won’t. But if anyone
can keep it going for a bit longer, it is Indi
tex. As Georgina Johanan of JPMorgan
Chase, a bank, notes, the Spanish giant
looks bestplaced to withstand the com
bined pressures of war, competition, infla
tion and, possibly, recession.
Start with the problems. Fastfashion
firms had to put a complete halt to their op
erations in Russia and Ukraine after Vladi
mir Putin invaded his southern neighbour
B ERLIN
But for how long?