Financial Times Weekend 22-23Feb2020

(Dana P.) #1

14 ★ FT Weekend 22 February/23 February 2020


COMPANIES. WEEK IN REVIEW


“The business of making and selling
aeroplanes is not for the
fainthearted... In deciding to build a
new airliner, a manufacturer is literally
betting the company.” The opening
lines ofThe Sporty Game, John
Newhouse’s history of the commercial
aerospace industry, were written in
1982 when Boeing, McDonnell Douglas,
and Airbus Industrie were battling for
dominance of the skies.
Nearly 40 years later, Bombardier
has proved the truth of his words. It’s
attempt to move into passenger jets left
it with huge debt and forced a fire sale
of assets that this week culminated in
the decision to sell its $8bn a year train
manufacturing business to Alstom of
France. Just over a week ago, the group
sold the last of its interest in the C
Series small single aisle jet programme.
The disposals have left the group
focused on business aviation, still
employing 18,000 people and with

$7bn revenues. But it is a shadow of the
global industrial champion spanning
trains, trams, regional jets, turboprops
and aircraft wing manufacture that
boasted a workforce of up to 70,000.
In hindsight, it is easy to spot the
mistakes. Bombardier, which had
grown rapidly through state-sponsored
acquisitions, underestimated the
challenges of developing a new
generation aircraft. As a family-
controlled company that had long
relied on government financial support
to take risks, there must have been a
sense of complacency about potential
failure. There was arrogance too in the
company’s refusal to woo initial
customers with the heavy discounts
that are normal for a first-of-its-kind
aircraft. But most fatally, Bombardier
failed to recognise the inevitable
reaction of Boeing and Airbus to a jet
that came close to competing with
the smallest of their aircraft.

Bitter enemies in all other respects,
the duopolists were aligned in their
determination to ensure Bombardier
could never get close to challenging
their hold on the passenger jet market.
Both ruthlessly undercut the C Series
by offering bargain basement prices on
their smallest aircraft, leaving
Bombardier struggling to clinch orders.
State of the art features and new
technology should have given it an
advantage. Dubbed the Whisperjet due
to its far quieter operation, the C Series
used innovative materials and systems
to cut weight, fuel use and emissions
and offer greater passenger comfort.
Yet, while Bombardier defined it as a
regional jet — a market not addressed
by Boeing or Airbus — it was obvious
that the C Series could eventually be
used more efficiently over a long
enough range to start challenging the
incumbents’ smallest aircraft.
That sealed Bombardier’s fate. Just as

it appeared most of the programme
risk had been overcome — and after
Bombardier had absorbed billions in
extra costs, along with public bailouts
—it was forced to sell control of the C
Series to Airbus for $ 1 in 2017. Boeing,
stung by Delta’s decision to buy the jet,
had pushed it into Airbus’ grasp by
convincing Washington to slap punitive
tariffs on the aircraft.
Since Airbus took control, orders
have surged. But Bombardier exited
the programme this month, leaving
Airbus to reap the benefits.
Bombardier’s failure should be a lesson
for those who think new technologies
provide an opportunity to break the
Boeing-Airbus duopoly. Some think
they can transform commercial
aviation with electric or hybrid aircraft.
But if they ever come close, it may not
be the technology deciding their fate.

[email protected]

The shot for the


sky that brought


Bombardier low


Boeing and
Airbus

ruthlessly
undercut

the C Series,
leaving

Bombardier
struggling to

clinch
orders

When Luca de Meo was offered a job
at Volkswagen, the Italian executive
spoke almost no German. After
studying at night, he was able to
address the carmaker’s main board
members in their mother tongue
within months of taking the post.
Such cultural dexterity will be
critical when the car executive, who
speaks five languages including
French, moves to Renault as boss in
the summer — a job requiring the
deftest political touch and a sharp
business acumen.
This week the Paris-based
carmaker suffered the indignity of
having its debt downgraded to junk
status by rating agency Moody’s after
it reported profits were almost wiped
out last year. Rival rating agency S&P
put the company on “credit watch
negative”, meaning it could also drop
the group’s debt to junk from
investment grade.
The downgrade highlights the
challenges Mr de Meo will face when
he takes charge at a company where
morale is at rock bottom and
relations with its largest shareholder,
the French state, can complicate
decisions. Last year, Paris derailed
merger talks with Italy’s FCA.
“He is taking the job from hell,”
said one industry figure.
The French group faces crises on
multiple fronts with sales stagnating,
the threat of crippling EU fines over
CO2 emissions targets and a
relationship with partner Nissan that
has been strained to breaking point
in the wake of the arrest of former
alliance chairman Carlos Ghosn.

“He is the perfect example of what
we need at Renault,” said the group’s
chairman Jean-Dominique Senard.
“We need engagement, a dynamic
management style and we need a very
strong guy in marketing and vision of
the brand.”
During interviews for the job, which
were conducted mainly in French, Mr
de Meo showed “intellectual honesty”
about the challenges facing the
business, and took the role despite the
“personal risk”, Mr Senard added.
But in spite of working in several
roles across a notoriously difficult
environment at Volkswagen, Mr de
Meo has never faced a test like the one
waiting for him in Paris.
Although his experience in
branding and marketing is essential to
fix many of Renault’s problems, he
will also need to learn to wield the
financial axe. Renault has launched a
€2bn cost-saving programme but the
company may require deeper cuts to
its bloated industrial footprint.

He also lacks an engineering
background, something that was once
seen as essential in a car boss. Renault
argues that its new head of
engineering, well-regarded former PSA
executive Gilles le Borgne, will help
balance Mr de Meo’s skillset.
However, this sharply dressed 53-
year-old is at least returning to a
business he once knew well, stepping
back in time to rejoin a company he
worked at two decades ago.
His road trip of the industry since
then has taken in a period at Toyota,
spells running the Lancia and Alfa
Romeo brands, the leadership of Fiat,
then a move to Volkswagen, where he
was a senior director at Audi and, most
recently, headed the German
company’s Spanish subsidiary Seat.
Although he never mastered
Japanese (he tried and gave up) while
working at Toyota, his experience at
the group may help his cause in
developing closer links with Renault’s
combative bedfellow Nissan.

“He is a cultural sponge,” said one
person who worked closely with him at
Seat. “When you are capable of dealing
with so many cultures, it’s not so
different to add one more.”
His natural consensual management
style and attention to detail may also
help him when dealing with Nissan,
where the Japanese corporate skill of
nemawashi, softening up team
members and superiors to new plans
before official meetings to help them
run smoothly, is prized.
Ahead of key meetings, former Seat
colleagues say he reads everything,
asking questions and garnering a wide
body of opinion before coming to
decisions. “He prefers dialogue to
dictatorship,” said a former colleague.
That would mark a distinctive
contrast to Mr Ghosn, who favoured a
more autocratic leadership style and
previously said that the company
could not be governed by “consensus”.
Yet Mr de Meo’s collegiate approach,
he often uses humour in meetings to
make his points and get his way, may
prove essential to mend relations
with Nissan. His easy-going manner
— he has been known to send
WhatsApp messages or emails filled
with emojis for light relief — also hides
a tenacious core.
It is this drive that helped him
revitalise Seat, where he boosted sales
and profits after the introduction of a
new wave of sport utility vehicles.
Ultimately, Mr de Meo’s ability to
defuse the tensions — political,
diplomatic, and commercial — that
face the carmaker will cement or
destroy his image as a team player and
turnround maestro. As one VW insider
recalls: “Going to war is always his last
option.”Peter Campbell

Culturally dextrous de Meo takes on Renault ‘job from hell’


Thegroup
had its debt

cut to junk
by Moody’s

after it
reported

profits were
almost

wiped out
last year

Luca de Meo, known for his
consensual style, is taking charge at
a company where morale is at rock
bottom and ties with Paris can
complicate decisions— Pau Barrena/AFP

UBStapsHamers


3 UBSappointed ING boss Ralph Hamers, pictured,
chief executive in a move that elevates the Dutch-
man to one of the most powerful roles in finance.
Mr Hamers, 53, will take over at Switzerland’s larg-
est bank on November 1 from Sergio Ermotti, who
has spent almost nine years turning round UBS after
it was bailed out during the financial crisis.
Mr Hamers’ appoint-
ment comes less than a
month after rival
Credit Suisse replaced
its chief executive Tid-
jane Thiam amid a spy-
ing scandal.

3 H S B C i s t o cu t
about 35,000 jobs as
part of a downsizing of
i t s o p e r a t i o n s i n
Europe and the US. The London-based bank said it
aimed to cut annual costs by $4.5bn and shed $100bn
of assets adjusted for risk by the end of 2022.
Noel Quinn, interim chief executive, hailed the
overhaul as one of the “deepest restructurings” in the
bank’s 155-year history and said it would allow the
lender to capture high-growth opportunities in Asia.

3 Glencore’s chief took a swipe at BP, dismissing the
oil major’s plan to cut its greenhouse gas emissions to
net zero by 2050 as “wishy-washy”. Commenting on
BP’s recent announcement, Ivan Glasenberg said
2050 was a “long way” off and Glencore preferred to
be “precise and factual” when talking about meas-
ures to reduce its own carbon footprint.
His remarks came as the miner and commodities
trader, which is also the biggest exporter of thermal

AirFrance-KLM said that it
expected flight cancellations

and low demand to bring a
€150m-€200m hit to earnings

Manchester City’s two-year ban
from the Champions League
tournament for alleged breaches of
football’s so-called financial fair
play rules has left the English
Premier League champions reeling
this week.
The extraordinary sanction has
also sparked a debate over
European football’s regulatory
model, the future of which is set to
be challenged when the club
appeals its sanction to the Court of
Arbitration for Sport, considered
the final arbiter of global sports
disputes.
FFP regulations are complex,
but are intended to ensure that
teams break even or, at most,
have €30m of losses over three
seasons.
Some spending is considered
exempt, such as on stadiums,
youth academies and on women’s
teams. This is because the rules are
designed to limit overspending
on players, rather than the club
itself.
Uefa, European football’s
governing body, considers the
regime a success, arguing that
continental clubs have made a
combined profit of €600m in 2017,
compared with combined losses of
€1.7bn in 2011 when they were first
introduced.
But how have the rules affected
the action on the pitch?
While there is evidence that FFP
has helped restrain ever bigger
spending on players among clubs,
in terms of performances, inequality
remains rife in football.
Murad Ahmed

coal, forecast a 30 per cent reduction in its absolute
Scope 3 emissions — including those produced by its
customers — over the next 15 years.
Andrew Grant, of the Carbon Tracker Initiative,
said of Glencore’s move: “Something is better
than nothing. But this is a projection rather than
target. So to what extent will this actually change
the way Glencore runs its business? That’s not
terribly clear.”

3 A host of big companies cut earnings forecasts
this past week and warned of the impact of the
coronavirus epidemic.
Foxconn, the Apple supplier, expected annual
sales to suffer from disruption to manufacturing
in China.
Maersksaid that its earnings this year would
be hit as the largest container shipping
company warned of a “very, very weak February and
weak March”.
Pin An, the Chinese insurer, warned of a decline in

its life business — an example of the effect on services
that involve face-to-face interaction.
Air France-KLMsaid it expected flight cancella-
tions and low demand to bring a €150m-€200m hit
to earnings.
Accorexpected a revenue hit of at least €5m in
China, where 200 of its 370 hotels remain closed.
Meanwhile, smartphone users in China down-
loaded a record number ofgamesand other apps as
Covid-19 confined tens of millions of people to their
homes, in a boost to the $150bn games industry.
More than 222m downloads were made in China
through Apple’s online store in the week starting
February 2, according to data by analytics provider
AppAnnie. Average weekly downloads of apps dur-
ing the first two weeks of February rose 40 per cent
compared with the average for the whole of 2019, the
statistics showed.

BEST OF


BUSINESS








   

Arsenal

Liverpool

Man United

Season: – – –*

   

Chelsea

Liverpool

Arsenal

Man City

Man United

Chelsea

Arsenal

Liverpool

Man City

Man United







   

*Latest data available. Wage data not available for all teams in the – season Sources: Companies House; FT research FT visual journalism: John Burn-Murdoch; Chris Campbell; Patrick Mathurin

Points per game as a multiple of league median

(log scale)

Wages as a multiple of league median (log scale)

During the Premier League’s inaugural
season, clubs were fairly tightly clustered
in terms of points per game and wages

Manchester United won
the league with  points,
collecting on average 
times more points per
game than rivals, while
spending just under two
times the average wage bill

Uefa’s FFP sought to address inequality
within the league caused by bankruptcies,
billionaire owners and lucrative TV deals

For the – season, the spread
between clubs remained dispersed, with
the performance of top clubs improving

While wages have
pulled back slightly
for the top teams,
their bill is still more
than two times the
league median

Man City and Man United
spent more than three
times as much on wages
than the league average

Performance gap of Premier League clubs
Average points per game v wage bill

35,
Number of HSBC
jobs to go in US
and European
downsizing

30 %
Glencore’s
projected cut in
absolute Scope 3
emissions by 2035

The Top Line


Peggy


Hollinger


Luca de Meo
Incoming Renault boss

Corporate
person in
the news

Under the hoodUefa’s ban on Man City does not change football’s inequality


Financial fair play regulations, which came into force in 2013, have capped clubs’ spending but not led to a level playing field


FEBRUARY 22 2020 Section:Companies Time: 21/2/2020 - 18: 04 User: cathy.pryor Page Name: CONEWS2, Part,Page,Edition: LON, 14 , 1

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