52 Business TheEconomistMarch12th 2022
only thing that determinesinvestmentde
cisions. And politiciansaresendingmixed
signals. Mr Biden has highlightedtheneed
to secure critical minerals,whiledoinglit
tle to help companies obtain them.Mr
Gelsinger, a special guestofMrBiden’sat
the stateoftheunionaddress,lookedon
awkwardly as the president said Intel
would quintuple a plannedinvestmentin
Ohio, to $100bn, if onlyCongresswould
authorise more subsidies.
Many European politicians likewise
pair industrial ambitionwitha propensity
to argue about it. In Februarytheeuun
veiled a plan to subsidisesemiconductor
manufacturing, but maynotcomeupwith
the €43bn ($47bn)to doso,sincemuchof
the money would havetocomefrommem
ber states and the privatesector.Theyare
also making life harder for American
firms—though not yethardenoughforthe
companies to up sticks.To complywith
French rules for cloudcomputingprovid
ers, for example, lastyearGooglesaidit
would form a joint venturewithalocal
company. This year Googleagreedtopay
French publishers for publishingsnippets
of news. Amazon andWalmartaresofar
sticking it out in India’secommercemar
ket, despite continuedlawsuits,shifting
regulations and no profits.
China shows just howdelicatethisbal
ancing act can get. Somecompaniesman
age it skilfully. Take Honeywell,anAmeri
can conglomerate witha sprawlingbusi
ness in China. It continuestoproduceand
sell avionics to Chinesecustomers,points
out Mr Black, even thoughaviationisa sec
tor in which China planstopromotedo
mestic champions andbecomeselfreli
ant. Specialising in complextechnology
that serves China’s broader goals helps:
Honeywell provides navigation systems
for the comac c919, a narrowbodyjetliner
that China hopes will competeagainstthe
Airbus a320 and the Boeing737.
Businesses less adroitatthehighwire
become contortionistsinstead.InRussia
most American tech firmshavebeatenon
ly a partial retreat. To abidebyChinesecyb
ersecurity laws, Applestoresandshares
iPhone users’ data with a statebacked
company. Since 2018 Americanfirmshave
all but stopped challenging patent in
fringement in Chinesecourts,accordingto
cases tracked by Rouse,a consultancyspe
cialising in intellectualproperty.Thatis
not because infringement has stopped,
reckons Doug Clark of Rouse. Rather,
heightened tension mayhavemadeAmer
ican firms wary of retaliation.InChina,
says Jue Wang of Bain,anotherconsultan
cy, firms are mapping outwaystorespond
to geopolitical risks orintensifiedsupport
for state champions. Asthe1990sdreamof
a single integrated globalmarketshatters,
firms in America, and everywhere else,
face a brutal adjustment.n
Theairline-industrialcomplex
Flightrisk
A
s vladimirputin’stroopscontinued
tolaywastetoUkraineonMarch5th,
Russia’s president surrounded himself
with bouquetwielding young women
training as cabincrew for Aeroflot, the
statecontrolled airline. Aviationis vital
forconnectingthevastcountry.Theunea
sygrinsonthefacesoftheladiestowhom
heexplainedthatWesternsanctionswere
anactofwarhintedthattheyunderstood
theimplicationsfortheirlongtermcareer
prospects.ThesamedaythatMrPutinmet
itstrainees,Aeroflotsuspendedallitsin
ternationalflights.Bythenthecarrierhad
fewplacestofly.Britainwasthefirsttoban
Russianplanesinreactiontotheinvasion
ofUkraine.Theyarenowalsobarredfrom
skiesaboveAmerica,Canada,theeuand
several other places. Western carriers,
meanwhile,arenolongerwelcomeinRus
siaairspace.
Anti-aircraftwarfare
ThedirectimpactonnonRussianairlines
is“nobigdeal”,saysKeithMcMullanof
AviationStrategy,a consultancy.Flightsto
MrPutin’srealmarea sliverofbusinessfor
theworld’slargeairlinegroups.Theclo
sure of Russianairspace isan inconve
nienceforEuropeanonesservingnorth
eastAsia,whichwillhavetodivertflights
tomoresoutherlyroutes,addinguptotwo
hourstoflyingtimetoBeijing.Butwith
Chinastillinlockdownsuchflightsarenot
asnumerousasbefore.Itistheknockon
effectsofRussia’sinvasionthatinvestors
in the global airlineindustrial complex
worry about.Ratherthancontinuetheir
reboundascovidcloudsclear,airlines,air
portoperators,travelwebsites,planemak
ers, othersuppliers and aircraftlessors
havelostnearly$120bnincombinedmar
ketvaluesofarthisyear(seechart).
The most immediate problem is the
surgeinoilprices(seeFinance&econom
icssection).Thecostofcrude,alreadynear
a 14yearhigh,surgedagainonMarch8th
afterAmericaannounceda banonimports
fromRussia,theworld’sthirdbiggestpro
ducer.iata, anindustrybody,forecastin
October that airlines’ fuel bill in 2022
wouldhit$132bn, accountingfor nearly
20%ofoperatingexpenses,witha barrelof
Brentat$67.Itnowcostsnearlytwiceas
much.Airlineshareshavelostaround15%
oftheirvalueinthepasttwoweeks.Those
carriersthatdonothedgefuelcostswere
hithardest;somehavealreadyaddedsur
chargesontickets.
OtherWesternmeasureswillalsotakea
toll.AmericaandtheeuhavetargetedRus
sianaviationbybanningthesaleorpur
chaseofplanesandparts,financingand
technicalassistance.Britainjoinedinon
March9th.Russiaisnota hugemarketfor
theworld’splanemakingduopolyofAir
busandBoeing.Only 62 jetsoutofthetheir
combinedorderbookof12,000aredes
tinedforthecountry.Butevena relatively
smallknockisunwelcomeastheindustry
triestoliftitselfupaftertwoyearsofco
vid19upheaval.
Moreover, theplanemakers may,like
otherWesternbusinesses,feeltheneedto
distancethemselvesfromRussiainother
ways.Boeinghasalreadyendeda contract
toacquireRussiantitaniumforitsplanes;
findingalternativesuppliesmaybea pro
blemgiventhatRussiaisthemetal’sthird
biggestproducer.Russia’sbigroleinother
commoditiesmarkets,fromnickeltopal
ladium,mayalsoripplethroughaerospace
supplychains.
AnothercollateralvictimofRussia’sag
gression,andtheWest’sresponsetoit,is
theaircraftleasingindustry.Aroundhalf
ofRussia’sfleetisownedbynonRussian
lessors.Those 500 orsoplanesarevalued
atsome$10bn,accordingtoiba, a consul
tancy.TocomplywithWesternsanctions,
suchleasesmustbeterminatedbyMarch
28th.Afterthat,intheory,Russianairlines
mustreturnthejetstotheirowners.Re
possessionis,however,madeconsiderably
harderbytheclosureofRussianairspace
andthedifficultyofgettingtherepomen
into Russia.The factthatnoplanesare
leavingthecountryhintsata possibilityof
expropriation.
Aswithplanemakers,thelessors’busi
nesswithRussiaisnothuge.AerCap,the
world’sbiggestsuchfirmwiththehighest
exposuretoRussia,leases5%ofitsfleetby
valuetoRussiancarriers.AndalthoughMr
PutinmayforcestaterunAeroflottodeny
Westernlessorstheirplanes,privatecarri
ers maypreferto handtheirsback, lest
theybefrozenoutofaircraftfinancingfor
SanctionswillhurtWesternaviation
firms.TheywilldevastateAeroflot
Bear in mind
Worldwide commercial aviation
Selected sectors, market capitalisation, $trn
Sources:Bloomberg;TheEconomist *March th
1.5
1.2
0.9
0.6
0.3
0
22*20191817162015
Aircraft
lessors
Travel websites
Airport
infrastructure
Airlines
Aircraft
suppliers
Planemakers