Financialization refers to the increasing role that
financial institutions such as markets and banks play in our economy. Early economists began their analyses by
considering the “real” economy to consist of making or growing things and
selling them. In order to do this,
borrowing and lending must take place.
Finance was always necessary, but it was thought of as a cost of doing
business not something that contributed to economic value. Over time, and particularly recently,
financial activity has become a growing component of the economy. But does this growth represent a contribution
to economic activity or should it still be thought of as a “cost” to the
economy which is actually extracting wealth from it.
The publicly funded
corporation was one of the great creations of capitalism. Governments created these as legal entities
and provided appropriate protections and restrictions on them on the premise
that they would be beneficial to society.
It was the accepted view that these corporations had stakeholders that
included society-at-large, employees, consumers, and those who would fund them
by buying shares through a stock market or lending them money. In their endless quest to mess things up,
economists sold the notion that the shareholders were not only investors, but
also owners. Therefore, shareholders
were the predominant stakeholders, and the goal of a corporation must then be
to maximize shareholder value (MSV). One
can do this by paying a significant share of profits to shareholder in the form
of cash dividends which are taxable as normal income. Since most shareholders are not interested in
consuming cash dividends, they are better served by taking steps to increase
the value of their shares on the stock markets.
It is at that point that financial maneuvers can become costly to the
economy and to the individual corporation.
Mariana Mazzucato considers these issues in her book The Value of Everything: Making and Taking in the Global Economy.
In the 1930s, Keynes
observed that it was in the nature of markets and investors for them to focus
on short-term performance rather than the long-term prospects of an individual
corporation.
“A
successful speculator himself, Keynes knew what he was talking about. He warned that the stock market would become ‘a
battle of wits to anticipate the basis of conventional valuation a few months
hence, rather than the prospective yield of an investment over a long term of
years’. He would be proved right.”
The result has been that
shares are being held for ever shorter periods of time. Share prices can rise and fall quickly based
on the slightest of news.
“Increasing
turnover is a sign that institutional investors’ sights are trained on the
short-term movement of stock prices rather on the intrinsic, long-term value of
the corporation. High turnover can be
more profitable for institutional investors than passive, long-term holding of
shares…The result has been a corporate fixation on quarterly performance, which
encourages consistent earnings growth to generate acceptable share price
performance.”
Tying corporate executives’
compensation to share price behavior combined with MSV provides a “perfect
storm” of incentives for corporate irresponsibility. Traditional approaches to generating
increased earnings include cutting costs and investing in new production
capabilities and new products. These
tend to be longer-term moves that may or may not make sense for a particular
company, and they may not be sufficiently promising to satisfy investors. Companies have discovered that surest path to
investor satisfaction is to use its profits not in long-term investment but in
immediate share buybacks. These
purchases will drive up the share value without any improvement in company
performance.
“MSV,
then sets off a vicious circle.
Short-term decisions such as share buy-backs reduce long-term investment
in real capital goods and innovation such as R&D. In the long run, this will hold back
productivity, the scope for higher wages will be limited, thus lowering
domestic demand and the propensity to invest in the economy as a whole. The spread of financialization deep into
corporate decision-making therefore goes well beyond the immediate benefits it
brings to shareholders and managers.”
Dan Catchpole provided a
perfect example of how financialization of a corporation can lead to long-term
harm. He provided an article for Fortune
magazine titled The forces behind Boeing’s long descent. He began with this lede.
“A shareholder-first culture
fueled the 737 Max crisis. Now it may keep the aerospace giant from recovering.”
Catchpole claims the 737
Max episode is the latest result of a change in corporate culture that occurred
when Boeing merged with McDonnell Douglas in 1997. Prior to that time, Boeing focused on
producing well-engineered commercial aircraft.
McDonnell Douglas, and its executives, had a different view based on
acceptance of MSV as its fundamental strategy.
The result was a Boeing that placed cost-cutting and returns to
shareholders before investments in product development.
“In the years prior to the
merger, Boeing had largely avoided share repurchases; McDonnell’s board, led by
its CEO Harry Stonecipher, had pursued them enthusiastically. Within a year of
the merger, buybacks became a cornerstone of Boeing’s strategy. As a Boeing
executive and later CEO, Stonecipher also advocated aggressive cost-cutting,
pushing the company to deliver an after-tax profit margin of 7%—a mark Boeing
had not hit since the 1970s. His successor, Jim McNerney, continued to put
profit margins first. ‘When people say I changed the culture of Boeing, that
was the intent, so that it’s run like a business rather than a great
engineering firm,’ Stonecipher told the Chicago Tribune in 2004. ‘It
is a great engineering firm, but people invest in a company because they want
to make money’.”
“For all of Boeing’s business
coups and innovation, one stark statistic has come to symbolize the company’s
priorities: Over the past six years, Boeing spent $43.4 billion on stock
buybacks, compared with $15.7 billion on research and development for
commercial airplanes. The board even approved an additional $20 billion
buyback in December 2018, less than two months after the first
737 Max crash, though it subsequently shelved that plan.”
The first indication that the MSV philosophy was hurting
product development came with the disastrous development of the 787 airplane.
“The downsides of cost-cutting
soon appeared in Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner program, which began in 2003.
Management pushed the company to save money by outsourcing development of
critical components to suppliers, many of which proved not up to the task,
leading to repeated breakdowns and delays. When the jet finally flew in 2011,
it was three years late and $25 billion over budget. In 2013, after the
plane was in service, electrical fires in batteries on two 787s prompted
regulators to ground the airplane for nearly a month.”
Boeing has a viable competitor in Airbus which has been
gradually approaching parity in new aircraft orders. The next big market will involve planes that
can carry 200-plus passengers longer distances with improved fuel efficiency than
the established 737 class of planes. Such
planes would open up the possibility of direct flights between many more cities
in the international market. Boeing
delayed the development of such new aircraft, presumably fearing the costs
would impact its profit margins.
“By the middle of the past
decade, Boeing was confronting its lack of a new mid-market airplane (known
in-house as the NMA). This category of jetliner carries around 250 passengers
over distances of 4,000 to 5,000 miles. Mid-market is the only segment of the
commercial-jet business expected to see strong demand in the near future,
making the category critical to Boeing and rival Airbus. ‘Boeing likely needs
two clean-sheet airplanes this decade,’ says Richard Aboulafia of consulting
firm Teal Group.”
“In 2016, however, then-CEO
Dennis Muilenburg pledged to double Boeing’s profit margins to the mid-teens, a
goal that made plane development that much more challenging. Punting on the
decision to begin designing an NMA became an annual tradition for Boeing leadership.”
Boeing decided to take a half step in that direction by adding
new engines and making minor changes to its 737 and calling it the 737 Max. Meanwhile, Airbus has been cranking out new planes
for that market.
“Boeing’s indecision has given
Airbus room to dominate the market. Given its problems with the Max, analysts
and consultants agree that the earliest Boeing can start an NMA project is
2021. Even on that timetable, Boeing ‘will have lost market share to the
A321XLR and maybe the A330neo,’ two new Airbus models, says Ron Epstein, an
aerospace analyst for Bank of America Merrill Lynch. ‘Some of it is fait
accompli,’ he adds. ‘The XLR is here—that’s [lost] market share’ for Boeing.”
Analysts seem to agree that Boeing needs to return to its
original roots and become again a competent developer of aircraft, but it isn’t
clear that they will take that advice.
“But the fallout from the Max
crisis may well push Boeing in the opposite direction. Costs related to the Max
have topped $9 billion and could easily double. To shore up its balance
sheet Boeing is reportedly considering borrowing money to pay shareholder
dividends—and cutting R&D spending.
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