Samsung the Elephant
Samsung dominates life in its home country like no other company
in the world. But the slogan "what is good for Samsung is good
for South Korea" is open for debate.
The South Korean economy is a paradox. It has become the third
largest economy in Asia after Japan and China. Its 48 million
citizens have in one generation enjoyed a sizable jump in their
standard of living and no country has benefited more than South
Korea from the rise of China which has become a vital export
market. Its sovereign credit rating was recently upgraded due to
reduced tensions with North Korea and it enjoys foreign exchange
reserves of over $200 billion. The Korean people should be full
of satisfaction for a job well done but instead are rather a
discontented lot.
Its per capita income is about one third that of the OECD
average. Economic growth is expected in the 3-4% range closer to
a mature economy than an Asian tiger. Unemployment is becoming
an issue and a stronger currency and relatively high wage levels
are crimping exports which account for 40% of its economy.
Exports are up only 7% this year after a 31% jump last year.
After a credit card binge, average net consumer borrowing is
equal to 100% of disposable income and the bank of Korea
recently bumped up its benchmark rate for the first time in
three years.
What is going on here? Somewhat surprisingly, South Korea is
experiencing many of the same outsourcing issues that Americans
complain about. It was the largest investor in China last year
with over $6 billion in fixed investments. Its largest steel
maker POSCO announced its intention to invest $12 billion in a
steel plant in India where it already runs 24 steel companies.
Hyundai manufactures 600,000 autos in China and its affiliate
Kia makes 150,000 more.
Meanwhile Samsung Electronics has become Asia's largest
technology company by market cap (larger than Sony), and its
largest maker of memory chips and flat panel screens and mobile
phones. Samsung enjoys a credit rating higher than South Korea's
sovereign rating. With 62 affiliates, the Samsung group
dominates life in Korea like no other company in history. It
represents 15% of the nation's total economic activity, 25% of
the capitalization of the KOSPI stock market and the taxes it
pays represent almost 10% of total government income!
Samsung, up 25% so far this year, is still attractive at about
11 times consensus 2006 earnings estimates and its operating
profit was up 29% in the third quarter. Despite third quarter
net income declining 30%, a strong fourth quarter is expected.
There is a shortage of LCD television panels and its flash
memory chip global market share exceeds 60%. As prices have come
down flash chip sales have gone up 40%.
But the company is not a terrific play on the South Korean
economy. Rather it is a global play on its three key markets and
the expected payoff from its extraordinary commitment to R&D.
The South Koreans are discontented because the five largest
companies are growing outside the country more than in it and at
a stage of development where it should be more competitive
manufacturing onshore. The challenge is the low cost
manufacturing platform with huge economies of scale just next
door - the issue is China. Samsung already has already has 29
plants and 50,000 workers in China.
Since China is already starting to manufacture stuff like
machine tools that the South Koreans were busily exporting in
2003 and 2004, South Korean planners believe it must quickly
transform itself into a finance, communications and
transportation hub - akin to the role of Singapore or
Switzerland. The question then becomes do they have the right
companies, the right skills and what is its competitive
advantage?
Together, Samsung, POSCO, KEPCO (Korea Electric Power) and SK
Telecom account for almost 50% of South Korean stock market's
market capitalization. To use a basketball analogy, the South
Korean starting five are strong but its bench is a bit thin and
its team has lost the home court advantage. The problem is not
Samsung but rather that they need about ten more Samsungs.
The top four companies also make up 40% of the South Korea
iShare (EWY) ETF which is up 29% so far this year. Samsung alone
accounts for 23% of this ETF and buying the iShare gives you
more exposure to the top ten South Korean companies. I am
trimming our position in the South Korea iShare to take some
profits off the table and with the expectation that the stronger
won and higher interest rates will lead to a slowdown in
exports. Together with the likely re-emergence of the North
Korean problem, this may very well undermine investor
confidence.
Bottom line: buy Samsung based on valuation and top notch global
reach and R&D but expect tougher going for the South Korean
economy as China turns from robust export market to direct
competitor.
or more information go to http://www.chartwellasia.com or call
877-221-1496