Bold Predictions For China Tech Over Next Decade

July 19th, 2010

The past decade have seen the rise of many Chinese Internet companies which have become wildly successful, and which most in the west are only now beginning to notice. These are companies with names like C-Trip, Shanda, Tencent, Alibaba, Taobao, Baidu just to name a few.

For the consumer-facing companies who benefited from China’s rapidly growing consumer spending power, this growth was unrivaled. They rode two waves to maximum advantage: the popularity of tech among Silicon Valley venture capitalists and private equity firms, and with the Chinese government; and with the rise of China’s urban middle class. In contrast to many American firms which really did invest in significant technology, many of these companies had less in terms of technology; preferring instead to spend their investment money on hiring people and building a human salesforce. C-Trip, the popular travel site, was mainly a call center with a website when it went public; Baidu built up a network of resellers which it bought out when it went public, and Alibaba has an aggressive salesforce to work with Chinese SMEs.

Over the next ten years, there will be dramatic changes. Here are some of the trends I see:

  • Growth in the economy will slow gradually at first, then will become more dramatic. The Chinese economy’s period of rapid growth has already passed its peak.
  • Slower growth means that income gaps will widen in the society, along with opportunity gaps for individuals. From a marketing point of view, segmentation becomes more important. Qualified lead-generation businesses will become lucrative.
  • As the economy slows, targeted advertising will become more important for the Chinese Internet. Advertising-based Internet models which did not work well in China previously but worked well in the west will be re-introduced into China. Successful companies will adapt them to the realities of the China market without trying to force a western model.
  • Because of the slower economy, real technology adaption will take place in medium- , and even small-sized, firms. These will focus on working with very large datasets and data mining, and will focus on describing the topology of the Chinese Internet in a way so that other businesses can use this data.
  • Lower disk space and bandwidth costs will mean that even though Chinese companies adopt more technology, their costs will be lower.
  • From a venture capitalist’s and private equity investors point of view, the biggest cost will be the founding team. The best teams will be few and far between, and will be much sought after. Compared to Silicon Valley and the rest of the world, Chinese Internet startups will still be more likely to be led by individual entrepreneurs than by founding teams in the western mold. This is a culture thing.
  • The trend to Chinese government preference for RMB funds and local investors over US- and western-based venture capital and private equity funds will pick up pace. The more unfavorable the economic environment becomes, the more dramatic action the Chinese government will take. This will cause some tension with the US, but the Chinese government will be willing to take the hit because domestic concerns for social harmony take precedence.
  • Some western venture capital and private equity firms are studying the possibility of Chinese IPO exits. Don’t hold your breath waiting for these to happen; they are likely to be few and far between.
  • Hong Kong will gain some advantage because it policies are different from Beijing’s and like China, smart entrepreneurs will look for opportunities in the long tail instead of the large consumer market.

China’s economic development so far is based on two assumptions which will come under pressure over the next decade. The first assumption is that rapid urbanization is a good thing, since that will lead to the development of an urban middle class. The challenge over the next ten years will be how to find jobs for that urban middle class, whose living costs have gone dramatically higher, while the global macro climate has dramatically worsened? This is already showing up in the rise of the ant people, educated white collar workers who cannot make it up all the way to the top of the pyramid. For the first time in its history, the belief that education is the path to success in Chinese society will be challenged.

The second assumption will be a shortage of blue-collar factory workers, which has already begun to show up in southern China in the form of strikes and slowdowns at foreign-owned factories. As China’s working population dramatically ages over the next decade, this situation will worsen. Technology can, to some extent, ameliorate the labor shortage, but it cannot generate demand.

During the next decade, we will find out if China can become rich, on a sustained basis, before it grows old.

If the Chinese government does not succeed, then China will head into a prolonged economic slump after 2020, which will be much like Japan’s, and further adding to what is likely to become a prolonged global economic depression. In addition, the workforce which starts working after that year will have to deal with a worsening environment and dues, in the form of non-performing loans (NPLs), from spending in the high-growth years.

That is why this next decade is make-or-break for China.

Risk Is In The Eyes of the Beholder Part IV

January 29th, 2008

watercube.jpeg

Yesterday, the new national aquatics center was unveiled in Beijing. This will become the venue for the leading water events of the Beijing Olympics. After the Olympics are over, it will be converted to a shopping mall for Beijing’s masses.

Beijing is now the site for some of the most exciting architecture in the world. For many Chinese though, there is an underlying uneasiness. Is all this dramatic futuristic architecture the beginning of a new and exciting future of wealth and prosperity which Chinese have never experienced in their long history?

Or is this instead a blip of prosperity, and will the future be much less bright, and will their children and grandchildren look back and see the Beijing Olympics as the apogee of what has since become a downward trajectory? And will this architectural marvel become dirty and dusty and seedy?

China has seen prosperity before, only to have its dreams shattered. Westerners today see China as a rich, prosperous and growing power, but it has run into the wall before, and on many different points in history. The first Chinese industrial revolution, when Chinese factories started making goods for the Chinese market started at the end of the nineteenth century, with textile mills and flour processing factories spouting up in the Yangzi river delta, mostly started and financed by entrepreneurs from Shanghai and Wuxi. Then China went into political chaos in the period following the revolution which overthrew the Qing dynasty in 1911.

Another period of short-lived period of prosperity came in the early 30s, this was cut short by the Japanese invasion of China in 1937.

Then, in the period following the end of WWII, China fell into civil war between the two leading political parties, with the Nationalists losing and retreating to Taiwan. Following the establishment of the PRC, China was very poor, and then made even poorer by the Cultural Revolution. In 1978, the Chinese government essentially decided that they were tired of being poor and moved ideology off the national agenda. From now on, it would be about making money.

Even today though, with all their savings and comfort, Chinese feel that it can all change and all go away. That is why they save and sit on their cash.

Americans are the opposite. Until very recently, most Americans believed that the future would always be brighter, that although there were things that they did not understand, America was the strongest and most prosperous country in the world, and that there would always be a way. This is why theyspent their savings, and when their savings were gone, they would take loans on easy credit terms, promising to repay the loans and credit when they had income again. It led to a bigger and bigger mountain of debt. And now, Americans are much less sure about their ability to repay the loans.

This is a way of thinking which is completely foreign to Chinese, and makes no sense at all to them. For Chinese, the only real money is cash. And when money goes bad in times of high inflation, they don’t even believe in cash.

They believe in land, and if the politics becomes unstable, they go to gold.

Runaway inflation is something the Germans experienced in th 1920s, then again in the postwar period. Japan experienced it too in the postwar period. China also experienced it in the postwar period when the Nationalists had to change national currencies three times in the period up to 1949. With the runaway inflation in the cities, people had to carry their money in paper sacks to do their shopping. They would go to the markets carrying bags of money to buy their groceries, then they would use the same bags to carry their groceries back home.

When the Nationalists lost control of inflation, they lost the Chinese cities and the support of the business community. This paved the way for the establishment of the PRC in 1949. The first task for the government was then to stabilize the currency.

While China was very poor in the fifties, sixties and seventies, there was virtually no inflation.

Today in China, we are seeing the early signs of inflation again in food prices and property prices. For any Chinese government, and this government is no exception, inflation is the greatest single and most frightening enemy it faces. It may creep up slowly, but it unleashes forces which can easily spin out of control.

If a government cannot maintain the value of its currency, it cannot protect its citizens, and the people end up in the poor house. It’s that simple.

This is why the Chinese government will not easily revalue the yuan upwards, and why the government keeps such a tight control on credit.

One of the upsides for Chinese businesses investing in Africa is that although the people are poor, at least they pay cash. When times turn hard, you want to be paid in cash.

For most Chinese, you aren’t rich unless you own cash.

Credit is just a derivative and in tough times, no one wants derivatives.