Katare wrote:
Where/how did you get the 2% figure for HAL? It is paying more than 3% of its sales as dividend on net profit margin of 16.7%?
What's the need for calculating "value add" when HAL itself provides that data for the company and also as per employee in its quarterly finance reports?
Well, HAL's numbers are inflated by the "Other Income" - in fact almost all their EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest Tax, Depreciaion and Amortisation - for the uninitiated) is just Other Income...And if you see the notes to the accounts, the Other income is primarily interest on Fixed deposits and asset sales..
the key parameter that people (analysts, econimists etc) therefore look for is "operating" margins..Because that is what gives the "efficiency" of the company..And that for HAL, taking their "operating" EBITDA-to-Sales ratio, is less than 2%..You do need to look a little beyond the headlines
For companies like HAL, this does not just reflect the efficiency of operations, it also reflects how much "value add" its doing on the products its assembling - at 2%, its not adding too much, is it?That is because all the "value" is going to the foreign OEM from which we are importing the key materials, raw and finished...
Therefore the analysis is not just about the "financial efficiency" of HAL - which should BTW anyways be judged - but importantly its about how much value is being added in India by the license manufacturing process..shows the extent of "expertise" that license production has generated after 40 years..
Those who think that ToT and control are "independent" issues should simply read the two documents I posted above..There are very strong empirical evidence of ITT (international tech transfer) being driven by FDI..The reason? A third of global trade now happens "intra firm" - like Hyundai Europe buying from Hyundai India - hence global firms transfer tech to the "best" location where they have "control"....Unfortunately, a lack of reading and comprehension aptitude cannot be rectified in a blog, but there is enough data and analyses in the two papers...Linking them again..
http://www.atpsnet.org/pubs/specialpaper/SPS%2016.pdf
http://econweb.tamu.edu/aglass/DevHandbook.pdf
Of course the quality of tech diffusion depends on a host of other factors as well, primarily, the capacity of the recepient country to absorb the technology and so on...Fortunately in India, we are blessed with the smartest set of people around, and some really high quality higher education institutions...Plus, there is no longer any dearth of capital and entrepreneurship..All of this together makes India one of the most "FDI propitious" countries...
And making a point once more - the question is NOT what CII, or Indian industry thinks is good..
What is good for CII is NOT necessarily good for India...(the jokers in CII started the Bombay Club in the '90s, remember?)..These guys would actually want a restricted FDI (minority stake) initially - as that would force the international OEM to get into JVs with them in case they wanted to set up facilities in India...When these JVs attain critical size, the same jokers from CII will lobby for a higher FDI in order to sell-off their stakes to the same foreigners at high(er) valuation...(exactly the same story as telecom, or media, or a plethora of other sectors played out) In the meantime however, the JVs set up (with minority foreign OEM stake) will be nothing but either "HAL-clone" license manufacturing entities, or producers of relatively non-critical tech..So when BAE systems now does a 26% JV with M&M, it only means that the quality of tech transfer will be concomitantly lesser than in a "majority control" JV..
As Ajai Shukla's report on offset data (which I posted somehwere above) shows, there is a big pickup in offset contracts, but almost nothing has gone into "critical" ares like R&D - precisely for this reason..there is enough "dollar value" in non-critical items in defence, but really with our size there is not point working only at creating more efficient versions of HAL or making nuts and bolts..
For most businessmen (not all though), whether India develops the cutting edge miltech eco-system or a more efficient version of HAL, it really doesnt matter - but it matters for India...
Added later: For all those who fear "decimation" of domestic effort due to FDI, some evidence to chew upon..In the last 20 years, the only major industry to have been completely rid of domestic players is the Cola industry!!!In every other sector - autos, telecoms, IT, electronics - Indian companies have prospered and thrived with foreign competition, even as the older fuddy duddies have disappeared (the Walchandnagars, the Modis, the BPLs)...