Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry,...

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Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry Serguey Braguinsky, Carnegie Mellon University Atsushi Ohyama, Hokkaido University Tetsuji Okazaki, University of Tokyo Chad Syverson, University of Chicago

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Presentation by Chad Syverson, "Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry"

Transcript of Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry,...

Page 1: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton

Spinning Industry

Serguey Braguinsky, Carnegie Mellon University

Atsushi Ohyama, Hokkaido University

Tetsuji Okazaki, University of Tokyo

Chad Syverson, University of Chicago

Page 2: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

What We’re Looking At

• The allocation of activity across production units matters to aggregate productivity

• M&A can in principle reallocate control of productive assets to entities able to apply them more efficiently

• Fits nicely with idea that managers and management practices shape productivity differences across plants, firms, and even countries

Page 3: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

What We’re Looking At

• But previous research has not been fully conclusive, partly due to several data problems

– E.g., couldn’t cleanly distinguish between physical (quantity) productivity and revenue productivity

– M&A may increase market power, leading to higher TFPR even if TFPQ is stagnant (or even falls)

– Even if productivity increases, difficult to observe the mechanism

Page 4: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Why We’re Looking Here

• Our data doesn’t have price-is-output problem while having lots of stuff one usually can’t observe (mechanism!)

• We can measure, e.g.:

– Profitability separately from productivity

– Production process virtually at an engineering level

– Productivity conditional on operation as well as capacity utilization (fraction of time in operation)

– Firms’ product-market outcomes, connections, and inventory-holding behavior

Page 5: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Why We’re Looking Here

• Our setting (Japan’s cotton spinning industry, 1890-1920) is also inherently interesting from a development point of view

– Japan isolated until forced opening in 1860s

– Cotton yarn and cloth accounted for fully one-third of imports during 1868-1875

– But soon became first world-class mfg. industry in Japan (Ohyama, Braguinsky, and Murphy, 2004)

– Domestic production surpassed imports by 1890; exporting started 1895 and surpassed imports by 1897

Page 6: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Data

• Decades of information on operations, management, and ownership of the universe of industry plants

– Plant output and inputs in physical units

– Output prices, inventories, and K utilization

– Firm-level accounting data

– Firms’ shareholder lists, board compositions, and business histories

• Spans critical industrialization period for Japan

Page 7: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

• After extensive growth through 1890s, consolidation

– Better firms expanded extensively rather than intensively

• 73 acquisitions involving 95 plants during 1898-1920; 70% of industry capacity changed hands

– Firms mostly joint stock companies with easily transferrable ownership (unusual for developing economies)

– Rate of acquisitions higher than in comparable contemporaneous U.S. values

What Role Did Asset Reallocation Play?

Page 8: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Number of Acquired Plants by Year

Page 9: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Main Findings (I)

• More nuanced picture than the straightforward “higher productivity buys lower productivity” story

• Acquired firms’ production facilities were not on average any less physically productive than plants of the acquiring firms, conditional on operating

• But acquired firms much less profitable

• This profitability gap did not reflect market power differences between the firms

Page 10: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Future Acquiring, Acquired and Exiting Plants before Acquisitions, 1896-97

Acquiring plants Acquired plants Exiting plants

First cohort Second cohort

Physical productivity

(% diff. from average)

6.6 3.4 15.6 -21.1

Profitability

(% return on equity)

27.4 18.5 15.9 15.9

Price

(yen/400lb)

93.8 92.4 92.8 91.7

Days in operation per yr 324 316 301 279

Equipment age

(years)

5.3 5.9 2.8 11.8

Number of plants 32 33 32 24

Page 11: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

• Profitability—levels and changes—was not about prices (the usual suspect)

• Most profitability differences before acquisition explained by input utilization

• Acquired plants’ profitability growth came from increased utilization in short run and both utilization and productivity growth in the long run

Main Findings (II)

Page 12: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Effects of Acquisitions, as Seen within Acquired Plants

Acquired plants, relative to 3+ years before acquisition

(% difference)

Productivity ROCE Price

1-2 years before acquisition -0.3

(1.9)

2.0

(1.3)

1.1

(1.3)

1-3 years after acquisition 4.5*

(2.6)

6.0*

(2.2)

3.6

(2.7)

4-8 years after acquisition 12.6*

(3.3)

8.9*

(2.5)

4.4

(3.4)

Observations 1,078 891 1,118

Page 13: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Acquired Plants Compared to Incumbent Plants of Their Acquirers

Acquired plants, relative to incumbent plants of acquirers

(% difference)

Productivity ROCE Price

Acquired plants, before

acquisition -2.5

(2.1)

-3.0*

(1.1)

-1.9

(1.4)

Acquired plants, after

acquisition

9.1*

(2.3)

4.0*

(1.4)

2.4

(1.7)

Observations 1,487 1,392 1,528

Page 14: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Acquired Plants Compared to Incumbent Plants of Their Acquirers

Page 15: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Main Findings (III)

• Profitability gap reflected systematically lower unit capital costs among acquirers

– Higher capacity utilization (lower unit K costs)

– Lower average inventory levels

• These differences arise at least in part due to acquired firms’ deficits in demand management

– Rationing occurred during times of low demand

– Stronger companies had a broader network of connections at trading houses and dealt with more reputable buyers

– New mechanism in the literature

Page 16: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Measuring Demand Management: Unrealized Output (I.e., Unsold Stuff)

Share of unrealized output

(%)

Incumbent plants, 1-2 years before acquisition 3.3

Acquired plants, 1-2 years before acquisition 7.8

Acquired plants, 1-3 years after acquisition 3.2

Acquired plants, 4-8 years after acquisition 2.3

Page 17: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

• We use 1898 nationwide registry to identify those most likely connected to cotton spinners’ output markets

• Yielded list of 154 individuals

– 98 cotton yarn traders across Japan who paid more than 50,000 yen worth of operation tax that year

– 25 individuals listed as board members of the 4 largest incorporated cotton yarn-related trade companies

– 31 board members and traders registered at Osaka cotton and cotton yarn exchange

• 33 of 67 firms had at least one trader among board members and top shareholders—we call these “in-network” firms

Firms’ Connections to Trading Houses

Page 18: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Firms’ Connections to Trading Houses

Out-of-network In-network

Physical productivity, % difference 0.0 5.5

ROCE, % 2.3 5.9

Unrealized output, % 12.7 8.4

Spindle utilization rates, % 73.9 78.1

Price, % difference from avg. -2.5 1.8

# of observations 127 170

Page 19: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Main Findings (IV)

• Acquisitions thus best characterized as “higher profitability buys lower profitability”

– Acquired plants weren’t less productive (when operating) because they had newer, better capital

– However, this capital was being used suboptimally

– New management raised both productivity and profitability

• Leading firms set apart by better demand management and superior use of productive capital rather than market power

• Acquisitions drove industry productivity growth

Page 20: Acquisitions, Productivity, and Profitability: Evidence from the Japanese Cotton Spinning Industry, Chad Syverson

Conclusions

• Asset turnover can happen for many reasons

• Can be an important mechanism to raise productivity within an industry

• This holds in our case, but mechanisms are subtle

• Acquired firms not initially less productive, but rather less profitable

– Their superior capital was underutilized

• Acquisition by better managed and better connected firms increased both productivity and profitability of acquired assets