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ood Products. Fuqua School of Business Emerging Markets Corporate Finance. Contents. Industry Overview WTC Wood Project Country Overview Risk Analysis Project Appraisal. 1. Industry Overview. The Tropical Wood Industry. U$ 6.6 billion industry
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ood Products Fuqua School of Business Emerging Markets Corporate Finance
Contents • Industry Overview • WTC Wood Project • Country Overview • Risk Analysis • Project Appraisal
The Tropical Wood Industry • U$ 6.6 billion industry • Vigorous growth in the past decade due to: • a) lower trade barriers • b) increasing demand for wooden furniture • c) buoyant construction and renovation activity in developed markets • Demand growth expected at 9-10% per annum in the medium term (ITC) • Gradual tendency to substitute wood for non-wood materials (bio-composite, plastic, aluminum) Source: International Trade Center, 2002
The geography of the tropical wood industry Asia: 83% LA: 16% Africa: 1% Source: International Trade Center, 2002
Forestry Potential Saturation Deforestation Extinction of wood species Asia Area (M of hs.) Larger potential More sustainable forest practices Latin America Source: International Trade Center, 2002
The Bolivian Tropical Forest • 7th largest in the world (49 M hs.) • Over 360 wood species • Operating at less than 1% of its full potential • 1,000,000 hs. recently certified for sustainable exploitation • Currently low value-added commercial timber only
The Tropical Wood Consortium • Created in 2004 to explore investment opportunities in the Bolivian forestry sector • Spearheaded by Tahuamanu TAHUAMANU S.A SMEs (Bolivia) Large (Brazil, Ecuador) Technology Suppliers (Germany) Andean Development Corporation
Tahuamanu S.A. • The world’s largest producer of processed Brazil Nuts • Seeking diversification (nut production reaching saturation) • Extensive experience in sustainable forest management • High managerial and industrial capacity • Long-established international marketing channels U$ 6M annual revenues Source: Tahuamanu, 2004
RAW MATERIAL EXTRACTION TRANSP. PLANT PROCESS PRODUCT TRANSP. MARKETS Marketing Own extraction (30%) Hard (50%) Belem US (40%) Private concessions (50%) Sawing (50%) Plywood Brokers Land-River-Sea Subcontractors Soft (46%) Laminating (46%) Vermeer Subcontractors (70%) 58,000 m3/y of processed wood Europe (30%) Paranagua Santos 187,000 he of forest land /20y 130,000 m3/y of raw material Precious (4%) Slicing (4%) Panels Community-based suppliers (50%) La Paz Regional BR-AR (30%) Energy Land Maintenance Internalized activity Outsourced Wood Processing Project
North American markets T Regional markets Future alternative ports European markets Transportation Alternatives
Key Success Factors • -Wood-Nut synergy (extraction, storage, transportation, labor) • -Economies of scale and scope • Tax-free industrial park (20% cost savings) • Low labor/production costs -Forestry management -International marketing -Industrial capacity (larger than most competitors) -Continuous technological upgrading -Knowledge of local suppliers -Continuous learning through inter-firm cooperation Price Advantage -Bolivian Tropical Forest at 1% of full capacity - One of the world's largest certified forest -International demand expected to grow steadily -Market integration (FTAA + MERCOSUR) - Modern regulatory and legal framework Growth Potential Internal capabilities SUCCESS Flexibility • Outsourcing • Strategic location • Transportation alternatives through BR/PER • Access to the Brazilian wood cluster • Isolated from political conflict
Major obstacles and mitigating factors • Tahuamanu’s high managerial and industrial capabilities • Inter-firm cooperation (consortium modality) • Learning costs (new industry) • Lack of infrastructure (roads, communications) • Expensive energy • Lack of supporting and related industries • Long distance to ports • Political instability Strategic location (flexibility to use more reliable infrastructure in Brazil/Peru) Investment in a wood-based energy generating plant Strategic Location (access to the Brazilian wood-processing cluster) Value-added processed products with lower incidence of transportation costs Strategic location (isolated from the most conflictive regions)
Bolivia: Basics • Landlocked country located in the center of South American • Area: 1 million sq km (about three times the size of Montana) • Population: 8.7 million • Natural resources: tin, natural gas, petroleum, timber and others • Poorest country in South America - poverty rate - 60% - GDP per capita - 900 USD Source: CIA, 2003, World Bank, 2003
Bolivia: Economic Environment • 23 years of democracy and 20 years of market reforms • Economic Reforms Package: - liberalization of prices, exchange and interest rates • - privatizations - trade and capital account liberalization • Results : macroeconomic stabilization (low inflation rates, stable ER, etc.) • However: stagnant growth GDP growth:1.5%/y (1990-2001) Source: World Bank, 2004
Bolivia: Key Comparative Indicators Source: World Bank, 2004
Governance Indicators (2002) Source: D. Kaufman, A. Kraay, and M. Mastruzzi (2003). World Bank Policy Research Working Paper
The major obstacles for doing business in Bolivia Source: World Bank, Doing business 2003
Political Environment • Since 1980s – constant social tension driven by poor economic conditions, income and regional disparities, ethnic conflict and wide-spread drug production and trafficking. • Since the early 2003, conflicts have taken a violent tenor: • - in October 2003 President Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada, an unconditional supporter of market reforms resigned after two months of rioting and strikes • - a separatist movement led by agricultural-rich elites in western Bolivia is gaining momentum • The current president has lost control over the congress and is seen as “weak” in dealing with social pressure. • Recent attempts to modify the legal framework for the energy sector has increased legal uncertainty.
Comparative Historical Risk • Overall risk comprises: • Economic risk • Operational risk • Political risk World Markets Research Center, September 2004
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