Is Texas the New
El Dorado of Spanish Companies?
Manufacturing News
Source : The
Manufacturer US Published March 21,
2007 in
Knowledge@Wharton http://www.themanufacturer.com/us/content/5331/Is_Texas_the_New_El_Dorado_of_Spanish_Companies?
Published : 22 Mar 2007 12:40
Little by
little, Spanish companies have been moving
into Texas, and they are beginning to enjoy
the benefits. In the infrastructure sector,
Ferrovial, through its highway subsidiary
Cintra, has become a strategic partner with
the government in developing the Trans Texas
Corridor (TTC-35).
OHL, the
construction and service company, has
acquired two construction firms. BBVA bank
has just acquired Compass [Bancshares],
whose headquarters are in Alabama, but which
has a larger presence in Texas. However,
this is only the beginning. Construction
firms, engineering companies, road
construction companies and banks, among
others, have Texas, the paradise of American
oil, in their sights. Their goal is not oil
wells but infrastructure, and the growing
power of America’s Hispanics.
During the
1990s, large Spanish companies crossed the
Atlantic in an effort to conquer Latin
America with a vigor that was unknown until
then. At that time, their business odyssey
was compared to the heroic effort made by
Christopher Columbus five centuries earlier.
Spain had once more found its El Dorado in
Latin America -- a territory that, during
the era of the Great Spanish Empire,
extended as far as New Mexico, as Spain
conquered most of what is now the southern
part of the U.S.
Now history
appears to be repeating itself. Attracted by
the growing Hispanic presence, Spanish
companies have begun to extend their
tentacles throughout the U.S., especially in
Texas. Why has that market attracted
so much attention among Spanish companies?
“In the case of
the banks, BBVA is looking at a growing and
attractive market,” notes David Allen,
professor of strategic management at the
Instituto de Empresa. “Many of their
potential customers have ties to Latin
American markets where Spanish banks already
have a presence. In this context, Spanish
banks have considerable experience. They
have had success offering their services to
the same segments of customers in Spain.”
A little more
than a decade ago, Latinos represented 27.6%
of the population of Texas. In 2025, they
are projected to exceed 10 million people,
or 37.6% of the population. It’s no accident
that Texas, along with California and
Arizona, has become the new center of
attraction for the Latino population, given
the opportunities available for financial
institutions, especially those that have an
infrastructure on both sides of the border,
such as BBVA.
In addition, the
American Southwest has become the new
economic engine of the United States.
Markets in that region are growing at an
average rate of one point above the rest of
the country.
They enjoy lower taxes, a greater supply of
jobs and lower housing prices. These factors
combine to attract companies – not just
foreign companies, but U.S. companies
– to the detriment of Northern states.
Looking Beyond
Hispanics
The Latino
population is a magnet for Spanish investors
and a possible platform for jumping into
neighboring states. In addition,
Texas offers other attractions, including
its ambitious plan for infrastructure
development that offers opportunities to
construction firms, road builders,
engineering companies, and companies that
provide technology, electricity and railroad
equipment.
Reflecting this
interest, a delegation of big Spanish
companies traveled to Texas last February to
learn first-hand about the state
government’s infrastructure plans, budgeted
at $150 billion.
The list of companies that spent
tour days analyzing their business options
in Texas includes construction and
infrastructure companies such as ACS, FCC,
Acciona, Ferrovial, OHL, Sacyr Vallehermoso,
Azvi and Elsamex; technology firms such as
Abengoa, Elecnor, Indra and Soluziona;
railroad manufacturer CAF, and Banco
Santander. This market has opened its doors
more easily thanks to a trade mission led by
Jose Maria Aznar, former prime minister of
Spain, at the beginning of the year, during
which Aznar held meetings with the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce.
“The U.S. is an
ideal market,” says Mauro Guillén, a Wharton
professor and director of the Lauder
Institute of Management and International
Studies. “The infrastructure is in bad
condition; it’s been years since investments
have been made in it.” Guillén, who authored
a Universia-Knowledge@Wharton article
titled, “Ferrovial, Following in the Path of
Carlos V,” adds that “central and local
governments have a fiscal crisis, which
means they are looking for ways to get
funding through privatization and
concessions that attract private capital. It
would not be surprising if Spanish
infrastructure companies, which are very
competitive, wind up with a piece of the
pie.”
Along these same
lines, Esteban Garcia Canal, a professor in
the University of Oviedo’s business
department, explains that “in the case of
Spain, the remarkable development of
infrastructure projects in recent decades,
plus more recent international experience,
has provided Spanish companies with
advantages that explain their current
successes.”
This experience,
along with its rapid entry into
Texas, has enabled Ferrovial to join with
the government to develop the Trans Texas
Corridor. Ferrovial has been awarded two
toll roads in this project -- sections 5 and
6 of SH130, the high-speed highway, as well
as, SH-121, barely a month ago. These two
concessions alone add up to an investment of
$4 billion.
A testing
ground?
The same logic
that applies to Texas can be applied to
other states, at least in such sectors as
infrastructure where construction firms,
engineering firms, and providers of
technology and railroad equipment are
looking into every opportunity. The
financial institutions are also there.
Nevertheless, it is impossible to avoid a
key question:
Are Spanish companies using Texas as a
testing ground?
Guillén does not
think so. In his opinion, their arrival in
Texas reflects several different factors
that all coincide in one space at one time.
“Cintra-Ferrovial came into this market
because they obtained a concession for the
San Antonio-Dallas toll road. BBVA did so
because it is looking for synergies between
its banks in Mexico and the Hispanic
community in the United States,”
he explains.
Allen, however,
suggests a wait-and-see attitude.
“Currently, the money that has been invested
in the United States is being used for
exploring the market. A much bigger step
would have a significant impact on the
bank’s results. There is no reason to run
that sort of risk at this moment.”
BBVA has invested
7.410 billion euros in its acquisition of
Compass. The deal has enabled BBVA to enter
the list of top 20 banks in the U.S.
However, the sub-prime mortgage crisis is
beginning to spread across the country,
leading to a higher rate of late payments.
Given such conditions, Allen opts for
caution.
“It
remains to be seen if Texas is the
springboard for Spanish companies into the
entire U.S. market,” says Allen, adding that
companies from the
entire world “try
their luck
in the United States. This is all
part of becoming a big multinational.
In manufacturing
sectors, things have gone quite well,
but the service
sector is another [story]; very
few companies have yet to get results.
Spanish retail banks are very good at what
they do. I believe that they have what it
takes to achieve their goals. Unfortunately,
they have chosen a tricky time to get in
because a growing number of mortgage firms
are dealing with late payments.”
Guillén, as
well, notes the great diversity of the U.S.
market. “In consumer markets, including
banking, the United States is a fragmented
market, with various cultural standards and
levels of buying power. It is a very big
country.”
As a result, you
cannot assume that the same sorts of
opportunities will exist in the rest of the
country. One example of the problems facing
Spanish companies is Zara. The all-powerful
Spanish company has taken decades to acquire
a niche in the U.S. Although the company
entered other markets quickly, in the U.S.
its progress has been slowed by cultural
differences from one coast to another, as
well as the logistical difficulties involved
in fulfilling its goal of re-supplying its
shops every 15 days. Although Zara has
managed to acquire a niche in the United
States, it has done so at a much slower pace
than usual.
A similar
problem could exist for financial
institutions. “Perhaps the most important
obstacle involves the integration process
for banks that have tried to deal with murky
problems they face,” says Allen. “From day
to day, BBVA has worked in a positive
economic environment in the United States.
To the degree that this might change, we
will see how well or poorly the bank
understands the market.”
In addition,
Texas is not necessarily the operational
center for every Spanish company in the U.S.
Many companies have set up shop in other
U.S. markets. “Everything depends on the
sector,” says Guillén. “Freixenet [the
sparkling wine company] operates out of
California, which is logical because it is a
region with extensive vineyards, but it
sells throughout the United States. BBVA is
in a large and difficult sector because it
is going from state to state. Inditex also
operates in many different U.S. states,” he
notes.
Whatever
strategy Spanish companies follow in Texas
and the rest of the U.S., Allen points out
the ultimate factor that can be taken as the
moral of the story: “Exceptional companies
such as Zara and the larger Spanish banks --
Santander and BBVA -- will succeed in
practically every market.
My major worry is that
[Spanish companies] may wind up buying
businesses that are overvalued or have
hidden problems.” Regarding
BBVA’s recent purchase of Compass, he says,
“The current
challenge for BBVA in the U.S. is the
emerging loan crisis,
especially among
mortgage firms*.
If BBVA is a winner despite such conditions,
it could become a serious player within the
U.S. market.”
As published in
Knowledge @ Wharton
(http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu), the
online research and business analysis
journal of the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania.
* FOOTNOTE:
Analysts on several
news programs lately in the "not prime time
segments" have said that the loan crisis has
been brought on by "predatory loan
practices" on a massive scale; e.g.,
actively pursuing the poorer and/or older
sector of the population with loan &
refinancing offers which they could not
afford in a variable market atmosphere. The
ones losing their homes to foreclosure are
those people. The ones being heard
"suffering" in the media are the ones
granting the loans and collecting the
bonuses who could well have heeded the
unsound practices they were a conscious part
of pushing.