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Plenary Session Three Thought Leadership on Risk and Change Meg Lassarat CFO Mustang Session Moderator ECC Board Member Thought Leadership on Risk and Change Thought Leadership on Risk and Change Jerry R. Strawser Dean, Mays Business School Texas A&M University Dr. William H. Glick Dean and H. Joe Nelson III Professor of Management at the Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Business Rice University Doing Business in the “Reset” Economy Doing Business in the “Reset” Economy Jerry Strawser, Dean KPMG Chair in Accounting Mays Business School Texas A&M University In the last 6 months, have things: 1. Gotten much better 4% 2. Gotten a little better 44% 3. Stayed about the same 22% 4. Gotten a little worse 22% 5. Gotten much worse 8% In the next 6 months, will things: 1. Get much better 3% 2. Get a little better 51% 3. Stay about the same 34% 4. Get a little worse 8% 5. Get much worse 4% When do you think things will get back to “normal”? 1. Within the next 6 months 0% 2. Sometime during 2010 16% 3. Sometime after 2010 64% 4. Never 20% So What Happened? Consumer Confidence Index 150 140 130 120 110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 Feb-09 Aug-08 Feb-08 Aug-07 Feb-07 Source: The Conference Board Aug-06 Feb-06 Aug-05 Feb-05 Aug-04 Feb-04 Aug-03 Feb-03 Aug-02 Feb-02 Aug-01 Feb-01 Aug-00 Source: www.conference-board.org/ People Who Plan to Buy a Home in the Next Six Months % of Respondents 5.5 4.5 3.5 2.5 1.5 Jan-09 Jan-08 Jan-07 Source: The Conference Board Jan-06 Jan-05 Jan-04 Jan-03 Jan-02 Jan-01 Jan-00 Jan-99 Jan-98 Source: www.haver.com Small Business Outlook “Now Is A Good Time To Expand” % of Respondents 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Jan-09 Jan-08 National Federation of Independent Business Jan-07 Jan-06 Jan-05 Jan-04 Jan-03 Jan-02 Jan-01 Jan-00 Jan-99 Jan-98 Source: www.haver.com Small Business Outlook “Planning To Hire People In The Next Six Months” 25 15 10 5 0 -5 -10 Jan-09 National Federation of Independent Business Jan-08 Source: www.haver.com Jan-07 Jan-06 Jan-05 Jan-04 Jan-03 Jan-02 Jan-01 Jan-00 Jan-99 Jan-98 Net % of Respondents 20 110 100 90 Index 1997=100 Industrial Production Index 120 80 70 January-08 January-06 January-04 January-02 January-00 January-98 January-96 January-94 January-92 Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve Capacity Utilization: Manufacturing 95 Percent Used 90 85 80 75 70 65 Jan-08 Jan-06 Source: Federal Reserve Board Jan-04 Jan-02 Jan-00 Jan-98 Jan-96 Jan-94 Jan-92 Jan-90 Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve Banks Reporting Stronger Loan Demand From Large Firms 50 Net Percent 25 0 -25 -50 -75 Q1-09 Q1-2008 Q1-2007 Q1-2006 Q1-2005 Q1-2004 Q1-2003 Q1-2002 Q1-2001 Q1-2000 Q1-1999 Q1-1998 Q1-1997 Q1-1996 Q1-1995 Q1-1994 Q1-1993 Q1-1992 Source: www.haver.com Federal Reserve Senior Loan Officer Survey Banks Reporting Stronger Loan Demand From Small Firms 50 Net Percent 25 0 -25 -50 -75 Q1-2009 Q1-2008 Q1-2007 Q1-2006 Federal Reserve Senior Loan Officer Survey Q1-2005 Q1-2004 Q1-2003 Q1-2002 Q1-2001 Q1-2000 Q1-1999 Q1-1998 Q1-1997 Q1-1996 Q1-1995 Q1-1994 Q1-1993 Q1-1992 Source: www.haver.com The Credit Crunch 22% 46% No Effect Some Effect 32% For those affected: • Reduced availability (58%) • Increased cost (49%) Source: “Business Outlook Survey, CFO, July/August 2009, p. 26. Large Effect 6 (Percent) US Civilian Unemployment Rate 12 10 8 4 2 0 Jan-09 Jan-07 Jan-05 Jan-03 Jan-01 Jan-99 Jan-97 Jan-95 Jan-93 Jan-91 Jan-89 Jan-87 Jan-85 Jan-83 Jan-81 Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve US Employment: Construction Thousands of Workers 8,000 7,000 6,000 NAICS 23 Building, developing, construction of Houses, buildings, power lines, highways, streets and bridges 5,000 4,000 Jan-08 Jan-06 Jan-04 Jan-02 Jan-00 Jan-98 Jan-96 Jan-94 Jan-92 Jan-90 Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics US Employment: Government Thousands of Workers 23,000 22,000 21,000 20,000 Sector 92: Executive, legislative, justice, public safety, human Resources, environmental quality, planning, national security. National, state and local government. This includes civilian employees only, military personnel are excluded. 19,000 18,000 Jan-08 Jan-06 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics Jan-04 Jan-02 Jan-00 Jan-98 Jan-96 Jan-94 Jan-92 Jan-90 Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve Oil Prices Source: http://tonto.eia.doe/gov/dnav/pet/hist In Summary • • • • Nobody has much confidence Activity is slow Banks can’t (or won’t) loan. Customers aren’t able to borrow (or do so at reasonable terms) • Unemployment is high The Best Case Scenario • Rise in stock price followed by favorable corporate earnings 4Q09 • Consumer confidence rises with stocks • Foreclosure pressure continues to be heavy • More spending results in higher profits • Layoffs end by the end of the 2009 • “Jobless recovery” in 2010 • Higher interest rates and inflation in 2010-11 The Worst Case Scenario • No effective fiscal package gets passed • Treasury and Fed continue to stumble • Bad banks and businesses propped up • No price discovery for “toxic” mortgages • Political risk for business stays high • Business / investors “sit on their hands” • Unemployment goes well over 10% • Commodity deflation and price deflation Which is it? Take a page from Cisco’s “Playbook” 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Be realistic. Assess your situation. Get ready for the upturn. Get closer to your customers. Watch the stock market. Always have more cash, not less. Be aggressive. Source: “Silicon Valley Survivor,” Wall Street Journal, July 25-26, 2009, p. A11. Three more ... 1. Tough economies will pare the field of weak competitors 2. Tough economies provide cover for certain behaviors and decisions (customers, suppliers, and employees) 3. Everything is up for grabs. Use this as a business development opportunity. How Others Have Coped • GE: Communicating inside and outside • Nalco: Motivating employees to cut costs • Avon: Changing marketing to reflect the times • Waste Management: Getting customers to share the pain Source: “My Recovery Playbook,” Fortune, August 31, 2009, pp. 61-66. What is your Company Doing? Limiting travel Layoffs Deferring new hiring Reengineering processes Changing terms with suppliers Streamlining offerings Reducing R&D Excuse to restructure 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% Source: “How Bleak is the Landscape?,” Harvard Business Review, July-August 2009, 92-93. What Opportunities is your Company Considering? Restructuring for efficiency Targeting new customers Encouraging entrepreneurial… Negotiating better terms w/suppliers Improving current products/services Creating new products/services 0% Source: “How Bleak is the Landscape?,” Harvard Business Review, July-August 2009, 92-93. 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% What can Happen During a Recession? When will we recover? 40% 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Already Later 2009 Recovering First half Second half 2010 2010 Source: “Business Outlook Survey, CFO, July/August 2009, p. 24. 2001 or later