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The 2004 DS100 Analysis
Where are the Brands and Service Companies?


Posted, January 3rd, 2005

A ranking of top businesses in OIC member countries is sure to validate the obvious, such as dominance of the energy sector, but at the same time such a ranking can be expected to reveal emerging brands, industries and regional clusters.

To derive such insights from the 2004 DS100 ranking, Dinar Standard sat down with its rankings advisor Mr. Aamir Rehman, a Harvard MBA and an experienced management consultant to Fortune 500 companies. Mr. Rehman, who has also been a senior associate of the Harvard Islamic Finance Program and was co-founder of the Harvard Business School Islamic Society, provided his analysis by first highlighting the importance of the DS100 ranking and then breaking it down into three distinct buckets; 1) surprises, 2) what's missing?, and 3) the obvious trends. Here is a summary of his conclusions.

DS100 Surprises - No single region dominates, and an interesting mix of industries emerging

It was surprising to discover that no single region dominates the DS100. Turkey from East Europe, Malaysia and Indonesia from South-East Asia, and Saudi Arabia from the GCC region represent the top four countries in the Ranking.  The country ranking of DS100 also closely correlates with the largest overall economies of the OIC in terms of GDP. This trend further validates the belief that a thriving private sector (reflected here in DS100 companies) is instrumental to raising the standard of living in a society.

Even with a heavy weighting of the Energy sector, only 18 out of the 100 companies in the DS100 belong to it. Several promising industry clusters can be identified, including automotive, finance, construction, transportation and food processing. DS100 firms from Indonesia, Malaysia, and Turkey represent a very diverse set of successful companies. This diversity of DS100 industries is a sign of increasingly balanced development.

Given the healthy regional distribution of the top economies on the DS100 and diversity in industries represented, there seem to be significant opportunities for intra-regional trade. Despite the long-standing perception that not much intra-OIC trade occurs, the list shows that promising opportunities exist between at least the big four to trade amongst themselves.

What's Missing?
Global Brands; Strong Services Sector

The DS100 sorely lacks global retail mega-brands such as Coca-Cola, Nestle, Toyota, Sony, Nokia etc. With the exception of a few up-comers (Indofood, Proton, Vestel, Emirates, Koc Holding brand Arcelik), surprisingly few of the major enterprises in the DS100 ranking have any globally recognizable brands. Infact, there isn't really any truly global retail brand on the list. Instead, most local retail sector companies compete to distribute non-OIC based global brands.

Despite a significant body of shared values and norms across the OIC, there seems to be a lack of cross OIC regional brands. Clearly, cultural barriers such as language represent a challenge to brand-building. This hurdle, however, has never stopped truly global brands to penetrate these markets. Building cross OIC regional brands presents some of the most viable immediate growth opportunities for businesses in the region. This is an opportunity that can be leveraged with much more natural competitive advantage.

In addition to a lack of mega-brands, there is also relatively small representation of the services sector. The exceptions are finance and transportation. However, in a post-industrial knowledge based global economy, the DS100 doesn't appropriately represent this changing focus. This is a huge area of opportunity. There is much that can be innovated in this space. Opportunities such as hospitality/ restaurants, food products, advisory and technology services are primed to be leveraged. In fact, consolidation in key services sectors can create greater efficiency and profitability throughout the region.

The Obvious Risks -
Reliance on natural resources, and dominance of government owned businesses

A basic analysis of the DS100 confirms that, it is quite obvious that there is an excessive reliance on natural resources, particularly Oil & Gas. This is not surprising, however the sheer volume of the revenue weightage (57% of the energy sector) is alarming. Such excessive reliance on natural resources is a major risk for the following reasons.

First, Petroleum and Natural Gas enterprises are mostly export-oriented, which leads to decreased circulation of money within the country. In essence, the 'multiplier effect' is less because there are fewer domestic parties involved and much of the capital received in exchange for petroleum is re-invested in non-OIC economies.

Secondly, with commodities it is difficult to create sustained advantage except through access to the commodity or cost advantage. In the long-term, continued reliance on commodities is a risky strategy.

Third, these are capital intensive industries with little value added on top of the commodity. This is especially true with crude oil. This lack of value-added activity deprives the workforce (and entire organizations) of the ability to develop skills which are transferable to other sectors.

The analysis also shows a dominance of government-owned businesses (30 total government enterprises representing 62% of the total revenues of the companies on DS100.) Conventional wisdom, however, holds that private enterprises create more value than state-owned enterprises because they have more of an incentive for innovation, growth, and differentiation. In particular, given the global market economy, a competitive environment should create more value than a single-entity. Many OIC governments have recognized this and, as a result, many privatization efforts are visible. However, this is a process that has to be accelerated.

One interesting question to pursue would be the tradeoff between taxation and state-owned monopolies. Several OIC governments levy little or no corporate taxes, which naturally creates an additional incentive for entrepreneurship and business activity. Remaining tax-free, however, relies on state ownership of key industries (especially natural resources) - a phenomenon which reduces the economies' overall competitiveness.

Conclusion -
DS100 Sets an Important Benchmark

Amongst the myriad of economic news from the OIC countries, the DS100 Ranking puts a refreshing spotlight on its corporate activities. Today, much focus is on government led structural policies, reforms driven by the IMF or World Bank, government subsidized infrastructure projects, 5 to ten year plans, etc., etc. No doubt that structural reforms supporting a healthy economic environment is the backbone of any economy, but very little is talked or known about the equally important private enterprises or the overall corporate level strategies and opportunities.

The ranking is bound to inspire competitive strategies that raise the bar for market leaders. It allows its managers and leaders to benchmark against regional and global leaders. It sets the bar high for companies to innovate and compete with the best- both regionally and globally.

I, for one, look forward to seeing the DS100 evolve over time as OIC economies and its leading firms mature. I believe this is a critically important endeavor, with relevance to all executives whose companies compete in the Muslim world.

 

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