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The Global New Normal & Opportunities
  for Home Grown Global Champions


    Presentation to CEO Leadership Exchange 2012
                   23rd May 2012


                 Manu Bhaskaran
                 Centennial Group
KEY TAKEAWAYS
    Despite risks, Asian surge will continue
     Short term risks: Asia has not decoupled
         Expect bad news
     Long term: changing landscape
       Global trends: Changing growth drivers
       Asian trends: Asian Century or …?
     Singapore as a major beneficiary
       Adjusting to challenges, beneficiary of trends


2   Confidential                                         01-June-2012
THE SHORT TERM:
    WEAKER GROWTH, NO CRASH




3   Confidential              01-June-2012
SHORT TERM: RISKS DOMINATE
    Caution needed
     Eurozone: recession is unavoidable
         Still largest market; financial shocks too
     China: worrying signs of sharp weakening
       Domestic/external demand falling
     Japan: recovery from disasters but
       Nuclear power shutdown, sales tax fears
     US: not strong enough to offset
       Job/income growth weak  demand weak

4   Confidential                                       01-June-2012
THE LONG TERM TRENDS
    GLOBAL ECONOMY




5   Confidential       01-June-2012
KEY CHANGES IN GLOBAL
    ARENA
    The next decade
     Slower global growth but higher quality
         G-3: deleveraging, not credit fuelled
         China: demographics, up the value chain
     A more volatile world
       Political stresses, energy prices, policy shifts
     Changing structure of competitiveness
       Re-industrialisation of US
     Definancialisation: smaller finance sector

6   Confidential                                           01-June-2012
SLOWER GROWTH
    G-3 economies’ adjustment
     Deleveraging will take a few years
         Households have to raise savings rate
         Governments cut budgets
     Credit system will take time to heal
       Banks will be wary, borrowers too
     Restrained investment
       To absorb excess capacity in housing etc


7   Confidential                                   01-June-2012
SLOWER GROWTH (2)
    China will slow significantly
     Demographics – work force growth slows
         Migration of rural workers slowing
         Labour costs rising – wages, social security
     Shifting policy emphasis
       Quality not quantity: environment, inequality..
       Removing hidden subsidies: energy, etc
     Reaction to over-investment
       Especially in housing


8   Confidential                                          01-June-2012
PATTERNS OF GROWTH

    Substantial volatility, stresses
     Global finance: hard to reform
     Developed: restructuring  stresses
     EMs: high growth cannot be smooth
     Tighter competition for resources
     Importance of resilience
         Balance of shock absorbers, amplifiers

9   Confidential                                   01-June-2012
CHANGING STRUCTURES




10   Confidential      01-June-2012
CURRENCY REALIGNMENTS

     Role and value of US Dollar down
      US Dollar - diminished
          Role: no more dominant reserve currency
          Value down as USD holders diversify away
      Asian currencies rise vs USD, EUR
        Winners: RMB, TWD, KRW, SGD, MYR
      RMB will rise vs other Asians

11   Confidential                                     01-June-2012
CHANGING
     COMPETITIVENESS

     Don’t underestimate the US
      USD down, boosting domestic producers
      New energy boom in US lower costs
      Massive restructuring: efficiency gains
      Clear signs of re-industrialization
          1st refineries, petrochemical in decades
          Chip plants – Intel
          Products with high tech, high tpt costs,…

12   Confidential                                      01-June-2012
EMERGING MIDDLE CLASS
     Structural shifts in global demand
      Asian middle class grows sharply over next
       40 years




13   Confidential                            01-June-2012
CHANGING STRUCTURES (2)
 Population shifts

  Migration within
     country
      Rapid pace of
       urbanization
      From low growth
       regions

  Migration between
     countries
      Legal and illegal
      Likely large in South
       Asia
14     Confidential            01-June-2012
CHANGING STRUCTURES (4)
       More Mega Cities in Asia
 Top 10 Largest Asian Cities in 2025
 Rank    Country       Urban agglomeration      Population (millions)
  1          Japan         Tokyo                        37.09
  2          India         Delhi                        28.57
  3          India         Mumbai (Bombay)              25.81
  4          Bangladesh    Dhaka                        20.94
  5          India         Kolkata (Calcutta)           20.11
  6          China         Shanghai                     20.02
  7          Pakistan      Karachi                      18.73
  8          China         Beijing                      15.02
  9          Philippines   Manila                       14.92
1510   Confidential                                          01-June-2012
             Japan         Osaka-Kobe                   11.37
THE LONG TERM TRENDS:
     ASIAN CENTURY
     OR
     MIDDLE INCOME TRAP?




16   Confidential          01-June-2012
KEY DRIVERS OF ASIAN
     GROWTH
     Complex web, mutually reinforcing
      Dramatic change in mindsets
          New energies, entrepreneurs, open to ideas
      Improving skills, human capital
        Education, improving health
      New competitive advantage
        Eg offshoring, low-end manufacturing
      Rising investment rate
        Domestic and foreign investment

17   Confidential                                       01-June-2012
NEW TRENDS IN FUTURE

     Recent growth spurring other positives
      Changing relativities
          China slows, India accelerates, …
          Rise of laggards: Phils, Myanmar, Bangladesh
      Changing structure of competitiveness
        China up value ladder; Indian manufacturing
      Increasing integration
        ASEAN Economic Community, Sub-regional

18   Confidential                                         01-June-2012
MASSIVE URBANISATION
 Asia’s urban population will nearly double by 2050

  Competitiveness, social
     and political stability
      Depends on quality and
      efficiency of urban areas
  Important to manage
     significant risks
      Inequality, slums and
      breakdown of social cohesion
19     Confidential                         01-June-2012
PROJECTIONS




20   Confidential   01-June-2012
ASIAN CENTURY SCENARIO
     Asia will account for more than half of global
     output in 2050




21   Confidential                             01-June-2012
MIDDLE INCOME TRAP
 A majority of Asian economies still have to
 demonstrate their ability
  Growth tends to
   become more capital
   and skill intensive
  Middle Income Trap
      Unable to compete with low
       income, low wage economies
      Unable to compete with
       advanced economies in high
       skill innovations
22     Confidential                            01-June-2012
SINGAPORE:
     NEW PHASE OF ADJUSTMENT




23   Confidential              01-June-2012
SINGAPORE: NEAR TERM
     Restructuring for new phase of growth
      Next 2-3 years: slowing, deflating
          Slow growth in G-3 will hurt
          Labour policy more restrictive
          Real estate cooling measures
      Cost rise temporary, will adjust down
        Costs and SGD have risen, SGD won’t weaken
        Restructuring like 2001-03: wages, rents down
        Relocation of activities to Iskandar Region

24   Confidential                                        01-June-2012
SINGAPORE: LONG TERM

     Major beneficiary of Asian trends
      Unique positioning
          Unmatched as hub serving India, ASEAN
          Major wealth management centre for Asia
      ASEAN integration boosts S’pore hub
        Increased flow of goods, people, capital
      Govt firm commitment to manufacturing
        Will do max to nurture sector

25   Confidential                                    01-June-2012
CONCLUSION
      Near term: risks from global slowdown
      Asian growth virtually unstoppable
        The Asian Century scenario more likely
      Long term trends
        Urbanisation, Middle Class/new rich,….
        Increased integration, rise of the laggards
      Singapore a major beneficiary
        Will adjust its costs down, remain competitive


26   Confidential                                         01-June-2012
Thank you

           www.centennialasia.com
           www.facebook.com/centennialasia
           www.twitter.com/centennialasia

27   Confidential                            01-June-2012

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The global new normal 1

  • 1. The Global New Normal & Opportunities for Home Grown Global Champions Presentation to CEO Leadership Exchange 2012 23rd May 2012 Manu Bhaskaran Centennial Group
  • 2. KEY TAKEAWAYS Despite risks, Asian surge will continue  Short term risks: Asia has not decoupled  Expect bad news  Long term: changing landscape  Global trends: Changing growth drivers  Asian trends: Asian Century or …?  Singapore as a major beneficiary  Adjusting to challenges, beneficiary of trends 2 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 3. THE SHORT TERM: WEAKER GROWTH, NO CRASH 3 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 4. SHORT TERM: RISKS DOMINATE Caution needed  Eurozone: recession is unavoidable  Still largest market; financial shocks too  China: worrying signs of sharp weakening  Domestic/external demand falling  Japan: recovery from disasters but  Nuclear power shutdown, sales tax fears  US: not strong enough to offset  Job/income growth weak  demand weak 4 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 5. THE LONG TERM TRENDS GLOBAL ECONOMY 5 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 6. KEY CHANGES IN GLOBAL ARENA The next decade  Slower global growth but higher quality  G-3: deleveraging, not credit fuelled  China: demographics, up the value chain  A more volatile world  Political stresses, energy prices, policy shifts  Changing structure of competitiveness  Re-industrialisation of US  Definancialisation: smaller finance sector 6 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 7. SLOWER GROWTH G-3 economies’ adjustment  Deleveraging will take a few years  Households have to raise savings rate  Governments cut budgets  Credit system will take time to heal  Banks will be wary, borrowers too  Restrained investment  To absorb excess capacity in housing etc 7 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 8. SLOWER GROWTH (2) China will slow significantly  Demographics – work force growth slows  Migration of rural workers slowing  Labour costs rising – wages, social security  Shifting policy emphasis  Quality not quantity: environment, inequality..  Removing hidden subsidies: energy, etc  Reaction to over-investment  Especially in housing 8 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 9. PATTERNS OF GROWTH Substantial volatility, stresses  Global finance: hard to reform  Developed: restructuring  stresses  EMs: high growth cannot be smooth  Tighter competition for resources  Importance of resilience  Balance of shock absorbers, amplifiers 9 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 10. CHANGING STRUCTURES 10 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 11. CURRENCY REALIGNMENTS Role and value of US Dollar down  US Dollar - diminished  Role: no more dominant reserve currency  Value down as USD holders diversify away  Asian currencies rise vs USD, EUR  Winners: RMB, TWD, KRW, SGD, MYR  RMB will rise vs other Asians 11 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 12. CHANGING COMPETITIVENESS Don’t underestimate the US  USD down, boosting domestic producers  New energy boom in US lower costs  Massive restructuring: efficiency gains  Clear signs of re-industrialization  1st refineries, petrochemical in decades  Chip plants – Intel  Products with high tech, high tpt costs,… 12 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 13. EMERGING MIDDLE CLASS Structural shifts in global demand  Asian middle class grows sharply over next 40 years 13 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 14. CHANGING STRUCTURES (2) Population shifts  Migration within country  Rapid pace of urbanization  From low growth regions  Migration between countries  Legal and illegal  Likely large in South Asia 14 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 15. CHANGING STRUCTURES (4) More Mega Cities in Asia Top 10 Largest Asian Cities in 2025 Rank Country Urban agglomeration Population (millions) 1 Japan Tokyo 37.09 2 India Delhi 28.57 3 India Mumbai (Bombay) 25.81 4 Bangladesh Dhaka 20.94 5 India Kolkata (Calcutta) 20.11 6 China Shanghai 20.02 7 Pakistan Karachi 18.73 8 China Beijing 15.02 9 Philippines Manila 14.92 1510 Confidential 01-June-2012 Japan Osaka-Kobe 11.37
  • 16. THE LONG TERM TRENDS: ASIAN CENTURY OR MIDDLE INCOME TRAP? 16 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 17. KEY DRIVERS OF ASIAN GROWTH Complex web, mutually reinforcing  Dramatic change in mindsets  New energies, entrepreneurs, open to ideas  Improving skills, human capital  Education, improving health  New competitive advantage  Eg offshoring, low-end manufacturing  Rising investment rate  Domestic and foreign investment 17 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 18. NEW TRENDS IN FUTURE Recent growth spurring other positives  Changing relativities  China slows, India accelerates, …  Rise of laggards: Phils, Myanmar, Bangladesh  Changing structure of competitiveness  China up value ladder; Indian manufacturing  Increasing integration  ASEAN Economic Community, Sub-regional 18 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 19. MASSIVE URBANISATION Asia’s urban population will nearly double by 2050  Competitiveness, social and political stability  Depends on quality and efficiency of urban areas  Important to manage significant risks  Inequality, slums and breakdown of social cohesion 19 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 20. PROJECTIONS 20 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 21. ASIAN CENTURY SCENARIO Asia will account for more than half of global output in 2050 21 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 22. MIDDLE INCOME TRAP A majority of Asian economies still have to demonstrate their ability  Growth tends to become more capital and skill intensive  Middle Income Trap  Unable to compete with low income, low wage economies  Unable to compete with advanced economies in high skill innovations 22 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 23. SINGAPORE: NEW PHASE OF ADJUSTMENT 23 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 24. SINGAPORE: NEAR TERM Restructuring for new phase of growth  Next 2-3 years: slowing, deflating  Slow growth in G-3 will hurt  Labour policy more restrictive  Real estate cooling measures  Cost rise temporary, will adjust down  Costs and SGD have risen, SGD won’t weaken  Restructuring like 2001-03: wages, rents down  Relocation of activities to Iskandar Region 24 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 25. SINGAPORE: LONG TERM Major beneficiary of Asian trends  Unique positioning  Unmatched as hub serving India, ASEAN  Major wealth management centre for Asia  ASEAN integration boosts S’pore hub  Increased flow of goods, people, capital  Govt firm commitment to manufacturing  Will do max to nurture sector 25 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 26. CONCLUSION  Near term: risks from global slowdown  Asian growth virtually unstoppable  The Asian Century scenario more likely  Long term trends  Urbanisation, Middle Class/new rich,….  Increased integration, rise of the laggards  Singapore a major beneficiary  Will adjust its costs down, remain competitive 26 Confidential 01-June-2012
  • 27. Thank you www.centennialasia.com www.facebook.com/centennialasia www.twitter.com/centennialasia 27 Confidential 01-June-2012