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Joint Ventures and Alliances

Joint Ventures and Alliances. Mode of entry. greenfield. acquisition. Partial acquisition. Greenfield EJV. shared. ownership. Greenfield WOS. Full acquisition. full. Why Joint Ventures?. Joint ventures imposed by governments Joint ventures as a first best strategy.

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Joint Ventures and Alliances

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  1. Joint Ventures and Alliances

  2. Mode of entry greenfield acquisition Partial acquisition Greenfield EJV shared ownership Greenfield WOS Full acquisition full

  3. Why Joint Ventures? • Joint ventures imposed by governments • Joint ventures as a first best strategy

  4. A firm which does not have all the capabilities it needs can • Internalize • Obtain access

  5. Equity Joint Ventures vs. Contracts (Alliances) Contracts: • Licensing • Technical cooperation • Distribution

  6. Equity Joint ventures vs. Contracts • Contracts: pay specified ex ante • Equity joint ventures: parties get paid for their contribution ex post from the revenues of the venture

  7. Advantages of Equity Joint Ventures • Reduces incentives for opportunism in the supply of inputs • Reduces negotiation and renegotiation costs

  8. Equity Joint Ventures vs. Contracts • Joint ventures have stronger incentives (more stable) • Joint ventures are more flexible • Joint ventures have higher fixed costs

  9. When are Equity Joint Ventures efficient? • When two or more parties hold complementary assets • When these assets are hard to evaluate and price ex ante

  10. Complementary Assets • Similar (scale joint venture) • Dissimilar (link joint venture)

  11. Hard to sell assets • Materials and components • Know-how • technological • marketing • country-specific • Distribution services • Capital

  12. Link joint venture Obtain complementary resources • Distribution and Country Specific Knowledge (Market Entry JV) • Complementary know-how (CFM= GE + SNECMA) • Capital (Ebara-Cryodynamics)

  13. Scale joint venture • Obtain scale economies in manufacturing, research, distribution • Aramco • Power PC (Apple + Motorola + IBM) • Francaise de Mecanique (Renault + Peugeot) • Toyota-PSA Kolin

  14. Aluminum Oxide Stade Reynolds 50% VAW 50% . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Reynolds Reynolds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . VAW VAW Bauxite Alumina Aluminum Scale joint venture

  15. Necessary and sufficient conditions for scale equity joint ventures • Differences in scale across stages of the value chain • Need for stages to be vertically integrated

  16. Licensing or Integration? Assets held by the MNE hard to sell/acquire easy to sell/acquire MNE licenses/ franchises Local firm Hard to Sell/ acquire Equity Joint Venture between MNE and local firm assets held by a local firm easy to sell/ acquire Wholly-owned subsidiary of MNE

  17. ‘Market ‘Sugar- R&D scale entry’ R&D link daddy’ Distribution Tripartite Japanese scale and link Nationality- based raw Downstream Downstream materials vertical vertical scale Marketing/ country- Intermediate specific Tacit Distribution Nationality inputs Capital knowledge technology A B C D E F 1. Capital 2. Country knowledge 3. Tacit technology 4. Distribution 5. Nationality 6. Intermediate inputs

  18. EJV vs. Replication and Acquisition • Replication more expensive than access if • desired assets public goods • desired assets unique • Acquisition more expensive than access if • illegal • acquired assets indigestible • damage to incentives

  19. Ratio of majority acquisitions to joint ventures (aversion ratio), European Community, 1983-92

  20. Joint ventures less stable than wholly-owned affiliates • Raw data • Hennart, Kim and Zeng (1998)

  21. Instability of partial and full Japanese stakes in US manufacturing 1980 to 2000source: Hennart database

  22. Why instability? • Are EJVs learning races? • Some EJVs are short-lived by design • JVs are not intended to be learning races, but may degenerate into learning races

  23. Alliance partners seek “collaborative specialization” • but collaborative specialization exposes parties to opportunism • protection against opportunism requires appropriate conditions • defective conditions cause learning races

  24. Alliance partners seek “collaborative specialization” Trade and specialization -exchange of capabilities -joint asset building

  25. Causes of Instability • Poor structure • goal conflicts • holdup • spillovers • parent interference • gridlock • Poor process • values and goals • communication • interface

  26. Solutions • Structure • structural design • legal safeguards • partner selection • Process • structural design • partner selection

  27. Goal Conflicts/Free riding • Partners have different goals • Free-riding

  28. Goal conflicts/free riding Global vs. local • Reinvestments • Advertising • Exports • Transfer pricing

  29. Solutions to goal conflict/free riding • Have potential partners spell out goals ex ante • Give partner control over performance aspects vulnerable to free-riding

  30. Holdup When dependence becomes asymmetric, party less dependent can exploit the other • Anamartic&Fujitsu

  31. Solutions to holdup • Specify market price transfers • Symmetrical structure • Set up mutual hostages • (Pernod-Ricard & Heublein) • Co-specialized assets • (Oris & Syncor)

  32. ASYMMETRIC Firm 1 Firm 2

  33. SYMMETRIC Firm 1 Firm 2

  34. Spillovers Parties divert their partner’s contributions to the alliance to activities outside the alliance (Wahaha and Danone)

  35. 50% 50% 100% 100% Parent 1 Non JV operations Parent 2 Non JV operations JV

  36. Solutions to spillovers • Choose right partner (McDonalds &ToysRUs) • Change the scope of the alliance • expand (Shin Caterpillar-Mitsubishi) • segment (Fuji-Xerox) • Blackbox knowhow (CFM Int’l) • Legal protection (patents, trademarks)

  37. Change the rules of the game • Extend the shadow of the future • Make unilateral commitments

  38. Relationship with EJV parents • Parent interference • Pricing of parent contributions • Gridlock

  39. Strategic Gridlock Air Canada Lufthansa Canadian Airlines Int’l United American

  40. Process • Different culture • Communication and interface

  41. Stage in Process Strategy formulation Partner Search Negotiation Start-Up Operation Adjustments Management Tasks Define logic of collaboration Match goals & capabilities Allocate roles & design structures Invest & build trust Contribute & receive capabilities Monitor changes & renegotiate Managing Alliances

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