Family firms | Business in the Blood; Companies controlled by founding families remain surprisingly important and look set to stay so. Economist, Nov 1, 2014.
www.economist.com/news/business/ ... t-and-look-set-stay
Quote:
“Family-controlled firms now make up 19% of the companies in the Fortune Global 500, which tracks the world’s largest firms by sales. That is up from 15% in 2005, according to new research by McKinsey, a consulting firm (which defines such firms as ones whose founders or their families have the biggest stake, of [sic; should be ‘or’] at least 18%, plus the power to appoint the chief executive). * * * This is largely because of rapid growth in big developing economies where family ownership is the norm among large businesses.
“China (where the proportion is about 40%) and Sub-Saharan Africa (35%) stand out for their relatively low share of [$1 billion-plus] family firms, because in both cases many large firms are state-owned.
“Of the American firms in the Fortune Global 500, 15% are family ones, only slightly less than in 2005. Among them is the world’s largest family firm, Walmart
My comment:
(a) “founding families retain a fair degree of control despite selling large stakes to outside investors. One way they have done so is through special classes of shares * * * Investors have accepted such arrangements as the price of getting a slice of these firms’ profits, but they rarely like them. Some institutional investors were unhappy, for example, when a deal struck years ago by her father allowed Ms Botín to succeed him in the chair at Santander shortly after his death in September[, 2014], even though the family owned only 2% of the bank.”
(i) About the Group. Santander Group, undated
www.santander.com/csgs/Satellite ... erca-del-Grupo.html
("Founded in 1857 in the Spanish town of Santander by 76 businessmen")
(ii) Obituary: Emilio Botín was the chairman of Banco Santander, which he built up into one of the world’s most successful banking groups. Daily Telegraph, Sept 15, 2014
www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituar ... Botin-obituary.html
(“Banco Santander * * * came under the control of the Botín family in 1909, when Emilio’s grandfather took the chair, to be followed in 1950 by Emilio’s father”)
(iii) Santander Group was founded, and is based, in Santander, Spain.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santander,_Spain
(section 1 History)
(b) The graphic shows Taiwan’s Foxconn is the tenth “biggest family businesses” in the world. I am surprised, that it is deemed a family business at all. Terry GOU 郭 台銘, the founder, has two grown-up children (a son and a daughter) from the first wife (who died of breast cancer in 2005), as well as another pair of kids (a son and a daughter, born in 2010 and 2009, respectively). His adult children have declared lack of interest in running Foxconn.
(c) “Family firms are also less likely to load up on debt. An obvious exception, and an illustration of why most family capitalists fear debt, is the recent collapse of Espírito Santo. Massive debts turned the family-owned Portuguese financial conglomerate into one of Europe’s largest corporate failures, ending in a state bail-out of the bank at the group’s core.”
(i) Espírito Santo (disambiguation)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Espírito_Santo_(disambiguation)
("Portuguese for the holy spirit")
(ii) Banco Espírito Santo
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banco_Espírito_Santo
(based in Lisbon; was the second largest private financial institution in Portugal in terms of net assets; section 1 History)
|