home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT0016>
- <title>
- Jan. 07, 1991: Riding Out The Storm
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 07, 1991 Men Of The Year:The Two George Bushes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 69
- Riding Out The Storm
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The recession will stagger many industries, but some may do
- fine. Here is a forecast of winners and losers.
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN E. GALLAGHER--With reporting by Jane Van Tassel/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Most American businesses have one thing in common right
- now: a sinking feeling. The recession that apparently began in
- late summer has drawn down the economy with wrenching swiftness.
- For most U.S. companies, simply riding out the slump has become
- the No. 1 short-term priority. But not all firms will be
- affected in the same way. Such heavy industries as
- petrochemicals and autos are likely to suffer the most, since
- they make products that people can often postpone buying.
- Heavily indebted companies will hurt too. But businesses that
- produce such necessities as pharmaceuticals and food will hardly
- feel the pinch. Here is a 1991 forecast for nine prominent
- industries:
- </p>
- <p> Aerospace and Defense. Even a war will bring little help to
- military contractors, because Pentagon spending will decline at
- a brisk annual rate of 5%, after adjustment for inflation.
- Companies that are heavily concentrated in military production,
- notably Northrop, will be the hardest hit. Fighting in the
- Persian Gulf may produce fresh orders for suppliers like General
- Dynamics, which makes the Stinger antiaircraft missile, but any
- increase would only be temporary. Because the Bush
- Administration and Congress have delayed hard decisions on the
- future of many programs, planning has become difficult for the
- industry. "I think next year is going to continue that
- uncertainty in the budget process. Confusion reigns," says Frank
- Shrontz, chairman of Boeing. Producers of commercial jetliners
- will have the smoothest flying. Boeing and McDonnell Douglas
- have a hefty backlog of orders, many from foreign carriers,
- which will help the companies weather the downdraft.
- </p>
- <p> Autos. The best hope for domestic carmakers is that sales,
- which have been sliding since 1986, will match last year's level
- of 14 million vehicles. By temporarily idling 38 plants during
- the first quarter of 1991, the Big Three aim to avoid a huge
- buildup of unsold cars. "We started a massive cost-reduction
- program in 1989, and all of us have slowed down our production
- schedules," says Robert Miller, vice chairman of Chrysler. "We
- all now have the staying power to get through a recession." With
- losses of $214 million in the third quarter alone, Chrysler is
- the most vulnerable of the Big Three. All the firms have their
- attention focused on Washington, where Congress may reconsider
- legislation that would raise fuel-economy levels 40% by 2001.
- Detroit is worried that such a law would require a major
- investment, which the automakers can ill afford at the moment.
- </p>
- <p> Computers. Stagnant sales and customer demands for better
- service made the past year a tough one for the industry, with
- many companies cutting their budget and work force. The coming
- year will bring more of the same, with some bright spots.
- Overall, sales will be weak as cost-conscious executives curb
- spending on new equipment. One stronger area will be
- lower-priced products, including portable computers and
- software. The biggest variable will be exports, which account
- for as much as one-half of all sales. This overseas business
- could improve if the dollar remains weak. "To a large degree,
- that is what's going to determine the rebound that will occur,"
- says Laura Conigliaro, an analyst for Prudential Bache Research.
- Such companies as Wang and Control Data, which rely on older
- technology, may be among the biggest losers. A likely winner is
- IBM, which has an impressive new line of products.
- </p>
- <p> Health Care. Health care, the most recession-proof of any
- industry, will keep growing about 10% in revenues during 1991,
- generating thousands of new jobs. "Americans are willing to
- support any capacity out there, but at some point that will
- crumble," says Uwe Reinhardt, an economist at Princeton
- University. Most employers have begun to balk at rising
- health-insurance premiums, and this could begin to restrict the
- growth of some parts of the industry. Psychiatric care may feel
- the pressure first, as employers seek limits to insurance
- coverage. Pharmaceutical companies, notably Merck and
- Bristol-Myers Squibb, will be big moneymakers again in 1991.
- Most of the major companies have invested heavily in new drugs
- that will pay off early in the decade.
- </p>
- <p> Insurance. The industry will have to fight a rising public
- perception that insurers are on the brink of a debacle
- comparable to the thrift industry's. In fact, most insurance
- companies are far healthier than savings and loans. "Total
- assets of the industry are on the order of $2 trillion. Very
- little of our holdings are below investment grade," says Robert
- Winters, chairman of Prudential. However, a few firms are
- faltering because of large junk-bond portfolios. And far more
- companies, notably Travelers and Equitable, have suffered from
- the falling value of real estate holdings. This year insurance
- companies will be caught in a squeeze because liabilities will
- go up but consumers and regulators will resist any sizable
- increase in premiums.
- </p>
- <p> Newspapers. The most immediate worry in the industry is the
- precipitous drop in advertising. "It's the softest ad
- environment we've seen in over 20 years," says Douglas
- McCorkindale, chief financial officer of Gannett, the largest
- U.S. newspaper group. Ad linage will probably keep falling
- through 1991, largely because troubled retailers have cut back
- drastically. At the same time, the price of newsprint, which
- accounts for about 25% of a paper's expenses, has been rising
- because of higher production costs. Forced to economize,
- newspapers will continue to trim their staffs and, by extension,
- their news coverage. When ad revenues pick up, papers will still
- have an enormous problem to solve: a sharp decline in interest
- among readers under 30.
- </p>
- <p> Oil. The outlook hinges on the Persian Gulf crisis. A
- protracted war could raise oil to $50 per bbl. or more and bring
- huge profits to many companies. But in a standoff, crude will
- probably remain at about $25 per bbl., or $5 to $10 above last
- summer's price. That still means a substantial profit for most
- oil companies, even though higher prices at the pump will cut
- demand for gasoline 1% to 2%. To diversify reserves, the
- industry will expand its overseas search for new supplies. But
- the industry's main concern will be found closer to home. "You
- can't look at 1991 without looking at the environment. It's a
- pervasive issue," says James Kinnear, Texaco's chief executive.
- To meet standards set by the Clean Air Act, the companies will
- have to spend billions of dollars to formulate cleaner-burning
- products. That cost will eventually be passed on to the
- consumer.
- </p>
- <p> Retailing. Until the second half of this year, stores will
- not see much improvement over their dismal performance in 1990,
- when profits fell about 5%. The upswing may be too late or too
- modest to save some of the more debt-ridden retailers from
- severe hardship. Among the most troubled: Carter Hawley Hale and
- Federated, which owns Bloomingdale's and Burdine's. Stores that
- survive the shake-out will compete strenuously by offering
- improved services to increasingly fickle and demanding
- consumers. "They want retailers to make it easier for them to
- buy. Those who can fulfill that will do well," says Kenneth
- Macke, chief executive of Minneapolis-based Dayton Hudson. Among
- those who should succeed: discount chains, including K mart and
- Wal-Mart, and such specialty stores as the Gap and Victoria's
- Secret.
- </p>
- <p> Wall Street. Investment firms hope they have reached the
- end of their belt tightening, which began with the 1987 crash
- and led to more than 50,000 layoffs. "We look for the start of
- a rather long and sustained bull market beginning the third
- quarter," says William Schreyer, chairman of Merrill Lynch. The
- industry also wants the government to offer some savings
- incentives--for example, IRAs with better tax benefits--to
- overcome the nation's low savings rate (4%, vs. 17% for Japan).
- That may encourage consumers to invest more, which could help
- rebuild not only Wall Street but the rest of the U.S. as well.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-