| HUMAN RESOURCE/ BUDGETING |
May 2004 |
WHEN WORLDS COLLIDE
The best hope for a foreign investor
is a local CFO with a mind of her own.
By Yang Jian
For time immemorial, China has
furnished foreign yarn-spinners with tales of epic battles.
Now, as capitalism takes hold, a literature is emerging devoted
to the conflicts of business. Books such as China Dream by
Joe Studwell, and the newly released Mr. China by Tim Clissold
- former CFO of Asimco, a company managing many China joint
ventures - chronicle no-holds-barred struggles between enlightened
capitalists and xenophobic Chinese managers. While they make
compelling reading, they can lack the more complex shadings
of the local point of view. And they tend to overlook a key
player, the Chinese finance professional charged with making
the enterprise work.
Xu Saihua's experience as the foreign-appointed
CFO in a Chinese joint venture could have been written by
John Grisham, the US bard of corporate intrigue. Her story
also highlights the role of an unsung combatant in China's
business culture wars. Xu, a Shanghai lawyer, was tapped by
Gale Pacific, an Australian maker of outdoor knitted fabrics,
to monitor the finances of Gale's manufacturing in Ningbo,
a city south of Shanghai. She turned out to be the foreign
investors' angel who ensured that the investment stayed afloat
in an environment of conflicted loyalties. Says Xu: "I do
not really know how I came through," but she quickly gathers
herself and adds: "Looking back, I can see there were conflicts
of interest between the two parties, as well as conflicts
of principles."
Xu's story shows the level of risk that
foreign companies undertake when launching a joint venture
in China. During her embattled tenure, Gale Pacific bought
out the joint venture partner and turned the enterprise into
a wholly-owned foreign enterprise (WOFE). A preference for
WOFEs, and therefore greater control, reflects the general
trend in China, where struggles within joint ventures - and
an easing of investment laws - have made total ownership more
popular.
But there are still 285,000 registered
joint ventures in China, and some multinationals prefer to
go this route. One reason may be profitability. McKinsey,
the US-based consultant, launched a study last year that found
that among the 31 foreign multinationals it polled, each with
WOFEs and JVs in its portfolio, the joint ventures had fared
better. But the study also found that the ultimate success,
whether WOFE or JV, depended on the presence of a local finance
officer with the independence to act in the majority shareholders'
interests."
Lawyer turned CFO
McKinsey might have added, get a local
lawyer like Xu Saihua to be finance chief. Prior to taking
her CFO job in Gale Pacific, Xu, 30, was an attorney with
a Shanghai firm, specializing in business investment and merger
and acquisition advisory work. Gale Pacific was one of her
clients. Then, in late 2002, Gale Pacific acquired US-based
California Sun Shade.
A private enterprise in Ningbo owned
by a local businessman named Lu Xianfeng, 35, was the sole
supplier of raw materials to California Sun Shade. (Repeated
attempts to interview Lu for a response to this story were
declined.) In order to secure a continuous and cheap supply
of materials, Gale Pacific's managers negotiated a JV deal
with Lu. In the deal, the Australian side would invest US$1.9
million and own 85 percent of the JV; Lu would invest US$330,000
to take the remaining 15 percent. As a minority shareholder,
Lu became a director of the JV, Gary Gale, Gale Pacific's
managing director, became chairman of the board. Gale Pacific
also appointed an independent director to balance the board.
Beginning October 2002, Xu worked closely
with Gary Gale, her then legal client, to get the Ningbo JV
up and running. The JV was registered in Ningbo Economic and
Technology Development Zone (NETD), and the authorities there
drafted a land lease contract with it. "Xu had only a glimpse
of the contract and pointed out that it was illegal," Gary
Gale recalls. Xu explained in detail how the clauses on dispute
resolution in the contract violated current laws. Both parties
were convinced and quickly made changes to the contract.
Her job done, Xu returned to Shanghai.
"In early December 2002, the Chairman (Gary Gale) suddenly
rang from Ningbo and asked whether I would like to work for
him," she recalls. Why leave Shanghai for Beilun, a suburb
some 40 kilometers from downtown Ningbo? "Of course I got
a decent package," says Xu.
"But it was more [to work with] the chairman."
Xu says Gary Gale "is reliable, knows about China, is smart,
and treats people well." Xu thought then that Gale would want
her to assume the role of legal counsel, or take on other
administrative responsibilities. Therefore it surprised her
when she arrived at Ningbo to find she was to be the CFO.
Why appoint a lawyer to be the CFO of a JV? Gale answers:
"China is very bureaucratic and laws are very important."
Unwelcome
Xu found she was unwelcome from day one.
The first project after the JV completed its registration
in December 2002 was to purchase equipment and raw materials.
Sunshade products are seasonal and the company needed to deliver
products to the US market as early as January 2003. Because
time was so tight, the company decided to purchase equipment
and inventory from Lu's former company. Xu took on the job
of selecting and verifying the quality of the equipment and
stock offered by Lu. Xu says that she questioned the usefulness
of some of the equipment, and immediately earned Lu's displeasure.
"I was very careful while questioning him," she says, "but
Lu was still very uncomfortable, simply because his reasoning
was that being asked questions equaled being distrusted."
Despite this, Xu and Lu pressed ahead
and sealed a deal for the purchase. Both parties worked hard
to kick-start production. "It was really cold and Lu worked
overtime with the workers all the way through," says Xu. By
the end of December 2002, the company was up and running smoothly
and sales started in January the next year. What's more, the
company was profitable in that very first month. "Lu played
a significant role in getting the factory operational, realizing
sales and profitability in such as short time," says Xu.
But she says she also sensed that her
presence "increasingly discomforted Lu." As a legal counsel
for JVs, Xu understood corporate governance to involve checks
and balances. "Running a company needs rules and processes,"
she says. However, Lu was someone "with a strong view on management,
who insisted on doing things his way."
In early February 2003, shortly after
the JV started normal operations, Lu took advantage of his
role as one of the company's directors and called a staff
conference. He announced that, from then on, he would decide
on his own who would be put in charge of purchasing and human
resources. With regards to finance, "he pre-arranged everything,
including how I should make financial accounts, who should
enjoy what allowances, and even how many times a certain employee
could reimburse travel expenses for visiting his family in
another town," says Xu. She felt this was a serious matter
and sent a memo in protest to Gale Pacific's board in Australia.
The conflicts with Lu intensified. Lu
fired off a long letter to the Australian headquarters. In
the letter, he argued that Xu was not qualified to be a CFO
and called for her removal. Xu believes that this was not
a personal attack but that Lu was against the role of the
CFO in principle. He regarded the position as an excuse to
watch his every move. "He thought everything I did was against
him," says Xu. As for the long list of her "wrongdoings" in
Lu's letter, which she read later, Xu is dismissive. For example,
Xu cites a complaint by Lu that she did not pour tea for him,
a traditional display of respect in China.
Gale Pacific's board took Lu's complaints
seriously. The investigation was so emotionally wrenching
that Xu considered resigning and going back to Shanghai. "However,
if I quit," she says, "I could foresee that the Australians
would have to give up more interests." As it turned out, the
Gale Pacific board concluded Lu's claims to be unfounded.
Nevertheless, Lu still insisted on firing Xu. Either Xu leaves,
he said, or he exits with his stake. But the Australians took
a hard line, too. Lu could go, but Xu had to stay. After some
negotiations, Lu proposed to have a month's time to weigh
the issues, and then decide whether he wanted to continue
the partnership.
Certainly, not all conflicts can be resolved
peacefully - indeed some call for draconian measures. But
decisions on changes to business process, especially in organizational
structure - such as restructuring units and reducing staff
- have to be supported by top management. "After ERP implementation,
some units will unavoidably disappear, while others will undergo
restructuring and job positions will be cut. These decisions
need to be made by the head of an organization. The key role
that top management plays in ERP implementation," says Zhang,
"is to support it unreservedly.""
Isolated and Helpless
Shortly after appointing Xu as the CFO,
Gale Pacific's board also designated Yang Yineng, a 33-year-old
Australian born in China, as the general manager based in
Ningbo. As part of the newly created post, both Lu and the
CFO reported directly to him. It was Yang, and his collaboration
with Lu, that forced the crisis that eventually broke the
partnership.
In May 2003, the joint venture set out
to build its own plant. Prior to this it had been leasing
local facilities. Lu selected the contractor, and won the
general manager's backing, but Xu objected. The investment
planned for the new plant exceeded 20 million renminbi (US$2.4
million), and Xu thought the cost too high and the contractor
below standard. Xu drew up a comparative analysis of contractors
that bid for the project and, along with experts' reviews,
sent it to Gale, who decided to launch an independent field
inspection. Gale eventually concluded that the deal was too
costly and decided against using the contractor. Immediately
afterward, Yang left his post and Gale Pacific.
Upon hearing the news, Lu, still cooling
off and on a trip to the US, flew back to Ningbo, called a
staff meeting and announced that he would take over the company.
He asked Xu to turn in the company chop and surrender key
documents. Xu refused. Lu forced open the door to Yang's former
office and declared he was the new general manager. Xu also
went on the offensive, immediately hiring a lawyer from Shanghai
and a local security service to safeguard the company's assets.
The stand-off lasted until mid-June, when
Gale Pacific chose its own contractor to build the new plant.
Lu announced he was withdrawing his shareholdings. However,
the two parties could not reach an agreement on who owned
the shares of several interests. Nor could they settle on
a non-competition agreement, with the Australians demanding
that Lu not compete with the company after withdrawing his
holdings. Zhang Ruping, NETD's Vice Merchants bureau director
recalls: "Both parties were going over the top. The gap between
them on the terms of termination of the JV was huge." NETD
officials attempted to bring both parties together, and after
many rounds of talks, an agreement was finally reached in
September. Lu would withdraw his shareholdings and was entitled
to his share of the profits when the company was operating
as a JV. But going forward, the JV would become a WOFE. When
this happened, Xu had been in the CFO chair for a mere ten
months.
Was the JV doomed from the start? Gale
says he intended to work with Lu for the long term. However,
NETD's Zhang says that Lu had expressed his suspicion of the
Australians. Lu thought that the Australians planned all along
to form a JV first, then force him to give up his shares,
step by step. Xu disagrees.
"Foreign direct investments are for the
long term," she says. Still, judging by the outcome, Lu can
be forgiven for having that impression. The initial joint
venture was indeed "a free marriage", to use the words of
Zhang, but the parties were unequal, in terms of capital invested.
The Australians, as the majority and controlling shareholder,
quickly moved to exercise their will by way of designating
the CFO and general manager of the JV. Xu says she attempted
to communicate with Lu and emphasized repeatedly that what
she was doing was for the benefit of the JV. However, Lu would
not listen because in his eyes, Xu represented the foreign
interests only. Xu acknowledges as such. "So long as the basic
principles were not violated," she says, "I had to put the
interest of the majority shareholder first."
Last September, Xu was appointed a director
of the board of the WOFE. She suggested that the company consider
expanding in the China market, rather than just using Ningbo
as a manufacturing center and exporting everything. Xu is
now overseeing the building of a new plant and opening a Shanghai
representative office, laying the ground for launching sunshade
products in China. The company remains profitable, with earnings
of 4 million renminbi (US$459,000) on 49 million renminbi
in sales.
Cultural Divide
Looking back, Xu says she now realizes
the inherent conflicts of interest in the JV. Lu had provided
a portion of equipment and inventories, thus playing the roles
of both supplier and shareholder. The situation was exacerbated
by differences between the cultural backgrounds of the two
parties. "The Chinese party cared very much about face. He
demanded respect and 100 percent trust. He just could not
deal with any questions," she adds.
Zhang followed the JV project between
Gale Pacific and Lu all the way through, and many times mediated
between the parties. Zhang also believes that the final divorce
to a large extent could be attributed to the differences between
the mindsets of the two parties. But unlike Xu, Zhang is more
inclined to think that the foreign party erred in underestimating
the problems of crossing the cultural divide in China. "Generally
speaking, foreigners still know very little about China,"
he says.

Yang Jian is a senior writer for CFO China
in Shanghai |