13 Sept 2016

Cute little babies!

I went to a tea lounge the other day in a market. After a few minutes, a small family came and sat on the adjacent table. They had a very little cute baby girl with them. Her mother put her up on the table beside me and she kept looking at me after that without much of a comprehension. It was very cute. But I couldn't help but think, however nonsensically, that...

...if babies were to be compared to a computer at that point of time, they would be a state-of-the-art hardware built to very high specifications but with a primitive operating system, like an MS DOS on a 2016 Dell machine!

Well, on second thoughts there is an important patch of code to this version of MS DOS, it supports machine learning!

Sorry folks, random meanderings of a wasted mind!

9 Sept 2016

Economics of e-commerce

E-commerce is an exciting new industry in India. A large number of horizontal and vertical players are battling it out to win. Everybody is bleeding. Everybody is experimenting with new ways of winning over customers' loyalty. Leadership is changing hands every few months. Employees aren't sure who to bet their careers on. Investors are hedging their bets by putting money in multiple competing players and watching with nervousness as newer players with deeper pockets keep entering and stakes keep getting higher. Leadership of traditional industries is confused whether to jump into it to protect their market share at high cost or wait for clarity at the risk of being too late. What happens eventually is sure to serve as an extremely important learning experience for businesses and the current generation of young leaders on how to do business, and not just in the digital world but also in any new worlds of the future.

But the fundamentals of doing businesses still remain. Business exists to generate a higher RoI than the opportunity cost of capital. If a business cannot generate a short term RoI higher than the interest of, say, a fixed deposit, yours truly as a retail investor would rather keep his money in a FD rather than buy the stock of that business. But if yours truly however invested for a living then he would perhaps be willing take slightly longer term bets and say that the business should give him a higher 8-10 year RoI than the opportunity cost of capital. He would perhaps not try to look beyond 10 years because the world these days changes so fast that the assumptions made in earlier years may become invalid by the 10th year.

But to make an informed call over an 8-10 year period, he would try to model some assumptions of how the business would do on some fundamental drivers. This will help him set clear targets for the business on these assumptions and from time to time take any hard calls required to get the business back on track on these fundamentals. If the business still doesn't get its act together then it will help him to pack his bags and exit while the losses are still low. But if yours truly was getting paid a sure x% of the funds under management every year, he will need to summon all his ethics not to be creative with these assumptions and not put money where the assumptions for a reasonable RoI are unrealistic. [Blame it on his principles but yours truly will also not hand over his dough to anyone who is starting up to be sold or make money. He would rather give his dough to people who have a real purpose and a set of guiding values for the business].

Yours truly deconstructed the economics of e-commerce to understand the underlying components. As an outsider if you want to roughly assess the likely success of a business, you could do the following steps:

  1. Try to find out the annual losses so far.
  2. Estimate the future annual cash flows based on your assumptions of how the business will do on each of the fundamental components as explained later in this post
  3. Use your opportunity cost of capital as the discount rate and calculate the current value of all cash flows
  4. Try to see how many years it will take for the business to give a positive NPV. Do you think the assumptions can be considered valid for these many years, given the pace of change? Is the NPV positive in your reasonable investment horizon?
To try to understand the fundamental components, let's deconstruct the economics of the e-commerce, i.e., the equation of annual profitability:

Profit = Contribution margin - Marketing expenses - Fixed costs
          = [Unique visitors X Conversion rate (Orders/UV) X Average order value X Unit economics (Gross margin per order)] - Marketing expenses - Fixed costs
          = [Unique visitors X Repeat rate (Visits/unique-visitor) X Conversion rate (Orders/Visit) X Average order value X Unit economics (Gross margin per order)] - Marketing expenses - Fixed costs

As an investor, you want the above equation to return a positive value as soon as possible. For that you could set operational targets on each of the components for the management of the company and do periodic review to identify where the management needs help or where you need to take any extraordinary steps.

Here is a look at each of the components in detail:

Unique visitors:
E-commerce business is usually characterised by heavy network effects, i.e., the more unique visitors you have, the more sellers want to sell on your platform, and the more sellers you have, the more is the likelihood of visitors converting (i.e., doing a transaction on the platform). So a very important thing in building a good e-commerce platform is acquiring more and more unique visitors and increasing the value of your platform. Another way of thinking about this is that because of low barriers to entry, e-commerce is a low margin business so a high volume is required to make money. Hence, more the number of transacting users the better it is for the platform profitability. That's why businesses spend so much in customer acquisition early on even at the risk of sustainability. 

It's because of this that e-commerce is expected to constitute almost 25% of the TV spending and 15% of the total digital spending in India in 2016. As a result of this competition to acquire the same customer, the cost of acquisition of customers has gone through the roof. Both digital and offline are so expensive that no sane assumptions around drivers of customer lifetime value (LTV) seem to justify the cost of customer acquisition (CAC) for e-commerce platforms. It takes a lot of creative accounting on the part of start-ups to convince the investors of the sustainability of their customer acquisition economics and business sustainability. Why are platforms spending so much then? Because if they don't do so they're anyway doomed to die so they might as well go all in! Everybody hopes eventually they will be able to build a loyal customer base that they can then mine.

A good customer acquisition strategy will segment the target customers into various groups each of which can be reached in its unique ways based on its behaviour, geography, etc. A very rough example is that digital channels will typically give access to urban, highly educated, mid to higher income group individuals whereas mass media (TV/Radio/Newspaper/Bill boards) will also give access to broader segments, e.g., tier -2/3 towns, low to moderately educated, and lower income group individuals.

In India the fight for urban customers in the top 12 odd cities is intense because they are the early adopters of e-commerce and also have higher purchasing power. However, the next phase of growth is expected to come from high volumes of lower income customers in tier 2/3 towns. That's where non-digital channels will become more important.

And when you reach a potential customer, the next important thing is what story you tell. That's why one needs to identify what they stand for and what differentiates them so that the customer will remember them. In Seth Godin's words, this is where business needs to create itself a purple cow that the customer will remember.

To assess company's performance on this dimension, an investor will need to keep a tab on the market share (Daily or Monthly active visitors on the platform as a percentage of the total Daily or Monthly active visitors on all platforms or as a percentage of the total internet users or as a percentage of Facebook's daily/monthly active users for a proxy of internet users). There is no right target for a market share. Whatever makes your overall equation profitable becomes the lowest threshold. Sustaining that market share will impact the other components of your economics which may lead you to revise your market share target. This will act as a continuous feedback loop.

Repeat rates:
Once you have acquired the unique visitors, you want to make them visit your platform multiple times, i.e., have high repeat rates, so that the life time value of your customers increases. You could do so either by push or pull.

Push typically works through digital marketing, e.g., contextual advertising, in-market advertising, re-targeting, emails, notifications, etc. The first three involve additional financial cost every time you bring the same customer back whereas the latter two have a reputational cost involved because if you overuse them you could be seen as a spammer. Companies also dole out attractive offers to make the customers repeat. In early days, this makes the economics unfavourable but businesses do it nonetheless in the hope of building a loyal base. However, with newer competition springing up every now and then with low barriers to entry, the road to loyalty seems to be long and tough.

Pull, on the other hand, works by creating a high level of brand awareness, a purple cow of the business. Yours truly hasn't seen a shortcut to building brand awareness. Companies he knows have built brand with extensive investments in mass media advertisements and positive associations with celebrities, all the time communicating the purple cow about themselves . Most companies are still trying to find out how to make content marketing work for them but rarely any has been able to do a good job in the current Indian e-commerce industry by mid 2016. Content marketing ideally needs to be pull based but a lot of current experiments border on blatant push.

An investor will quickly need to assess how much of this repeat rate is dependent upon the direct cash burn in terms of various offers and how much upon the sustained indirect brand spend. The idea is to create such a purple cow that a business doesn't need to give loss making offers to make the customer repeat.

Conversion rates:
A registered user is good only if he/she transacts. You want them to transact as much as possible. your economics is highly sensitive to this metric. As mentioned earlier, this metric benefits from your market share because of the network effects. Apart from that this is a function of typical product-market match, quick and easy discovery of right products on your platform, price competitiveness, quality of information you give, trust you build through product quality and service, and creating cross-sell opportunities.

An investor could gather market intelligence around the conversion rates of various platforms to set a practical target for this metric. Or could also set a target based on where the economics of the equation works out. It helps to look at an e-commerce business in terms of different categories (e.g., mobile phones, women's bags, etc.) because then you could also do internal benchmarking of your conversion rate metrics across different categories and share best practices across the various category teams.

For product-market match, a good way is customer segmentation into different groups with unique category, style, price point, service, freshness, etc. needs. There can be multiple dimensions and one has to make judgement calls in creating the most logical segments which are homogenous within and heterogenous across. Then you've to ensure your selection composition on the above parameters reflects the composition of your target customer segments in the market. A simple example is that in apparel e-commerce, if 70% of your target customer can purchase only a sub-500 price point product then your selection composition has to reflect that. Please note that I am using the phrase 'target-segment'. If you want to build a business targeted only at higher price point customers, you don't need to build a sub-500 price point selection.

Quick and easy discovery of products on your platform is important because in the digital age the customer doesn't have a lot of patience of sifting through multiple pages or filters to find the right products. So personalisation based on past customer behaviour becomes important. This can be based on the individual's past behaviour if your technology is strong enough or based on the overall segment's affinity behaviour. A lot of platforms claim to be using personalisation algorithms but actually their technology is fairly nascent in India in 2016. Personalisation can happen around the specific category, price point, or brand, etc. preference of the customer based on their historical behaviour. Platforms can also leverage statistical methods over large customer sets to predict based on the historical large group dynamics what brand/category/style is the specific customer is likely to prefer.

Other than that you have to continuously experiment with your product navigation to get the customer quickly to where he/she wants to be. This essentially makes product discovery easy on your platform. Identify where customers click the most when they get to your site/app, which pages they visit the most, and use these insights to put the strategically important links in those locations. Strategically important links could be of high conversion rate products, high margin products, or something else based on what your company strategy is at that point of time. Also experiment with new product features which encourage customers to engage more with your platform and discover new products. A very popular technique used by companies these days is the quick A-B testing and iteration to quickly identify what works and what doesn't. This is essentially experimenting a new feature on a test group vs. a control group to assess how the new feature works. Another aspect of aiding discovery is understanding the preferences of your customer groups and making the relevant products easily discoverable. For example, if your low price point buyers prefer some sort of value deals then you could create a page for such value deals on your platform and make that link easily discoverable on your website/app.

Price competitiveness is extremely important in e-commerce because it's very easy for customers to open multiple websites/apps and compare the prices of products. This comparison is easy in concentrated categories, e.g., electronics and electrical appliances, where a few products constitute a major share of category sales but is difficult in fragmented categories, e.g., apparels where a large number of brands and small sellers exist and within each brand/seller the selection is large. Nonetheless, even in fragmented industries there are some core lines which don't see too many design variations, e.g., innerwear or some standard colors/styles in apparels, and are easy to be compared for price range across platforms. It's important for a platform to be price competitive on such sub-categories. Platforms do it in three broad ways: First, develop an automated crawling engine which keeps track of prices of similar products across platforms and keeps changing price of those products on own platform to remain price competitive all the time. Leading platforms have also segmented products into very commonly searched/purchased products vs others and on the former they ensure they have the lowest prices even if on the latter they are expensive and make money. This method works better in concentrated categories. Second, they develop some sort of algorithm which estimates the expected price of a product based on its input materials and tries to see if the product price is broadly in range. This method is vague and less accurate so better suits when you deploy it on a sub-set of selection in fragmented categories. Third, they look at the conversion rates of various products with a hypothesis that lower conversion rate for a sustained period may indicate price uncompetitiveness. Once a platform finds that a product is not competitive on price, it can either take a hit on its margins to become price competitive or it can go back to the seller and ask them to be more price competitive. The former is quick and easy but negatively impacts the unit economics whereas the latter requires manually intervention and takes time but doesn't hurt the platform's unit economics. However, sellers do not always agree to make the products price competitive because the economics doesn't work out for them. In such cases the platform either punishes the vendors in some way or takes the hit itself. Doing business is not so easy after all!

Price competitiveness is also a function of your business model, i.e., inventory based vs. marketplace. An inventory model adds fixed cost to operations but in categories like apparel it has clear advantages in price competitiveness over marketplace. An inventory based apparel e-commerce can procure bulk merchandise at attractive prices which allows it to offer lower prices than regular marketplace distributors while still making some gross margin. Any left over, so long as it's not fast fashion, can be offered at steep discount in next season. Many inventory led players in fact use this model as an advantage to create a perception of higher discounts on branded merchandise which marketplace distributors find difficult to match because they have smaller and usually current season inventories.

Vertical integration is another way of being more price competitive because it reduces the number of parties involved in the transaction and because the platform is willing to accept lower in-house/contracted manufacturing margins compared to pure 3rd party manufacturer-sellers to gain scale through own e-commerce platform. The idea is to make a reasonable margin over the end-to-end value chain and generate cash by higher volumes.

Quality of information you provide becomes important because customer cannot touch and feel the product on your platform. It's important to have a strong product on-boarding process which includes strong quality check of information about the product for comprehensive and accurate information. Companies currently do it in two ways - One, by throwing more people at the problem who review the product information bottom up, Second, by using a carrot and stick mechanism in which they push down the listings of vendors who have poor conversion rates or poor ratings or in which they show extensive customer reviews about the product so that any new customer can make an informed decision. Customer reviews also serve the customer as important peer feedback about the product.

Building trust in your product quality and service is a no brainer in the interest of a long term business. It helps to have a clear set of values and purpose statements of your business early on which act as clear guiding principles to your employees in their day to day decisions. After all, it's day to day decisions which build customer's trust in your products and service. In emerging markets, heavy communication and innovation is required to build trust on the new offering. Some examples of communication are using stamps of quality assurance, return guarantees, secure payments, etc. on your platform pages. An example of innovation is cash-on-delivery service.

Quality control becomes difficult with increasing scale of marketplaces. In such situations, many platforms identify a small, strategic group of sellers who constitute most of the sales and get the team to work closely with them in proactive initiatives in all areas of business, e.g., selection management, right pricing, reducing return rates, etc. This is easy in case of concentrated categories which are anyway dominated by big, well known brands but in fragmented categories the smaller set of vendors can be identified based on the scale of their business or some other parameter that indicates their strategic importance. The other sellers are left to be managed by self service technology and customer feedback.

Typically, companies find it easier to maintain high customer experience by doing things in-house which enables a tighter integration into various processes. E.g., Apple's in-house hardware, software, and services enable a high level of customer experience by better performance through tighter integration. Similarly, in e-commerce, leading players have found that an inventory model helps create a better customer experience than a pure marketplace model. This is because you can tightly integrate logistics with your front end platform and reduce the dispatch and delivery time. This is how Amazon offers one day delivery. You can also do better product quality checks in an inventory model.

Vertical integration, in which companies get into private labelling, also helps higher level of quality control compared to a pure marketplace model where the platform can't always control what's offered by 3rd party sellers.

Once you've invested in acquiring a user, you want to maximise their lifetime value by creating more and more opportunities for cross-sell while remaining aligned with your purpose of existence so that your brand remains consistent in a customer's mind. There is enough literature on how to expand your product offering while maintaining your differentiation in the minds of customers. For example, Gillette expanded from just Men's shaving products into Women's hair removal products by interpreting their purpose as creating quality shaving products. They further expanded the interpretation to overall grooming products and expanded into Men's grooming products. Similarly, an Indian e-commerce platform that stands for enabling discovery of Indian traditional/Ethnic products finds sense in expanding into traditional pickles and eatables segment but not in Western wear segment, you know who I'am talking about! The higher opportunities of cross-sell make the economics of horizontal players (cross-category players) more attractive than vertical ones (single-category players). Due to this reason the lifetime value of the same customer tends to be higher for horizontal platforms than that for vertical platform. This means the horizontal platforms can have a higher customer acquisition cost than vertical platforms. This is another argument in favour of better economics for horizontal platforms vs. vertical platforms. However, the fundamentals of competitive dynamics ensure that in a crowded horizontal market the competitors bid up the cost of customer acquisition so much that it one by one everybody exits the game until eventually only the player with the deepest pockets, the maximum customer engagement, or the least cost remains.

Average order value:
This has proven to be a tough metric to crack for most platforms. It can be broken into the following equation:
Average order value = Units per order X Average selling price per unit

Units per order can be influenced by recommendations at the time of product views or when products are added to the cart. Amazon does it very well by showing 'frequently bought together' or 'Customers who bought this also bought...". Higher trust in your product quality and platform service also favourably impact this metric. Two ways platforms have built trust in their product qualities is either by building a brand for themselves or by listing strong brands as part of their selection. In either case, a brand name usually increases trust.

Average selling price per unit tends to be a function of composition of your visiting user base and their purchasing power and to that extent tends to be beyond control. However, higher trust in your product quality and platform service favourably impact this metric.

Unit economics:
This means that you make a positive gross margin on each of your orders. You could be cross subsidising products within an order in the interest of increasing your overall GMV and keeping your sellers' growth broad based as long as you make the required margin on an order to cover your marketing and fixed costs and leave the required profit for a reasonable RoA.

Private labelling through vertical integration improves the gross margin across the combination of manufacturing and selling because both activities now come under the same company. In this case the combined manufacturing and selling margin of the platform is lower than the sum of manufacturing-selling margin of the 3rd party seller and the marketplace fee of the platform. The platform hopes to gain volume by passing on part of the margin of combined operations to the customer and being price competitive. The whole idea is to generate reasonable cash at large volumes even if at lower percentage margin. That's the whole game of businesses characterised by network effects.

In recent times and especially in business characterised by heavy network effects, businesses are disregarding unit profitability in the hope that once they have clearly established themselves as a preferred go-to destination in the minds of customers, they will make reasonable profit. The success of this approach has been proven in developed markets, e.g., by Amazon in the US. However, there is always a risk of taking it too far amid intense competition in a developing market characterised by low per capita purchasing power. There are two key risks: One, you get so much into the red during the investment period that recovering the investment becomes extremely difficult in a predictable time frame and Second, the still-low purchasing power of the customers in future makes it difficult for you to recover your initial investment.

As I said earlier, what will happen is a matter of debate but once the outcome becomes clear it will serve as an extremely important learning experience for businesses. Investors sometimes try to hedge their risks by keeping a clear timeframe in mind within which they expect the platform to break-even on a customer and if the platform misses this target for a few quarters then they wouldn't fund the platform anymore. These days (mid-2016) the thumb rule for investors seems to be that a platform should break even on a customer in 12-18 months because the repeat rates of customers tend to be really weak post that.

Advertising:
A new area which leading platforms have started using from last one year is advertising. Earning from advertisement goes directly to the bottomline of the platform hence is very attractive to otherwise unprofitable platforms. Advertising on e-commerce platforms happens in the following key ways: One, the sellers pay the platform to show their products as sponsored products in product search results, Two, some unethical platforms may also artificially push the advertisers results automatically in organic category listings, Three, sellers pay the platform to show their banners/links on several pages or on various assets of the platform. However, platforms will find out that marketing objectives from advertisements tend to be different for large brands vs. smaller sellers. Whereas large brands spend money from their marketing budget with an objective of strengthening brand awareness, smaller sellers do not have well defined business practices and do not set aside any marketing budget. In fact, the very fact that small sellers are not brands means that they also do not command enough margins that could fund large advertising campaigns. This means that small sellers tend to expect 1-to-1 attribution of any advertising money to increased sales. This is a huge ask on the part of e-commerce platforms which are otherwise occupied with many larger issues of their own. All of this leads to such advertising being primarily led by few well known brands and not a large number of small sellers.

E-commerce is a complex and exciting industry and no one seems to have cracked the winning formula yet in India. As the various players fight a bloody battle out, I hope they remember that the real skill is in making profitable businesses. Anybody can put a desk outside and pay people hundred rupees to come buy a eighty rupee handkerchief.

Are your large acquisitions creating or destroying value?

A McKinsey research says large acquisitions destroy value more often than not. That research recommends a programmatic acquisition which is regular, multiple small acquisitions meant to fill specific gaps in an organization's capabilities, offerings, or geographical presence. IBM has been a poster child of such a program in recent two decades.

When I read such pieces of research, most examples tend to be older, preceding the research. I wanted to start documenting more recent examples that offer some learning on value creation/destruction through inorganic pursuits. Perhaps more failures will get highlighted but I will try to find successes too. I will keep adding new examples as they come up to my notice. If you know any new examples, pls share with me. So, here we go:

HP Enterprises's divestment of its software portfolio:

  • Acquisition: Britain's Autonomy Corp Plc in 2011 for $10.3 bn. Integrated into HP as a software business.
  • Divestment: To Britain's Micro Focus International Plc on 8-Sep-2016 in a deal worth $8.8 bn ($2.5 bn cash and 50.1% equity in the combined company). Additional expense of $700 mn in one time costs related to the separation of the assets.
  • There will also be some accumulated profits/losses for the duration of ownership which I haven't tried to find.
Intel's divestment of McAfee:
  • Acquisition: McAfee (internet security software company) for $7.7 bn in 2011 and renamed as Intel Security Group in 2014
  • Divestment: Sold 51% stake to investment firm TPG for $3.1 bn in cash on 8-Sep-2016. Brand name to be reverted to McAfee. TPG can leverage synergies with its other two investments in security start-up Tanium and Zscaler
  • Intel's investment thesis:
    • Integrate McAfee security technology into Intel chips but no progress made
    • Get a piece of the emerging business of protecting corporations from sophisticated espionage, but newer players such as Mandiant, came to dominate the business
    • Gain from market share increase in PC security but PC growth itself slowed

29 Dec 2014

House investment: Is there a business case?

When did your dad buy his first (and, in most cases, only) house? Perhaps mid 40s. But you want to buy your first house in early 30s. The reason you buy a house at this early age today is very different from why your dad bought his house during his mid 40s. He wanted to secure a roof over his head post retirement but you want to get a good return on your investment. Even if you can't afford a house large enough to live in, you feel a tacit pressure to buy a smaller one somewhere on the outskirts as an investment, just to sell off at the right time. But is it a wise investment option?

A detailed analysis proves that unless you pick up stake just when a city is taking off (like Gurgaon in mid 2000s or may be the new capital of Telangana now), a house investment isn't a good investment at all. In fact, even a FD gives you higher and safer return.

Let's do some simple maths to understand better:

Assumptions:
Let's assume that you are a salaried employee with all white money so you're interested in an all white deal (this analysis will not be applicable to those with black money support because they can't invest that money elsewhere legitimately so whatever return they get on property is better than an otherwise no return). Let's also assume that you are married and want to buy in a joint ownership so that you maximize your loan eligibility and tax benefits.

Suppose you are interested in buying a two plus study house in Gurgaon for about Rs.1.4 Cr. (typically a Sohna road location). You want to finance Rs.25 lac from your savings, Rs.10 lac from your PF and the rest Rs.1.05 Cr. from a bank loan (you can avail a loan of up to 85% of Rs.1.4 Cr which is Rs.1.19 Cr so you are able to afford this house). And suppose you are paying a rate of Rs.9000 per sq ft (typical fully loaded cost of a Sohna road property if you've cracked a good deal), which means your house area will be 1.4 Cr/9000 = 1556 Sq ft.

Let's take two cases one by one:
Case I: You will self occupy the house.
Case II: You will rent the house to a tenant and keep living in a rented house yourself.

Now let's see if the house purchase makes you richer or poorer over 5 years.

Case I: You will self occupy the house.

Annual cash outflow:

  1. Interest on bank loan = 10.15% x Rs.1.05 Cr. = Rs.10.66 L
  2. Opportunity cost of your savings (had you kept this money in a FD, it would have grown by 8.75% FD rate and attracted a 30% income tax, thus returning you an annual 6.13% return) = 6.13% x Rs.25 L = Rs.1.53 L
  3. Opportunity cost of your PF (earns about 8.5% with no income tax) = 8.5% x Rs.10 L = Rs.0.85 L

Total annual cash outflow = Rs.10.66 + Rs.1.53 + Rs.0.85 = Rs.13.04 L

Annual cash inflow/benefit:

  1. Income tax rebate under section 24 (Rs.1.5 L of income is deductible from taxable income for both owners) = Rs.1.5 L x 30% + Rs.1.5 L x 30% = Rs.0.9 L
  2. Saving of house rent that you would have otherwise paid (assuming you pay a rent of Rs.30,000 per month including society maintenance of Rs.3,000. With your own house you will still pay society maintenance but will save rest of the Rs.27,000 rent) = Rs.27,000 per month x 12 months = Rs.3.24 L

Total annual cash benefit = Rs.0.9 + Rs.3.24 = Rs.4.14 L

Net annual cash outflow = Total cash outflow - Total cash benefitRs.13.04 L - Rs.4.14 L = Rs.8.9 L

Resale value and the rate of return:
Suppose after 5 years you have a better job, higher salary, or higher savings (say, you are an IT employee and you went onsite and saved some money) and want to upgrade your house, i.e., sell this one off and buy a bigger one. In 5 years, you would have incurred a cash expense of Rs.8.9 L x 5 = Rs.44.5 L on this house. Besides all this, if you anyway planned to sell this house after 5 years then essentially the 6% registry charges that you paid also ends up being a sunk cost. Let's assume the circle rate for this property is Rs.5000 per sq ft so you paid 6% x 5000 x 1556 = Rs.4.67 L for registry. So your total expenses on this property in 5 years are Rs.49.2 L. Also sunk is the 1% that you paid to a broker both at the time of buying and selling (=Rs.1.4 Cr. x 1% + Rs.1.4 Cr. x 1%) = ~Rs.3 L.

With all these expenses, just to break even after 5 years you would want to net off Rs.52.2 L on your property. But selling after 5 years will also attract a long term capital gain tax of 20% so actually you want to sell at an appreciation of 52.2/80% = Rs.65.3 L. This means after 5 years, the value of your 1556 sq ft house should be Rs.2.05 Cr. (at a whopping Rs.13,174 per sq ft). On a per sq ft basis, we are talking about an annual appreciation of 65.3/5/1556 = Rs.840 per sq ft every year. And these numbers while look big, are just a modest 7.9% compounded annual rate of return (CAGR) pre-tax ((2.05/1.4)^(1/5)-1 = 7.9%).

Think of these numbers in following four ways:

  1. Do you think a 1556 sq ft house that you bought today at effectively Rs.9000/sq ft rate will go at the rate of Rs.13174 per sq ft in 5 years? (To put it in context, 13000 is the rate at the most prime locations in Gurgaon today, e.g., MG Road and Gold Course Road and 9000 is the effective rate on Sohna road after including all hidden charges if you cracked a good deal. My guess is as good as yours but I would bet my money on Rs.11,000 per sq ft max after 5 years for similar locality under similar circumstances. MG Road and Golf course road rates did grow from Rs.5,000 in 2005 to Rs.13,000 in 2014 but at that time Gurgaon and the property bubble in Gurgaon was picking up. It's beneficial to invest at that stage. These rates in all Gurgaon locations have been constant or gone down a bit over the last 2 years as the property bubble became unsustainable during economic downturn. Also the rates tend to peak out as people find the rate of return in those areas small so take their money elsewhere. This in turn makes the area unattractive for future speculative buyers. Sohna road seems to have realized much of it's potential for a few years because it's already expensive and a lot of new inventory is coming up around golf course extension road and southern periphery road so people have many alternative options. But investment even in this new inventory isn't attractive because it can be shown through similar analysis that even that under-construction or just announced inventory is over priced to yield a good rate of return over 5-10 years).
  2. Do you think prices will increase by Rs. 840 per sq ft every year? (Again to put it in context, prices have not increases at all in the last 2 years and most of these areas are already overpriced).
  3. Do you think the value of your Rs.1.4 Cr. house will increase by Rs.13 L every year? (Think Sohna road to put it in context).
  4. Do you think a 1.4 Cr two plus study will get 2.05 Cr in 5 years? (Who will be the buyer? A typical salaried, middle class family with an annual 10-14% salary increment and 1-2 kids gathers around Rs.1.0-1.6 Cr for a small house)

So in case I (self occupied house), should one not purchase a house at all? Yes, buying purely for financial gain doesn't make sense (compare a modest 7.9% CAGR that looks too huge to realistically achieve in property with a FD that gives you 8.75% CAGR without risk easily). But you should consider buying a house if:

  1. A rented accommodation doesn't give you all the facilities you want (e.g., you like stylish bathrooms and rented houses all use cheap fittings).
  2. The particular house that you're interested in has sentimental value for you (e.g., you grew up playing in that house or you really like this location but the availability of house here is very rare).

Case II: You will rent the house to a tenant:

Annual cash outflow:

Total annual cash outflow as calculated in case I = Rs.13.04 L

Annual cash inflow/benefit:

  1. Income tax rebate under section 24 (as calculated in case I) = Rs.0.9 L
  2. Rental income (assuming you will get Rs.35,000 per month including Rs.3,000 maintenance for this house) = 12 x 32000 = Rs.3.84 L (I have assumed a rent on the higher side but because rent will slightly increase year on year, I am taking a constant average amount which is a bit higher today). You're allowed an income tax deductible of 30% towards general house maintenance which means you pay tax only on 70% of your rental income, which comes to an income tax of 3.84 x 70% x 30% (slab rate) = Rs.0.81 L. And if you rotate your tenant every 18 months and pay a brokerage of 15 days (Rs.15,000 every time), this also comes to an annual expense of Rs.10,000. Also, when you rotate the tenant, your house may be vacant for approximately a month every 18 months so a loss of Rs.32,000 every 18 months coming to annual loss of Rs.21,300. Plus your house will really need some miscellaneous expenses (e.g., seepage repair, paint) so let's deduct another Rs.15,000 per year. So you net rental income is 3.84 - 0.81 - 0.1 - 0.213 - 0.15 L = Rs.2.57 L.
  3. Because you consider your house an investment vehicle in this case, you should calculate net gain/loss on this investment and claim tax benefit. This means if your net cash inflow from the house is 2.57 L + 0.9 L = Rs.3.47 L and your interest payout is Rs.10.66 L, you're incurring an annual loss of 10.66 - 3.47 = Rs.7.19 L. On this you claim tax rebate = 30% x 7.19 L = Rs.2.16 L (This option isn't available in case of a self occupied property, that's why we didn't consider it in case I).

Total annual cash benefit = Rs.5.63 L

Net annual cash outflow = Total cash outflow - Total cash benefit = 13.04 L - 5.63 L = Rs.7.41 L

Resale value and the rate of return:
In 5 years, you would have incurred a cash expense of 7.41 L x 5 = Rs.37 L on this house. Add the 6% registry charges on circle rate of Rs. 5000 per sq ft = 6% x 5000 x 1556 = Rs.4.67 L. So your total expenses on this property in 5 years are Rs.41.7 L. Also add the 1% brokerage at the time of buying and selling = ~Rs.3 L (as calculated in case I).

This time just to break even you would want to net off Rs.44.7 L on your property. Accounting for a long term capital gain tax of 20% so actually you want to sell at an appreciation of 44.7/80% = Rs.55.8 L. This means after 5 years, the value of your 1556 sq ft house should be Rs.1.96 Cr. (at Rs.12,586 per sq ft). On a per sq ft basis, now we are talking about an annual appreciation of 55.8/5/1556 = Rs.717 per sq ft every year. And this is again just a modest 6.9% compounded annual rate of return (CAGR) pre-tax ((1.96/1.4)^(1/5)-1 = 6.9%).

Now again think of these numbers in following four ways:

  1. Do you think a 1556 sq ft house that you bought today at effectively Rs. 9000/sq ft rate will go at the rate of Rs. 12,586 per sq ft in 5 years? (As I said my guess is as good as yours but I would bet my money on 11,000 per sq ft max after 5 years for similar locality under similar circumstances).
  2. Do you think prices will increase by Rs.717 per sq ft every year? (Again to put it in context, prices have not increases at all in the last 2 years and most areas are already over priced).
  3. Do you think the selling price of your house will increase by Rs.11.16 L every year?
  4. Do you think a Rs.1.4 Cr two plus study house will get Rs.1.96 Cr in 5 years? (Again, to put it in context, think of your average middle class salaried buyer who gets an annual raise of 10-14% and can perhaps gather up to 1.6 Cr of funds for a small house purchase in their early 30s).

So, if your objective was only investment, then this house is hardly going to give you a 6.9% CAGR pre-tax and there is too much risk of uncertainty even on getting this much from your house in 5 years. Compare that with a 8.75% CAGR pre-tax that a FD gives you risk free.

Another way of looking at this investment:
And in case II, just theoretically, if we agree that the going rate of this house will be Rs.11,000 per sq ft then you only made (11000-9000) x 1556 = Rs.31.1 L from capital gain. The balance of 55.8 - 31.1 = Rs.24.7 L over 5 years or Rs.4.94 L per year should come from rental income. This takes your required rental income to a whopping Rs.2.57 L (rental income that we calculated for case II) + Rs. 4.94 L (gap needed to bridge to break even on your investment) = Rs.7.51 L per annum. Reverse adjusting for all the factors considered in point 2 of income in case II, this comes to a required monthly rental of Rs.84100, which is definitely not happening.

In this case the ratio of your purchase value of your house to the average 5 year monthly rental comes out to be 14000000/84100 = 166. It can be shown roughly that factoring for annual rental increase, around this house price, the ratio of house value to the monthly rental at the time of purchase should be anywhere less than 200 if your investment has to give you positive 5 year return (The calculation isn't different for 10 year, 15 year returns either).

At current Gurgaon prices, this ratio realistically is more around 14000000/30000 = 467 which makes a house a bad investment option in Gurgaon. This is why I believe we're in a property bubble and should keep distance from it. While this calculation has been done for Gurgaon, in general, a residential house purchase turns out not a good investment option in any city unless you pick up medium term stake in a city that is just taking off.

Philosophically thinking:
All the above calculations were financial and they proved that house purchase is not a good investment option. But there are other associated costs as well.

In your early 30s, you are newly married and may be will soon have a baby. This is a great time to see the world together and fall in lifelong love with each other. Once the baby grows up into a teenager, you will anyway have all sorts of practical pressures of life. But this time will not come back. Do you want to get into a Rs.1 Cr+ loan, get tied to a monthly EMI of Rs.1 lac+ at this stage and not have any spare money to go on that expensive Saturday night dinner date with your young partner or go on that summer vacation to Europe with your love and your still able parents?

Chances are that you will do well in life and will have good money in your mid 40s (better than your dad in the then coveted government service) to buy a house and handle growing pressures of a family. Do think about retirement fund now, don't touch your PF, get an insurance term plan for about 6-8x your annual CTC, save 30% of your take home salary and put it in a balanced portfolio (FD, mutual funds, metal, stocks) but don't fret about a house yet. It's sunny out there, take your partner on a date today!

22 Dec 2012

Badlo usey, na jaane kisey...Hoga aise, na jaane kaise!

It was inhuman - the brutal torture and rape of a girl in a Delhi bus. We were disgusted by what we have made of our society. And so many of us started hoping, instead of dreading, that the world would end on 21st December 2012 as predicted by Mayans. The prevailing sense was captured best by a post doing rounds on facebook - 'I am not scared the world would end on 21st, I am scared that it will continue as it is'. But the world didn't end. It went on and it went on unchanged. So some of us, in fact, many of us got out of our homes and started demonstrations at India gate for something that needs to happen somehow. The only things unclear were what and how!
  1. We have gathered at India gate to demonstrate without a clear leader. When a group of people from among us demonstrators came out after meeting some officials in the Rashtrapati Bhawan, the crowd questioned the legitimacy of their representation and refused to listen to them.
  2. We do not seem to have a clear demand. Some of us want capital punishment for rape in rare of the rarest cases, some want capital punishment for rape in all cases, some want a special session of parliament to bring this amendment to the law, some want the guilty in this specific case be lynched, some want the resignation of Home Minister, some want the suspension of Delhi police commissioner, etc. What seems to doom our demonstrations is the absence of a comprehensive set of structural fixes in our demands.
  3. I heard a politician ask "if capital punishment hasn't deterred criminals from murdering people, will it deter criminals from resorting to this crime?" and found myself unsure.
  4. Five policemen found in dereliction of duty will be suspended. But that's routine. Things will be forgotten in 2 months and those guys would be back in service. We are anyways short of staff in police. And the broader point is the state of our police staff. They are 'on duty' for long hours and sometimes 7 days a week, are paid peanuts in salaries, take bath in open outside the police stations (read their office), dry their laundry in the police station (read their office), can't easily touch most serious criminals due to their political connections (read do not perform their duty because their bosses do not allow them to do), etc. If you and me worked under such conditions, what would be our quality of work! Despite those work conditions, because all of us have to feed our families, someone might supervise us into working from time to time by brandishing the stick of suspension but in absence of the underlying motivation, we would revert to our shoddy self as soon as the supervision fades.
  5. Many of our political leaders are 70+ years of age. At our home, we do not expect family members of this age to be 'able' to take care of us youngsters. They speak feebly and walk with support. We urge them to take more rest, eat carefully and lead a retired life. I feel terrible then when people of this age have to run this entire country. Not that they are stronger of the lot, even they are speaking feebly and many of them walking with support.
  6. It's heartening to see that High court has taken suo moto cognizance of this unfortunate incident and set up fast track courts to hear rape cases. But a villager whose land was snatched by local influential people wants a fast track hearing equally badly because he can't feed his family without that land.
Thoughts will keep coming and I will keep updating this post, but the underlying questions will remain -
  1. Should we not demand judicial reforms, police reforms, and political reforms?
  2. Can those reforms not happen in parallel with economic reforms?
  3. Given the number of inconclusive public demonstrations on various issues lately, is it time that we make our demonstrations more effective by taking lessons from our rich pre-independence history (on proper public discourse to come up with a blue print of popular ideal state while agitating for change)?
And a personal question to myself, should I not stop writing but do something about it?

13 Jun 2012

Bachpan ki woh ameeri..

बचपन की वो अमीरी ना जाने कहाँ खो गयी...
जब बारिश के पानी में हमारे भी जहाज चला करते थे.
                            
                                                     - गुमनाम

29 May 2012

Rest in peace JEE...you will be missed!


Yesterday marked the day when JEE was killed. I am extremely distressed at the disconnect politicians and bureaucrats have from the masses. I have done well as an IITian but had the system been so in my times, I would never have been an IITian.


A comment from Chairman of the Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE), Vineet Jain, - "This will bring about a big change in the teaching-learning in the classroom" makes me wonder how this will happen. Will the quality of our secondary school teachers change over the next 10 years Mr. Jain? Have you even met tier 2/3 school class 12 teacher in the last few years Mr. Jain or are you only meeting the principals and directors of public schools in Delhi? Do you seriously believe a typical tier 3 city student has a chance of competing with a tier 1 city student in class 12. The only way the playing field can be leveled is if the poor tier 3 city kid spends a large amount of money to stay in hostel in a tier 1 city himself to study at the same quality place. Where a kid used to do so for only 1 year of JEE preparation so far, he would perhaps do so for 2 years of inter college too now.


This will just make small town students miserable. Even pandering to the wishes of unethical teachers who want to teach only at private tuition at home wouldn't help poor kids score in board exams because most of these small town school teachers anyways don't have their fundamentals in place. And if kids don't pander to their wishes, they are screwed in even bigger ways. My geography teacher in 10th didn't tell me in school that board exam has a 10 mark question on maps. He told so to his students at his private tuition classes and asked them to be quiet about it at school. I figured this only a day before the final board exam, tried desperately to understand maps at the last minute but ultimately lost on all 10 marks. Result - I scored just 63 marks in Geography, substandard looking at my larger academic record.


And why just go to a small town. I shifted to a mini metro city in 12th late in July, when 1st term exams were almost there. I scored 94 in those exams, thanks to a phenomenal tutor I had in my previous town. I used to study the legendary R.S. Agarwal book till that time in my own style. However, soon I figured that this maths teacher promoted a maths guide by a different author to the extent that he would beat us up physically if we were not showing hand-written solutions to the problems in that book. Now with my limited time, I had to give up my favourite R.S. Agarwal and switch to a different book just because this teacher was promoting it. It added one more adjustment to my already disturbed schedule (Remember, I had just joined this new school). Moreover, my freedom of solving the problems my way was lost. To me writing every line of solution in a notebook wasn't important but I had to do so to prove to this teacher that I was studying his 'favorite' book. All of this resulted in significant loss of time for me and I had 72 marks in my 2nd term.


Now, Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain, I still made it to IIT because class 10 and class 12 DID NOT matter in my entry to IITs. Though my substandard knowledge from school education did put me a bit behind my metro public school counterparts but I made up for it through my hard work in the 1 year local JEE coaching. If you sit for an hour in a school's class 12 room and in a JEE coaching institute Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain, you would figure out the difference in quality of education yourself. What we need Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain is therefore not a change in entrance criteria for any exam but a change in the quality of our teachers. I am waiting for any such working plan from you Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain.


Please forgive my language in this post Mr. Sibal and Mr. Jain but this is coming from the first hand experience of a person who seriously doesn't believe in your 12 year education system. Times change, systems change, why can you guys not be comfortable with the shift of importance from class 12 to engineering entrance? Has telecommunication not made India post irrelevant today, then why does our poor old class 12 have to remain relevant? Why can it not give in to evolution?!