Title: Succession strategies in Southeast Asia: successes and failures
1Succession strategies in Southeast Asia
successes and failures
- Victor S. Limlingan
- Asia-Pacific Family Business Conference
- Bali, Indonesia, 5-7 November 1997
2Succession Failure leads to Corporate Civil War
- My goal is to build a business empire so big that
it is worth fighting over by my children and so
sturdy as to survive the corporate civil war that
will surely follow - remark of business taipan
3Mitsui Constitution of 1722
- The MITSUI CODE OF REGULATIONS is embodied in the
will of Hachirobei Takatoshi, founder of the
House of Mitsui, who died in 1694. It was
promulgated in 1722, on the hundredth anniversary
of his birth, by his heir Hachiroemon Takahira in
the form of a will.
4Succession rules of Mitsui
- 1. The head of the senior main family shall be
regarded as the head of the house those under
him should serve him as faithfully as they would
their real parents, heeding his wishes and
obeying his instructions. - 2. The family of Hachiroemon shall remain at all
times as the senior main family. Therefore the
son of Hachiroemon, if he is sufficiently
capable, shall succeed his father and become the
head of the house even though he may not be of
age.
5Succession rules of Mitsui
- 3. When there are no children to succeed as head
of the senior family, a son may be adopted from
among other members of the House. When there is
no male issue, a female may succeed to the
headship. - 4. The second and younger sons may be given in
adoption to other members of the House or be
allowed to establish branch families at about
thirty years of age, if they have acquired
sufficient business experience and are capable
6Succession rules of Mitsui
- 5. Female children attaining majority should be
married to sons of House members whenever
possible. When these girls marry into outside
families, however, an adequate sum of money shall
be provided for the wedding ceremony. - 6. In principle, the eldest son is to succeed his
father as head of the family, but if his conduct
should cause harm to the family, he shall be
expelled, even if he is the only son, and sent
into the priesthood.
7Ownership structure of the House of Mitsui
- The shares of House assets held by member
families shall be as follows - 62 for Hachiroemon
- 30 for Gennosuke
- 27 for Saburosuke
- 25 for Jiroemon
- 22.5 for Hachirojiro
- 22.5 for Sohachi
- 8 for Sokuemon
- 6 for Kichiroemon
- 7 for Hachisuke
- 10 for reserve to grant merit awards
8Business structure of the House of Ayala (1834 -
1968)
- 1. From its founding as CASA ROXAS in 1834 to the
incorporation of AYALA Y CIA as AYALA CORPORATION
in 1968, the business structure of House of Ayala
was that of a business partnership managing the
assets of the Ayala families.
Senior Managing Partner AYALA Y CIA
AYALA ASSETS AND CORPORATIONS
9Business structure of the House of Ayala (1834 -
1968)
- 2. The business partnership is headed by the
eldest family member who holds the title of
Senior Managing Partner. The composition of
management is therefore not determined by
ownership structure
AYALA Y CIA
AYALA Y CIA
AYALA ASSETS AND CORPORATION
MANAGEMENT COMPANY
Senior Managing Partners
Stock Holders
10Business structure of the House of Ayala (1834 -
1968)
- 3. Upon the death of the Senior Partner or the
separation of a family branch, the partnership is
dissolved and a new one reconstituted.
- -Upon death of founder Domingo Roxas in 1843,
Sociedad Roxas Hijos replaced Casa Roxas - -Upon resignation of Jose Bonifacio Roxas in
1864, Roxas Hermanos replaced Sociedad Roxas
Hijos.
11The Chemphil Saga The roots of a corporate civil
war
- 1. The founder for understandable business
reasons creates a monolithic business structure.
All the diverse businesses of the founder are
formed as subsidiaries of a single holding
company.
12The Chemphil Saga The roots of a corporate civil
war
- 2. Into this monolithic structure the founder
places his children in various positions with the
eldest appointed president and the rest as vice
presidents. His expectation is that his business
empire will outlive him.
13The Chemphil Saga The roots of a corporate civil
war
- 3. Upon the death of the founder, the children
realize that instead of commanding a business
empire, they have been thrown into a business
arena where they are forced to fight each other.
14The Chemphil Saga The roots of a corporate civil
war
- 4. The desperate situation of the children could
be summed up thus - a) the bulk of their inheritance is sunk into
this holding company. If calamity befalls the
company, they lose practically everything. - b) despite the vast wealth attached to their
name, the sole source of their income is the
salary they draw from the company as the father
then and the elder now do not declare cash
dividends
15The Chemphil Saga The roots of a corporate civil
war
- 4. The response of the children to the situation
they find themselves goes through several stages - a) They chase after higher titles and multiple
positions in hopes of increasing their
compensation package. - b) They set up their own personal corporations
whose only business is supplying or buying from
the family corporations. - c) They divert the resources of the family
corporation to their own personal corporations. - d) Their personal corporations compete for
markets, partners and business against the family
corporation.
16The Chemphil Saga The roots of a corporate civil
war
- 5. The strength of the family bonds will
determine how long the family members will allow
their enterprising sibling to milk the family
firm. - But since goodwill rarely outlasts greed,
corporate civil war then erupts.
17Key components of a successful succession strategy
- 1. Clear rules of succession.
- 2. Security of tenure for the Successor.
- 3. Security of income for the rest of the family
members. - 4. Sell-out provisions for disgruntled family
members.
18Succession strategies of selected Asian family
firms
- 1. Robert Kuok
- 2. Lamsam of Thai Farmers Bank
- 3. Bakrie and Brothers
19The evolving business environment in Southeast
Asia
- 1. More egalitarian laws and policies.
- 2. More competition from both foreign and local
firms. - 3. More need for global reach and regional
expansion - 4. The rise of Professional Managers
- 5. The trend to public listing
20Evolving succession strategies in Southeast Asia
- a. The Asian Family Compound
- b. Securities Cocktail
- c. Earlier Ayala model
- d. Rothschild model
- e. Later Ayala model