Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Manufacturing’

Report: Manufacturing in Mexico (July 23, 2009)

July 23rd, 2009

Consumer ConfidenceBy Jose Ruiz

Monterrey,  Mexico (July 23, 2009).-  Mexican manufacturers are seeing an end to steep declines in output as U.S. companies begin ramping up orders and reducing inventory.

Overall manufacturing activity is still declining but it is doing so at a slower pace. U.S. Manufacturing declined in June at its slowest pace since August of last year, a sign that the bottom is near in the U.S. and consequently in Mexico which is closely tied to U.S. activity. Mexico last year sold 80 percent of its $291 billion in exports to the U.S.

A full manufacturing recovery in Mexico will be slow and very dependant on the automobile industry which makes up 20 percent of Mexico’s industrial production. A number that is too large to be offset by other industries.

Production in that industry sank 42 percent during the first part of 2009 as General Motors and Chrysler adjusted factory production to match lower demand in the U.S.

Local recovery will depend less on internal factors and more on U.S. consumer demand where employers cut more jobs than expected in June threatening a decrease in consumer confidence and consumer spending which will be critical for an economic recovery.  It is expected that the unemployment rate in the United States will hit its worst point until early next year.

Other indicators pointing towards hitting bottom is the factory index from The Institute for Supply Management which rose in June for a sixth consecutive month to 44.8, after hitting its lowest point in December (32.9). An index below 50 indicates a contraction. So the trend, while still reflecting a contraction is positive as the contraction rate slows. 

_

Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. He can be reached at +52 (818) 8625-6521 or jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit
www.heidrick.com

Mexico Industry , , , , , , , , ,

Watching indicators in the US that would signal an improvement in consumer demand

June 15th, 2009

economy_commandWe’re closely watching indicators in the US that would signal an improvement in consumer demand.  Mexico’s efforts to tackle the effects of the ongoing global financial crisis can help mitigate the impact but the recovery will come from an improved US economy.
 
“Mexico’s fate is so closely linked to the United States that they can’t get out of the recession on their own,” said Eugenio Aleman, a Latin America economist from Wells Fargo Bank.  “They are trying to smooth over the problems. The central bank has loosened policy. But there is not much the government can do.”
 
Looking for signs of recovery…
A report last Friday confirmed consumer confidence in the US tumbled more than expected in June, to a 28-year low. The report by the Reuters/University of Michigan said the confidence index fell to 56.7 from May’s 59.8. The figure is the lowest since the record low of 51.7 in May 1980.
 
Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Evans said the U.S. unemployment rate could get closer to 10 percent instead of 9.5 percent. He added that the jobless rate could peak later this year — earlier than a mid-2010 peak previously expected. This could signal a deeper fall but an earlier recovery.
 
Potential risks that can derail a recovery…
A current point of concern for many is soaring commodity prices. Food prices in the US have jumped 5% the past 12 months, with bakery products (up 10.5%), dairy (+11%) and oils (+12.8%) leading the way. Energy prices have skyrocketed. Fuel oil and other fuels have soared 50.7% in the past 12 months.

_

Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. He can be reached at +52 (818) 8625-6521 or jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit
www.heidrick.com

Mexico Indexes , , , , ,

Aerospace Industry Forecast to 2013

June 15th, 2009

aero-430According to companiesandmarkets.com’s new research report, “Aerospace Industry Forecast to 2013″, growing air travel and wars around the world are driving the global aerospace industry. Civil aerospace segment is expected to grow at a faster pace than the defense segment. It is estimated that by the end of 2027, the world’s airlines will take delivery of 29,400 civil airplanes with total value of US$ 3.2 Trillion to keep pace with the growing demand for air travel.

The US represents the biggest aerospace market, with total sales estimated to have closed at US$ 204.4 Billion in 2008, followed by EU, Canada and Japan. But in future, developing economies such as China, India, Mexico and Brazil are expected to emerge as big marketplace for aerospace products.

The Chinese aerospace sector ranks among the world’s most dynamic sector due to the massive investment by the country. Moreover, Chinese aerospace companies are fast showing their presence in the global aerospace industry. It is anticipated that China will buy more than 3,700 airplanes before 2028 with the potential market value of US$ 390 Billion, becoming the most potential civil aerospace market.

Companiesandmarkets.com’s  report gives an extensive and objective analysis on the global aerospace market. It investigates both the past and current trends in the global aerospace market, and outlines the future trends shaping it. It comprehensively assesses the industry performance both in civil and defense segment. Based on various market indicators, the report evaluates future outlook of the industry. The report can thus give valuable information to manufacturers/investors preparing to enter the aerospace market.

The report also provides future perspective of the following countries

Developed Markets
- US
- Canada
- Japan
- UK
- France
- Germany

Emerging Markets
- Middle East
o UAE
o Saudi Arabia
o Qatar
- China
- India
- Mexico
- Brazil

Profiling on Key Players

This section gives overview on the key players, including The Boeing Company, EADS NV, United Technologies Corporation, Lockheed Martin Corporation, Northrop Grumman Corporation, Honeywell International Inc., Raytheon Company and BAE Systems plc, operating in the global aerospace market. It provides vital information, like business overview and financial information, of each company.

Mexico Industry , ,

Recruiter Confidence Climbs To Highest Level In Eleven Months

June 7th, 2009

business20growth20bar20chart1ExecuNet’s Recruiter Confidence Index (RCI) surged 16 points higher in May, as the executive search industry’s outlook for the employment market improved for the third consecutive month amid signs that economic conditions are stabilizing. The RCI now stands at its highest level since June 2008.

Introduced in May 2003, the Recruiter Confidence Index is based on a monthly survey of executive search firms conducted by ExecuNet (www.execunet.com), a private network for business leaders. Designed to forecast job growth at the executive level, a reading above 50 percent indicates recruiters expect the number of search assignments in the next six months will increase. Independent analysis of the RCI has confirmed it is a leading indicator for the executive employment market.

According to May’s survey of 143 executive recruiters, 57 percent are confident or very confident the executive employment market will improve in the next six months – up from 41 percent last month. During this period of time, 67 percent of all executive recruiters expect at least a 10% increase in search assignments received from corporate clients.

| Read More

Mexico Executive Search , , , , , ,

Has the recession bottomed out?

May 25th, 2009

recession-2Recession in the US will bottom out in fourth quarter, says Moody’s economist Economy won’t ‘kick in to high gear’ until 2011 or 2012, Mark Zandi says.

Mark predicts the battered economy will begin a slow upward climb after the recession in the United States bottoms out in the fourth quarter of 2009,

“The economy won’t come roaring back,” he said. “The sectors that generally lead us out of a recession — housing and vehicles — are flat on their back and won’t revive rapidly. The economy will kick into high gear in 2011 and 2012.”

It is expected that China will lead the way followed by the United States. Mexico will likely follow since Mexico’s economy has suffered as the global crisis chokes demand in the U.S., which buys 80 percent of the country’s exports.

Mexico needs U.S. consumer demand to pick-up and it does not look good if consumer confidence is an indicator of future demand and unemployment is a driver of consumer confidence. The Congressional Budget Office expects the unemployment rate to keep rising through 2010 to peak over 10%.

It does not look like the recession in Mexico has bottomed out and it does not look like it will in the near future.

Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. He can be reached at +52 (818) 8625-6521 or jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit
www.heidrick.com

Mexico Indexes, Mexico Industry , , , , ,

News this week is not expected to be good. But it marks the past, not the future.

May 18th, 2009

auto-manufacturingMexico’s central bank cut its key interest rate by three quarters of a point Friday saying strong action was needed because the economy had contracted more than expected this year after a fall in exports to the United States and the national shutdown to control swine flu.

This will be an active week:

On Monday, we are expecting to hear that March industrial production declined 8.41 percent year-on-year (according to a Reuters survey).

On Wednesday, the release of the gross domestic product numbers are expected to show the economy shrinking 7.61 percent in the first quarter, compared with the same period a year ago.

On Thursday, March retail sales data are expected to show a decline of 5.93 percent, while Mexico’s consumer price index for the first half of May is expected to fall 0.3 percent.

“A string of sluggish economic data should reinforce expectations of a potentially deeper rate-cut cycle,” RBC Capital Markets said in a research note.

However, it is widely believed that the first signs of an economic turn around will come from US consumer indicators. As the US consumer goes so does the economy in Mexico.  The peso and Mexican stocks soared as US recession fears began to ease early this week.

Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. He can be reached at +52 (818) 8625-6521 or jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit
www.heidrick.com

Mexico Indexes, Mexico Industry ,

Are things feeling positive?

May 11th, 2009

46The peso remains strong floating around 13 pesos to a dollar and inflation in April was reported at 0.38%, an improvement over March’s 0.58%

In another positive sign for manufacturing in Mexico the U.S. government report showed employers cut fewer jobs in April than economists forecast. The U.S. buys 80 percent of Mexican exports.

“This was a good number,” said Jaime Ascencio, a fixed- income strategist in Mexico City at Actinver SA, the nation’s biggest independent money manager. “It raises bets that diminishing job losses will translate into more consumption.”

Economists are forecasting Banco de Mexico will trim its target to 5.25 percent from 6 percent on May 15, according to the median of 16 forecasts in a Bloomberg survey. The bank has reduced rates by 2.25 percentage point so far this year to 6 percent last month in an effort to revive growth.

With information from bloomberg.com>

Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. He can be reached at +52 (818) 8625-6521 or jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit
www.heidrick.com

Mexico Indexes, Mexico Industry , , ,

Economic activity in Mexico came to a screeching halt

May 7th, 2009

Mexico-Swine-FlueIt’s been a week headlined by swine flu as most of Mexico’s economic activity came to a screeching halt in unprecedented action to curb the spread of the disease.

Actions halted nonessential state services as well as the private sector from May 1 to May 5.

Mexican President Felipe Calderon is confident will soon return to normal and regain economic momentum. “Mexico is trying to return to normalcy as soon as possible,” Calderon said in a televised interview broadcast yesterday. The President said it is too soon to estimate the economic impact caused by the virus. “Some economic sectors may recuperate immediately,” he said.

Experts estimate the economic halt has cost 2 billion pesos ($150 million) of lost gross domestic product per day.

Health Minister Jose Cordova declared yesterday that the epidemic is in a “declining phase” and appears to have “contained itself”.

Activity in the country began to return to normal on May 6.

Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. He can be reached at +52 (818) 8625-6521 or jruiz@heidrick.com

About Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc.
The world’s premier provider of senior-level executive search and leadership consulting services. The firm’s executive recruiters and leadership experts operate from principal business centers in North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia Pacific. In Mexico, Heidrick & Struggles operates offices in Mexico City and Monterrey. For more information about Heidrick & Struggles please visit
www.heidrick.com

Mexico Industry , , , ,

Report: Manufacturing in Mexico (April 1, 2009)

April 1st, 2009

By Jose Ruiz

Monterrey, N.L. (April 1, 2009) – The peso rose 0.8 percent to 14.1722 per U.S. dollar and the Bolsa stock index climbed 0.5 percent to 19,626.75. Both signs of optimism as Mexico’s President Felipe Calderon announced that Mexico’s public finances are in order and we’re able to take a line of credit from the IMF as soon as this week.

Overall Status of Manufacturing in Mexico
The outlook remains grim. Mexico’s industrial fell the most in almost 14 years in January as the country’s ties to the declining U.S. economy crimps manufacturing and trade. Mexico is one of the worst performers in Latin America because of its close business and consumer ties to the U.S. Geographically within Mexico the impact of the recession is felt the most in the northern cities that are tied closer to the U.S. business cycle. However some manufacturing sectors begin to show positive signs.

Transportation
It is expected that U.S. companies operating in Mexico will pay higher shipping costs after the U.S. scrapped a trucking program designed to eliminate daylong delays at the border. “The fact that we can’t have a truck go door-to-door generates a cost,” said Cesar Castro, president of the Mexico City-based National Council for the Exporting, Maquiladora and Manufacturing Industry.

Because of the suspension, companies that were in the program now must pay about $120 per trailer for a transfer service that hauls cargo across the border. Delays compound those costs because shippers must drop the trailers on the Mexican side of the border, hook them up and deliver them to the U.S. side, where an American trucking company picks them up.

Automotive Industry
Uncertainty currently looms on Mexico’s automotive industry and the automobile industry is Mexico’s largest manufacturing sector and a key employer.

 The Group of 20 nations suggests the global economic slowdown could last through the end of 2010. But most importantly the Obama administration said as it set the stage for a crisis in Detroit that would dramatically reshape the nation’s auto industry. The immediate future and strategic direction of GM and Chrysler will have direct short term impact on Mexico’s manufacturing environment.  President Barack Obama and his top advisers have determined that neither company is viable and that taxpayers will not spend untold billions more to keep the pair of automakers open forever. Protecting U.S. jobs will remain an will have an impact in GM and Chrysler’s operation in mexico.

Jose Ruiz is a Principal in Heidrick & Struggles’ Monterrey office. As an executive recruiter he has worked on executive search projects for multinational clients in industrial sectors and consumer markets. He can be reached at +52 (818) 8625-6521 or jruiz@heidrick.com

Mexico Industry , , ,

Mexico: A Better Choice than China?

March 22nd, 2009

hal_sirkinBy Harold L. Sirkin – Business Week

March 17, 2009 7:17AM

A big reason for the narrowing gap is the fact that Mexico has already absorbed the rapid increase in manufacturing wages that are just starting to hit China and other developing economies. The shrinking labor-cost advantage, coupled with the devaluation of the Mexican peso in the past year, is making Mexico even more competitive.

The question doesn’t really matter, but the answer for U.S. manufacturers always seems to be the same: China.
With good reason. China has a huge, low-cost, underutilized, and eager workforce unencumbered by outdated unions, labor laws, and expensive government mandates and regulations. China has a strong supply network that is getting better all the time. China understands the value of infrastructure and is investing heavily in it. National and provincial governments want to help business succeed, not tie its hands.

All this points to China as the wave of the future. But that doesn’t mean China is the only option for manufacturers — nor is it always the best one.

There are many other low-cost manufacturing alternatives: Brazil, India, Thailand, and Vietnam, to name some. Closer to home lies America’s third-largest trading partner, Mexico. If distant China is the Big Kahuna of low-cost manufacturing and sourcing, Mexico should be seen as El Pequeno Kahuna.

Mexico Is Growing More Competitive

As noted in a 2008 Boston Consulting Group report, Mexico’s Evolving Sweet Spot in the Globalization Landscape, the cost difference between low-wage Mexico and lower-wage China has been narrowing. In 1996, Chinese labor cost about one-third of Mexican labor. Today, Chinese labor costs are about half of Mexico’s — $1.69 per hour, on average, in 2007, compared to $3.46 per hour, according to the International Labor Organization [ILO]. In another year or two, according to estimates, hiring a Chinese worker will cost about 85 percent of what it costs to hire a Mexican worker.

A big reason for the narrowing gap is the fact that Mexico has already absorbed the rapid increase in manufacturing wages that are just starting to hit China and other developing economies. The shrinking labor-cost advantage, coupled with the devaluation of the Mexican peso in the past year, is making Mexico even more competitive.

Moreover, wage and exchange rates are not the only factors managers need to weigh. There’s also the cost of transoceanic shipping and the inherent risks of a long-distance supply chain. When these and other factors are taken into account, Mexico often looks better.

The fact that Mexico is our neighbor means a company often can place an order one or two weeks before delivery is needed, rather than four to six weeks in advance, as is typically necessary when sourcing from China. In times like these, when demand can fluctuate wildly, the ability to respond quickly to changing market conditions can be critical.

Shipping Savings Exceed Labor Edge

Mexico’s proximity to the U.S. also means less dependence on America’s crowded ports. It’s also faster and cheaper to move heavy products relatively short distances by truck than to do it over thousands of miles by ship, and then further by rail, truck, or both. As Mexico’s Evolving Sweet Spot noted, “in the case of a refrigerator — a very bulky product — manufactured in a low-cost Asian country and sold in the U.S. for $500, the cost of shipping represents up to $100 of the price tag, or 20 percent. Shipping it from Mexico would cost less than half that amount.”

If assembling each refrigerator takes four man-hours, a manufacturer would save just over $7 in labor costs per unit by manufacturing in China. If the company can save over $50 in transportation costs by manufacturing in Mexico, while paying seven or eight dollars more in labor, the advantage goes to Mexico, with net savings in excess of $40 per unit.

Without a supply base, manufacturing can’t be shifted to Mexico any more than it can be to China or elsewhere, but Mexico is taking care of that. For example, many of the world’s top manufacturers of industrial, commercial, and home refrigeration, heating, and air-conditioning equipment have formed an industry “cluster” to attract a supply base in and around Monterrey, in northern Mexico. The cluster grew by 9 percent in 2007. South Korea’s LG has had a manufacturing presence in Mexico since 1988; in addition to refrigerators, the company produces digital TVs, PDP modules, monitors, and mobile phones there.

Aerospace Is Clustering in Mexico

The Monterrey industrial cluster has drawn leading suppliers of parts and components as well. For instance, China’s Golden Dragon Precise Copper Tube Group — the largest producer of precision copper tube in the world — made an initial investment of $50 million in the area and eventually will employ 900 people there.

A second industrial cluster in Mexico also is attracting global attention, this time from the aerospace industry. Before the downturn, more than 160 companies were involved, employing nearly 17,000 workers.

Proximity offers other advantages as well. Being in the same general time zone means it’s easier for U.S. companies to conduct real-time business in Mexico. The majority of Mexican cities, for example, lie in the same zone as Chicago, just one hour behind New York. When you need to be on-site, there are frequent and direct flights from some 20 U.S. cities. Language also is less of a barrier, with native Mexican managers typically speaking English and increasing millions of Americans conversant in Spanish.

Just as China has disadvantages, so too does Mexico. According to the January 2009 Wall Street Journal-Heritage Foundation Index of Economic Freedom, corruption remains “pervasive” there and “Mexico’s rigid labor regulations continue to hamper productivity,” making it difficult to lay off workers when necessary. Mexico’s infrastructure remains woefully inadequate, slowing the flow of needed raw materials and intermediate goods. And battles with drug traffickers make some areas unsafe.

What To Look for Overseas

So what should U.S. executives considering global manufacturing or sourcing do?

1] Think globally. Competing successfully probably will require more, not fewer, locations. To succeed in the future, most companies will need a global network of manufacturing, assembly, design, and research and development facilities.

2] Pinpoint production. Facilities should be built where they’ll do the most good. The question managers need to ask is: What can be done best where? That’s where the work should be done.

3] Develop a portfolio. Your objective in choosing manufacturing locations is to maximize returns while minimizing risk. Ask yourself where markets can be developed or expanded. This will help you determine what the future portfolio should look like.

In addition to its appeal as a manufacturing hub, Mexico is the world’s eleventh-largest country and — prior to the recession — was experiencing a boom in domestic consumption [as were China and India]. This might make Mexico a better choice than a country with a smaller domestic market.

4] Act strategically. The decision to acquire or build a plant in China, or Mexico — or Missouri, for that matter — should be part of a long-term strategy, not an isolated decision. As with all long-term capital decisions, you need to consider both your next potential moves and long-term changes in your customer base and competitive environment.

Managing isn’t getting easier. It takes more knowledge of more things — and perhaps more chutzpah — than ever before. Competing with everyone from everywhere for everything is a different challenge than that faced by America’s captains of industry in the 19th and 20th centuries.

To maintain America’s leadership, business executives will have to be engaged far beyond our shores. Dozens of countries will play a role in our continued success. If we’re wise, Mexico’s role will be larger than most.

© 2009 Business Week Online

HR Management in Mexico, Mexico Industry , , , ,

Jose J. Ruiz | Executive Recruiter
Heidrick & Struggles | Executive Search in Mexico