Technology
GUEST ARTICLE: The Web At 25 - Reflections From Rothschild

The following comments are from Hugo Capel Cure, Mark Wallace and Rupen Patel, co-heads of Rothschild Wealth Management & Trust’s UK investment research team. They look at the impact of the Web 25 years on - including how it affects wealth management.
The following comments are from Hugo Capel Cure, Mark Wallace
and Rupen Patel, co-heads of Rothschild Wealth Management &
Trust’s UK investment research team. This publication is grateful
for permission to reproduce the comments about the impact of a
technology that is continuing to transform how wealth managers,
as well as others, do business.
Predicting the direction of markets may be popular, but then so
are horoscopes; neither are particularly good guides when making
important decisions. For our part, we are more interested in
dealing with uncertainty than forecasting the future.
Technological change makes our task harder, by adding complexity,
challenging norms, and re-defining many of the ways in which we
live, work and communicate. These themes are explored on the
following pages, where we consider the impact of the internet on
business and set out the implications for the way we invest.
“The most profound technologies are those that disappear. They
weave themselves into the fabric of everyday life until they are
indistinguishable from it,” said Mark Weiser, former chief
scientist at Xerox PARC.
In March 1989, Tim Berners-Lee filed the proposal for what was to
become the World Wide Web while working at CERN. Twenty five
years on, the internet and the web (which are actually different
things, but synonymous in everyday use) have become like
electricity: almost-invisible technologies that we now take for
granted.
Yet consider how much has changed. We have instant access to a
library of information that is unprecedented in its breadth, size
and rate of growth. Anyone with a smartphone can broadcast to a
global audience, whenever they want from wherever they are,
limited only by access to mobile reception. Email and social
networks are re-shaping the way we interact and communicate. In
some areas, automated systems are replacing humans (how many
people have you spoken to at Amazon?) while digital products and
services are changing the way we read, keep records, take photos
and listen to music. At a deeper level, emerging research in
neuroscience suggests internet technologies are likely to alter
the way that we think, particularly for children growing up with
touch screens.
Companies are at the forefront of these revolutionary changes and
here we focus on the impact of the internet on business. Twenty
five years in, we attempt to survey the landscape, identifying
three major trends that have, are, and will continue to transform
sectors and industries. We then outline the implications for our
investment approach, followed by some specific investment
examples.
Three powerful trends
“It is sometimes useful to remind ourselves,” the poet Philip
Larkin wrote in an essay on modernism in poetry, “of the simpler
aspects of things normally regarded as complicated.”
Like modernist poetry, the impact of the internet on business is
complex. It has many dimensions, resists neat summaries and, like
the work of Eliot or Pound, it challenges long-established norms.
And yet there are still some simpler aspects. Amid the waves of
disruption, transformation, explosive growth and dramatic
declines, it is possible to identify a few big trends.
The first is access to information. Transparency is a defining
theme of the internet era. Product and service reviews highlight
the failings of bad hotels and unreliable laptops; the internet
gives consumers more power and control, and their conversations
are amplified on social media.
At the same time, price transparency is powerful. Comparison
sites make it easy to evaluate a range of competing services or
find the best deal on a particular item. High Street chains
selling non-perishable commodity products – such as books and
electronics – struggle to compete against online retailers with
lower overheads and more efficient supply chains. Without strong
brand differentiation, traditional retailers get dragged into a
race to the bottom on price, a race they are likely to lose.
Where businesses provide access to factual content, the internet
has been particularly disruptive. Wikipedia destroyed the
business model of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, while the New
York Times fell out of the S&P 500 index of US stocks in
2010, replaced by Netflix, a company best known for internet
video streaming.
Yet it would be wrong to conclude that providing access to
content can no longer be profitable. After 125 years, the
Financial Times is flourishing, and digital subscriptions to
FT.com now exceed the newspaper’s print circulation. Under a very
different model, Time Out no longer charges for its magazine in
London but instead distributes it freely to commuters. This is
part of a strategy to create a global digital media brand: Time
Out has local websites in more than 40 cities, attracting 15
million visitors each month.
Good digital marketing allows small businesses to reach
both mass and niche audiences.
The second main way in which the internet is re-shaping business
is by lowering barriers to entry. A small retailer can use eBay
or Groupon to compete in a specialist area or challenge
established and well-recognised brands in ways that wouldn’t have
been possible before the web. Lean online businesses with low
distribution costs can target niche groups in the ‘long tail’ and
the internet makes it possible – through blogs, online
communities, display and pay-per-click advertising – to find and
sell to everyone from hand-gliding fanatics to tortoise
owners.
Mass marketing is also much more accessible. An email marketing
campaign can reach 100,000 people at a fraction of the cost, time
and effort of direct mail delivered through the post. In the
1980s, the high cost of advertising on TV, radio and in print
held small new businesses back. Today, companies can create
interesting, useful or amusing content on a low budget and
distribute it cheaply online, boosting brand awareness and
sales.
At the same time, the cost of much IT and communication
infrastructure has also fallen sharply, removing this as another
barrier to entry. A start-up in San Francisco can run on
inexpensive but powerful laptops, access servers and software in
the cloud, and collaborate over Skype with developers in Pakistan
or designers in Russia.
This lowering of barriers helps facilitate disruptive innovation
which, online, can lead to spectacular growth. As an example,
consider photo-sharing app Instagram. In the nine months from
December 2010 to September 2011 it grew from 1 million to 10
million users. Six months later, in April 2012, that figure had
trebled to more than 30 million users. Facebook then bought the
company for $1 billion in cash and stock – at the time, it had
just 13 employees, no revenues, and was less than two years
old.
Disappearing middlemen
Easier access to information and lower barriers to entry have
contributed to our third internet trend: disintermediation, or
cutting out the middleman.
This speaks for itself. In some sectors – including travel,
general insurance and classified advertising – the process is
already advanced. In others, disintermediation is only just
beginning. Emerging areas include lending and access to capital
(with the rise of peer-to-peer networks), real estate (where
property websites are dominant, but estate agents haven’t yet
been cut out of the loop), recruitment (where LinkedIn challenges
traditional agencies), publishing (everything from open-access
academic journals to thrillers self-published as ebooks),
education (where “massive open online courses” may re-shape the
role of traditional universities) and television (online video is
already supplanting free-to-air and subscription TV in China, a
trend that may follow in the US and Europe).
Yet not everything changes
What does all this mean for the way we invest? The internet is
important, but it doesn’t change the fundamental disciplines of
our investment approach. We are not technology zealots, nor are
we Luddites. In practice, the trends we have identified are
simply an addition to our existing research process. They provide
another lens through which we can view opportunities and risks
and assess the prospects of businesses that we invest in.
Given the perennial danger of internet hype, it is also worth
making an obvious point: the impact of the internet isn’t uniform
across sectors. Demand for chocolate, medicine, beer and shampoo
won’t disappear in a digital world. Firms such as Nestlé,
Unilever, GlaxoSmithKline and AB InBev will continue to adapt
their marketing to changes in consumer behaviour, but their
actual products are unlikely to change a great deal. These firms
own strong brands in generally-stable industries. This helps make
them resilient businesses and, in our view, attractive
investments for the long term.
Put another way, our goal is to preserve and grow the real value
of our clients’ wealth. Technology doesn’t change that. Every
investment – old economy or new – still has to earn its place in
a client’s portfolio.
It is also worth stressing that the internet is an extremely
complex system where innovation and progress are not steady or
linear but volatile, rapid and unpredictable. As the technology
research firm Gartner has highlighted, three “elemental forces” –
the drive for profit, for freedom, and for control – are
competing for the future of the internet. One of these three
forces may eventually dominate; perhaps two will share power at
the expense of the third. There are at least a dozen plausible
scenarios, with a whole spectrum of implications for businesses
and investing. As Gartner put it, the future of the internet is
best seen as a series of parallel strands “each starting from a
different point and taking a potentially different route at
different speeds toward a probable plethora of future
states.”
In this context, extrapolating current trends is naïve. Placing
too high a degree of certainty on any assumption about the future
is dangerous. In our view, it is no basis for prudent investment
decisions.
An electic mix
Bringing together the Daily Mail, Ryanair, Tesco and a
basket of technology stocks may seem like an attempt to craft a
bad joke full of Englishmen, Irishmen and Californians.
Fortunately, these are instead four examples that may help to
illustrate our investment approach.
US technology basket
On parts of the internet, it may be true that the winner takes
all. Yet for every Google and Amazon there are many brands that
only flourish for a season (Netscape and AOL) and many more that
fail to live up to their early excitement (Tiscali and Pets.com).
A technology fund manager today might rhapsodise over
developments in the cloud, or the ‘internet of things’, or
radical advances in 3D printing. These may all be fantastic, but
they are not necessarily going to make money. Sometimes it is
worth looking at what has been left behind.
Early last year, we noticed that many of the largest, established
technology titans - firms such as IBM, Cisco and Oracle - were
displaying a number of common characteristics. They were
generating high levels of cash on their capital employed, had
solid and conservative balance sheets and, crucially, were
trading at low valuation multiples. Given the regular upheaval in
the technology sector, we didn’t want to take concentrated
investment positions in individual companies. Instead, we decided
to follow a diversified approach focused on the sector as a
whole. We assessed stocks according to objective criteria and
using a quantitative screening, measuring factors including
valuation, capital deployment and the quality and trend of a
company’s profits.
We then created a ‘basket’ to invest in the most attractive
opportunities, holding a total of around fifteen stocks.
Tesco
The internet has an unpleasant habit of turning assets into
liabilities. Tesco’s recent experience illustrates this well. The
UK-based supermarket won a multi-decade “space race” against its
competitors, resulting in a superior footprint of stores across
Britain. This seemed to create a high barrier to entry,
particularly on a crowded island. It should have proved a
crowning triumph and a recipe for superior margins for decades to
come. However, a superstore on the edge of every town doesn’t
matter to shoppers online. The non-food items that were supposed
to fill half of the shelf space of the larger stores can now be
bought from Amazon, which has global purchasing scale that dwarfs
even Tesco. What’s more, online grocery shopping is great for
consumers but it is tricky and expensive for supermarkets to
deliver. It currently generates much lower profit margins than
traditional in-store sales. Early last summer, we sold our shares
in Tesco, having decided that the rise of online shopping
weakened the company’s competitive advantage.
DMGT
The Daily Mail and General Trust (DMGT) may be a surprising
example of successful adaption to technological change. The
Daily Mail newspaper was first published in 1896 by brothers
Harold and Alfred Harmsworth, later ennobled as 1st Viscounts
Rothermere and Northcliffe. Under the leadership of the 4th
Viscount Rothermere, the business has been re-shaped from a
traditional newspaper company to a portfolio of digital and media
assets, with new businesses built around providing access to
information. DMGT owns the world’s most popular online newspaper
in MailOnline, recruitment portal Jobsite, insurance
risk-modelling firm RMS and has a controlling stake in property
website Zoopla. At the DMGT investor day in the autumn, we were
encouraged to hear from the leaders of many of the business units
and to see a culture that supports entrepreneurial growth. We
believe the portfolio of companies is very attractive.
Ryanair
In many ways, Ryanair is a child of the internet age. The
airline’s business model is built around disintermediation. All
bookings are channelled through the company’s website,
eliminating the need for travel agents. The website, in turn, is
a source of referrals to the providers of other services, from
car hire to hotel rooms. As a result, the company has turned
something that was a cost of doing business into a source of
revenue. Even though the fares charged by Ryanair are the lowest
of any European carrier, their low-cost model has resulted in
strong cash flows. At a recent lunch, chief executive Michael
O’Leary reminded us that the company had distributed more of this
cash to investors over the past five years (as special dividends
and share buybacks) than it had ever raised through public
offerings. This is remarkable for any company, let alone an
airline, and we remain shareholders.
Conclusion
In its first twenty five years, the web has re-shaped many
industries, created new business models and unleashed bouts of
rapid growth. When thinking about the internet and investing, we
avoid the extremes of hype and complacency, instead sticking to
what we do best: portfolio management focused on wealth
preservation. The internet trends we have identified – access to
information, lower barriers to entry and disintermediation –
still have much further to run. Over the next twenty five years,
they will create many challenges to manage and opportunities to
grasp.