WhatsApp, Wal-Mart and the Surprising Stock Market Value of
Workers
The Fiscal Times
February 27, 2014
How
much are you worth as a worker?
That’s an easy question for the 55 employees at WhatsApp
to answer right now. In the wake of the bombshell news that Facebook not only
acquired the tiny messaging service company at the anything-but-tiny price of
$19 billion, pundits and
observers of all kinds have been crunching the numbers1. It turns out that at that price, each employee is worth
some $345 million.
The tradition, of course, is to value a company using all
kinds of other metrics. For publicly traded
firms, the price/earnings ratio is a traditional measurement, with others
including price to cash flow, revenue or book value. When it comes to privately traded companies, you have
to get a little more creative (unless you’re an insider), which is why the “per
employee” number has made such a splash, along with the $42 per WhatsApp
user price tag2.
The traditional valuation metrics make sense from an
investor’s perspective. After
all, when a shareholder invests, he’s not acquiring3 a bunch
of employees but the right to profit from an increase in the revenues and
profits that those employees generate. The employees themselves are simply a means to an end4.
Still, putting tradition to one side for a moment and
focusing instead on the market value of employees can also be informative, in a
completely different way. That’s particularly true in light of the longstanding
debate over what kind of minimum wage (state or federal) is
appropriate these days.
News of those
ultra-valuable WhatsApp employees sent5 Jack Ablin,
Chicago-based chief investment officer at BMO Private Bank, to do some number
crunching of his own. It turns out that Facebook’s own employees
are apparently seen by investors as immensely valuable, although at about only
a tenth the level as those of WhatsApp.
The energy, health care, utilities and tech sectors all
fare well in the market cap-to-employee analysis, but energy and utilities are both
capital-intensive industries6, Ablin notes. Similarly, some companies,
particularly some real estate investment trusts, have very large asset bases
relative to the number of their employees. At Healthcare Property Investors
(NYSE: HCP), for example, each employee’s contribution to future profits might
be valued at $111 million based on the number of employees and the REIT’s
market capitalization.
The takeaway from all that: tech, along with health care,
is where you can best see the value of employees to a company’s stock. “The truly elite thinkers among
today’s students would be well advised7 to pursue career
paths in those fields if they want to make sure they are on the advantaged side
of the income equality divide,” Ablin suggests.
At the other end of the spectrum, let’s ponder Wal-Mart
Stores (NYSE: WMT), which has about 2.2 million employees worldwide and has a
market capitalization around $240 billion. Collectively, the efforts of those
employees generated net income of $4.43 billion in the just-ended fiscal year,
up from $3.78 billion the previous year. Based on the company’s valuation, the
market values each employee at about $109,000, on average. Now, consider that
perhaps 900,000 of those employees in the United States alone make less than
$25,000 a year, according
to the company’s own admission.
No, I’m not trying8
to cram together apples and oranges by suggesting that employees should collect
salaries that reflect the value that investors ascribe to their collective
efforts. Companies — unless they are
deliberately established as partnerships or worker-owned
co-operatives — are set up to act in the best interests of their
investors, not their employees. As interpreted by Wal-Mart and other businesses whose jobs require
significantly less skill and education than those at companies like Facebook or
Google, that has meant wages that often fall just above — and
sometimes even below — the poverty line9.
Still, some high-level
numbers show that how focus on rewarding investors has affected workers10. If you go back 30 years, corporate profits bounced
around at a level that was about 7 percent to 8 percent of the GDP of
the United States11. Employee compensation was between 56 percent and 57 percent of GDP12.
Today, those figures are
closer to 12
percent and 52 percent, respectively13. In other words, a
significantly greater chunk of the country’s economy is accounted for by
corporate profits, while paychecks make up a smaller portion. And that 52
percent is the lowest number on record in more than half a century. The 12
percent? Well, that matches the highest level recorded since 1949.
Add to that the fact
that the minimum wage, adjusted for inflation, has actually fallen by
more than $3 an hour — or 30 percent — since it peaked in 196814. Today’s $7.25 an hour will buy
you about what $1.60 bought you back in the year that Martin Luther King15.
Jr. and Robert Kennedy were
assassinated16. More of Ablin’s number-crunching earlier
this week brought him to the conclusion that based solely on inflation, today’s minimum wage should be
above 17 an hour. If you throw productivity into the mix — reflecting
the increased value that employees are generating for their companies, a figure
that shows up in both the GDP numbers and in the Wal-Mart profit statement
— the figure should be north of $15 an hour.
Now, that’s an aggregate number, of course. Clearly, not all companies in all
industries will be able to afford to fork over that much money, at least
as things stand today18. But given that roughly two-thirds of
economic activity in the United States is driven by consumer spending, surely
if companies like Wal-Mart — which clearly can afford to boost wages
— pay employees at a higher rate, that will show up in higher rates of
consumer spending.
Perhaps Wal-Mart employees will begin buying their
groceries at the store rather than relying on food drives and food banks?
Perhaps a local restaurant or a day care service will find that there is more
demand for their business, and either volume or price increases will help
offset their own higher costs?
Some companies are
already thinking about
this state of affairs in a new way19. Costco,
for instance, has made a
strategic decision to use some of its profits to finance
higher employee salaries20. The tradeoff for those higher costs? Higher
productivity — and potentially higher customer satisfaction. Now the Gap
is following the same path, announcing its plan to boost the minimum wage it pays to $9
an hour this year and $10 by the end of 2015.
Of course, this isn’t just “be nice to your underpaid
workers” week in the retail industry. Gap clearly feels that by paying more,
it’s more likely to attract the workers it
needs: those able to guide and advise customers, not just stack shelves.
Employees at companies like McDonald’s and Wal-Mart are
least likely to have other, more attractive options. Even so, there’s a solid
business case to be made in favor of executives at both companies placing a higher
value on their employees, as reflected in their wages. Motivated and happy
employees generate good PR for their company, not lousy news headlines. They generate sales. Their spending keeps other
businesses going, whose employees can in turn now pick up lunch at McDonald’s
twice a week instead of only once.-0
That would, however, require a big shift in the way companies
think about profits. If every
dime of additional productivity is destined for the shareholders of a company,
without even a penny being directed toward its workers (who generate
those productivity gains), well, little will change regardless of what dollar
number is established as a minimum wage20.
Explanation :
1.
In the wake of the bombshell news that
Facebook not only acquired the tiny messaging service company at the
anything-but-tiny price of $19 billion, pundits and observers of all
kinds have been crunching
the numbers.
ð
Present Perfect Continous
ð
S + HAVE/HAD + BEEN +V-ING
2.
. When it comes to privately traded
companies, you have to get a little more creative (unless you’re an insider),
which is why the “per employee” number has made such a splash, along with the $42 per WhatsApp
user price tag2.
ð Present Perfect Tense
ð S + HAS/HAVE + V3 + COMPLIMENT
3.
After all, when a shareholder invests, he’s
not acquiring3 a bunch of employees but the right to profit from
an increase in the revenues and profits that those employees generate.
ð Present Continous Tense ( Negative Form)
ð S + IS/AM/ARE + NOT +V-ING + OBJECT
4.
The employees themselves
are simply a means to an end.
ð
Simple
Present Tense
ð
S
+ IS/AM/ARE + COMPLIMENT(ADJECTIVE,ADVERB,NOUN)
5. News of those ultra-valuable WhatsApp
employees sent5 Jack Ablin, Chicago-based chief investment
officer at BMO Private Bank, to do some number crunching of his own
ð
Simple
Past Tense
ð
S + V2
+ OBJECT + ADVERB
6. energy and utilities are both
capital-intensive industries6,
Ablin notes.
ð Simple Present Tense
ð S + IS/AM/ARE +
COMPLIMENT(ADJECTIVE,NOUN,ADVERB)
7.
The
truly elite thinkers among today’s students would be well advised7
to pursue career paths in those fields if they want to make sure they are on
the advantaged side of the income equality divide.
ð Past Future Tense
ð S + WOULD/SHOULD + BE + COMPLIMENT
8.
No, I’m
not trying8 to cram together apples and oranges by suggesting
that employees should collect salaries that reflect the value that investors
ascribe to their collective efforts
ð Present Continous Tense (Nigative Form)
ð S + IS/AM/ARE + NOT + V-ING
9.
As interpreted by Wal-Mart and other
businesses whose jobs require significantly less skill and education than those
at companies like Facebook or Google, that has meant wages that often
fall just above — and sometimes even below — the poverty line9.
ð Presesnt Perfect Tense
ð S + HAS/HAVE + V3 + COMPLIMENT
10. Still, some high-level numbers show that how
focus on rewarding investors has affected workers
ð Present Perfect Tense
ð
S +
HAS/HAVE + V3 + COMPLIMENT
11. If you go back 30 years, corporate profits
bounced around at a level that was about 7 percent to 8 percent of the
GDP of the United States
ð
Simple
Past Tense
ð
S +
WAS/WERE + COMPLIMENT (NON VERB)
12. Employee
compensation was between 56 percent and 57 percent of GDP
ð
Simple
Past Tense
ð
S +
WAS/WERE + COMPLIMENT(NON VERB)
13. Today, those figures are closer to 12 percent and 52 percent, respectively
ð
Simple
Present Tense
ð
S +
IS/AM/ARE + COMPLIMENT
14. Add to that the fact that the minimum wage,
adjusted for inflation, has actually fallen by more than $3 an hour
— or 30 percent — since it peaked in 1968
ð
Present Perfect Tense
ð
S + HAS/HAVE + V3 + COMPLIMENT
15. Today’s $7.25 an hour will buy you
about what $1.60 bought you back in the year that Martin Luther King
ð
Present
Future Tense
ð
S
+ WILL/SHALL + V1 + OBJECT + ADVERB
16. Jr. and Robert Kennedy were assassinated16
ð
Simple
Past Tense
ð
S +
WAS/WERE + COMPLIMENT
17. today’s minimum wage should be above 17
an hour
ð
Past
Future Tense
ð
S +
SHOULD/WOULD + BE + COMPLIMENT
18. Clearly, not all companies in all industries will
be able to afford to fork over that much money, at least as things stand
today
ð
Present
Future Tense
ð
S +
WILL/SHALL + BE + COMPLIMENT
19. Some companies are already thinking about this state of affairs in a new way
ð
Present
Continous Tense
ð
S +
IS/AM ARE + VERB-ING+ COMPLIMENT
20. Costco, for instance, has made a strategic decision to use some of its profits to finance higher
employee salaries.
ð
Present
Perfect Tense
ð
S
+ HAS + V3 + COMPLIMENT
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