BASF : In the price-conscious chemicals market., a good network
is vital. The Thai operation will benefit from big new plants in Malaysia and China.
ASF had already been in the chemicals business for 80 years when
it began following its main customers to Asia. As economics in the
region began to grow at mid-century, manufacturers of a host of
consumer products and other goods set up local bases, and BASF wanted
to be there to supply them.
Cheap
oil and gas prices are a must in the chemical industry, and this
is something Thailand cannot provide
BRUNO FRIESEN
Managing director, BASF (Thai)
Today, the German-based multinational owns or has equity in more
than 50 companies in 20 countries in Asia. Its revenue from the
region reached 5.2 billion Deutschmarks last year, an increase of
17% from 1996.
Friedrich Engelhorn, the company founder, could never have foreseen
how large Badische Anillin-und Soda-Fabrik would become when he
started the company in 1865.
BASF AG now has 350 affiliates in more than 170 countries, producing
8,000 different chemical products. Global sales last year were nearly
56 billion Deutschmarks.
The group's products can be divided in five major categories: health
and nutrition, colorants and finishing products, chemicals, plastic
and fibres, oil and cosmetics, printing and packaging.
BASF came to Thailand before World War II, taking a 30% equity
in a joint-venture company
with Bara Windsor, a local trading firm.
"The Thai economy had begun to grow very quickly, and BASF
designed to set up a 100% owned company in 1966 called BASF (Thai),"
managing director Bruno Friesen said.
The local operation is small compared with those in other countries,
with a workforce of 157 at its plant in the Bang Poo Industrial
Estate in Samut Prakan.
However, BASF (Thai) generated revenue of more than one billion
baht in sales last year. despite the downturn.
The company has three lines: caprolactam, a raw material for producing
nylon fibre for the textile industry; polystyrene, with i-nany applications
in the computer, electronics and construction fields; and industrial
chemicals such as monomers, solvents and adhesives, with a total
production capacity of 7,200 tons a year.
BASF has two local affiliates. BASF Vita is an animal feed joint
venture between BASF (Thai) with local investors; and BASF East
Asiatic Colours and Chemicals is a joint venture between the German
parent and East Asiatic (Thailand). The latter deals mainly with
the import and sale of textile dyes and chemicals to the textile
industry.
Mr Friesen, who has been in Thailand for more than a decade, said
the economic downturn had hit the chemical industry hard. Major
customers such as automotive, consumer product and textile makers
had cut back by as much as 50% and the chemical industry was looking
at a 30% drop in sales revenue as a result, he said.
However, BASF sees the crisis as short-term, and it is preparing
for the recovery. Across Asia it has been steadily expanding production.
Together with local partners, it will invest, DM 10- 12, billion
'In the region in the next five years.
Among the show-cases will be an integrated petrochemical site in
Nanjing, a joint venture with Yangtzi Petrochemical Corp and China
National Petrochemical.
As well, BASF AG has just acquired a 50% stake from two Korean
partners to gain full control of chemical plants there. It has also
purchased a lysine business from local investors.
In Malaysia and the Philippines, BASF has invested more than DM1
billion to set up two chemical plants.
In Thailand, BASF Thai intends to increase its equity in BASF Vita
to gain control of management of the animal feed producer, in the
belief that the local economy will turn around within two years.
In the chemical industry, Mr Friesen said, price is the ultimate
factor for customers. Chemical companies are always on the lookout
to produce more cheaply and efficiently.
BASF has adopted the "Verbund system" as a company-wide
strategy that stresses grouping operations in large, integrated
plants for the low-est cost of production. The integrated plants
dis-tribute products to customers in nearby countries through offices
in each country.
In Southeast Asia, Malaysia was chosen as the manufacturing hub.
The company has joined with Petronas, Malaysia's national oil company,
in a DM1-billion plant.
Mr Friesen Said that when compared with neighbouring countries,
the cost of overall chemical production in Thailand was higher.
"Cheap oil and gas prices are a must in the chemical industry,
and this is something Thailand cannot provide."
The Thai plant began by serving mainly local demand, with only
15 % of the output exported. However, the economic downturn has
forced BASF(Thai) to export more, and that means working to cut
costs in order to compete.
The company expects sales this year to remain at the same level
as last year, helped by increased export revenue due to baht depreciation.
"Next year we will see zero growth, though our revenue will
increase slightly in 2000. The overall industry will experience
fierce competi-tion due to the plunge in demand. Some companies
will have withered away by then," Mr Friesen said.
However, BASF(Thai) will continue to rein-force its position as
a major chemical player in the local market, taking advantage of
the arrival of integrated production sites in Malaysia and China,
as well as the newly-established logistics centre in Singapore.
Mr Friesen said the network would help BASF (Thai) serve the needs
of all its customers at very low prices and strengthen its leading
position.
BASF (Thai) Ltd
Established: 1966
Main businesses: Chemicals
and animal feed manufacturing
Subsidiaries: BASF Vita; BASF
East Asiatic Colours and Chemicals
Number of employees: 157
1997 gross revenue: 1.21 billion
baht
Worldwide
Headquarters: Ludwigshafen,
Germany
Number of Countries: 170 with
both manufacturing and customer service centres
Number of employees: 104,979
1997 gross sales: DM55.78 billion
Net profit: DM3.23 billion