Wednesday, September 23, 2015

The Root Of ISIS

ISIS or the Islamic State in Iraq and al-Shamam is also referred to as ISIL (Islamic State in Iraq and Lavant) by some. The grey shaded area in this map (Link) is the area controlled by ISIS today. How ISIS came in power over such a large region is one question and why it did so is another. I want to try to answer the why part in this blog post because I feel it is not being paid sufficient attention to in the media.

The roots of the ISIS movement lie in the toppling of the Saddam Hussein government in Iraq in 1990s. Saddam had become an autocratic leader and had defied the Western powers after he went to war with Kuwait over its oil. The George Bush Government in USA decided to capture Saddam Hussein based on intelligence that he had weapons of mass destruction. Saddam had used chemical warfare in the Kuwait War.

In the new government that was set up after the fall of Saddam Government, the majority power went to the Shias and the Sunnis and Saddam loyalists were not given any representation. The Saddam loyalists put a stiff fight to the Americans and established government and till the very end of the American occupation in Iraq, Fallujah, Tikrit and Mosul were on the verge of a civil war and the Americans gave up hope and left. 

The Saddam loyalists were heavily marginalized in Iraq after the funds from America and the NATO started pouring in to help in the post war reconstruction in Iraq. These Saddam loyalists became the separatists and are at the root of the ISIS movement. 

ISIS started expanding by gaining control of large territories in Iraq. The American troops had withdrawn now to focus their attention on Afghanistan and the Al Qaeda, getting Osama Bin Laden was now their sole focus. As the Americans and NATO focussed all of their might on decimating Al Qaeda and on the man hunt for Osama Bin Laden, ISIS faced little resistance in gaining territories in Iraq which did not have a full fledged army till now. 

As Arab Spring came and many of the autocracies in the Middle East were overthrown, ISIS found it easy to gain support from some of the separatists in Syria and Libya. Today, the ISIS controls large territories in the Middle East and the Americans are facing the same stiff opposition they faced in 1990s when they had to retreat from Fallujah without setting up a full civic order.

Here is a good article from The Atlantic on what the ISIS really wants: Link

Sunnis are still being marginalized in Iraq: Link to story

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

BITCOIN AND RELATED BUSINESSES

This presentation was prepared for the E-BUSINESS COURSE taught by Prof. Vijay Shrotriya. This presentation covers the regulated aspects of the bitcoin currency. There is a large shady marketplace for bitcoins that is unregulated and exists outside of USA and Australia. Regulating the dark market is difficult due to the decentralized nature of the bitcoin. However, proactive and corrective actions such as those taken in USA and Australia are necessary to check the growth of the dark markets which are unregulated. Turning a blind eye to these dark exchanges is not going to solve the problem of money laundering using the bitcoin which is often time used by drug dealers and terrorist networks.


Wednesday, September 9, 2015

A Hundred Small Steps (Contd.): Market reforms within existing legal and institutional framework

First a comment on my previous blog post in this series: Creating Liquid and Efficient Markets

"Consider the last 2 weeks turmoil in the financial markets. On Aug 24 the markets dropped by around 1000 points as fears from slow down in China and the US rate increases created a flight to safety in the markets. As the money moved out of Indian equities, the Rupee dropped to a 12 month low to 67 to a US Dollar. Subsequently, as the rate hike fears in USA were eased and the Chinese government reduced the rates, the markets recovered and so did the Rupee to 65 to a US Dollar. Now suppose we had a robust and liquid corporate bond market open to foreign investors. The money that moved out of equities at the start of the down swing, would have moved into corporate bonds and the Rupee would not have been hit so hard."


The suggestions given in the section on market refoms have been alluded to in earlier sections of the report and so have been superficially covered in the previous blog posts in this series. I find the treatment in the report to be very complete and am unable to contribute to the suggestions expressed in any way. So I  would suggest the reader to read this section on the report on pages 133 to 135 here: A Hundred Small Steps: Raghuram Rajan

Friday, September 4, 2015

NASH EQUILIBRIUM AND ITS IMPACT ON BUSINESS STRATEGY

This paper was written as a part of a course assignment for the Business Policy and Strategy course taught by Prof. Avinash Nene at SICSR. The material has been adapted from the COURSERA MOOC for Competitive Strategy taught by Prof. Tobias Kretschmer  at LMU Munich and a few other sources. I have tried to build relevant examples by myself.

Nash Equilibrium

In this paper I will try to explore the different strategies for 2 player matrix form games. 2 player matrix form games are those games that can be expressed in the form of 2 competitors having 2 alternative strategies. This would typically be 2 competitors having identical or similar products which could be priced low or high.

Consider 2 toothpaste brands in the market, Colgate and Dabur. Both of these could price their product low or high. Assuming infinite price elasticity of demand, the brand with the lower price would get all the demand in the market. If both charge a high price they split the market equally. Similarly if they both charge a low price, they split the market equally and in this case their profits are lower.

Colgate (high)
Colgate (low)
Dabur (high)
15/15
0/20
Dabur (low)
20/0
10/10

The above matrix indicates the 2 strategies for each player and the possible pay offs for each. If Colgate and Dabur both charge a high price, they share the market and get payoffs of 10 each. If they both charge a low price, they again share the market and get payoffs of 5 each. If either one charges a low price and the other high, the one charging low price gets the entire market. If the 2 firms co-operate, they both charge a high price and each gets a payoff of 15. However, in this situation they are both incentivized to deviate and charge a low price since they can improve their pay offs to 20 in this case.

If Dabur alone charges a low price, Dabur gets the entire market with a payoff of 20. In this situation, Colgate is incentivized to charge a low price as well. They both end up charging a low a price and split the market equally with pay off of 10 each. Once they both charge the low price, they are not incentivized to deviate from this position. This situation is called the “Nash Equilibrium”, named after the mathematician John Nash.

In a Nash Equilibrium, none of the 2 competitors are incentivized to deviate from their market positions. A pure-strategy Nash equilibrium is an action profile with the property that no single player can obtain a higher pay off by deviating unilaterally from this profile.

Similar situation arises during the pricing of telecom spectra where in the telecom operators could co-operate and bid low to lower their costs and increase their payoffs. However, this does not happen and they deviate to bid high to win the spectrum and end up with high costs and lower pay offs than if they would have co-operated.

Prisoner’s Dilemma:

In this form of game, both the competitors act selfishly to lead the game to an outcome which is not mutually beneficial. Consider the game below: If none of the competitors advertise, their payoffs split equally at 10 each. If any one competitor advertises, they get the entire market (20) and their pay offs are 15 (less the cost of advertising). However, if any one advertises, the other competitor is also incentivized to advertise and they both end up advertising and making a lower payoff of 5 each. This situation is known as the “Prisoner’s Dilemma”, where in they could get higher payoffs if they co-operate but instead they choose to act selfishly and this lowers their pay offs. The Prisoner’s Dilemma is also a form of Nash Equilibrium.

Colgate (advertise)
Colgate (not advertise)
Dabur (advertise)
5/5
15/0
Dabur (not advertise)
0/15
10/10

Game Trees:

Here in a simultaneous game is plotted as a sequential game with one of the players taking the lead. Often, who takes the lead decides the outcome of the game. Consider a product placement offer made by the James Bond movie producer to Sony, where in they showcase James Bond using Sony Vaio laptops. This could boost their sales by $0.5 million and would cost them a million dollars. If Sony refuse the product placement offer, James Bond movie producer goes to Apple with the same offer. If Apple accepts the offer, they stand to gain $1.5 million dollars and Sony would lose $0.7 million. The costs are the same. In this case, Sony would be incentivized to go ahead with the product placement even though they would incur a loss in this process. This is evident from backward induction given full knowledge of the game in advance.

Decision trees can be plotted to analyze and aid the understanding of this game. Such a sequential analysis could be used to analyze a simultaneous game and arrive the possible future outcomes if are not sure of the competitors strategy.
The above figure depicts the game tree for the case of the movie ET approaching Mars and Hershey for product placement. The slide is from the MOOC course on Competitive Strategy available on Coursera.

Simultaneous games described before could be converted to sequential games described here by aggressive commitment or early mover strategies. These could potentially alter the outcome in favor of the first mover.

Consider the case of Boeing and Airbus. They both make jumbo jets. It is found that the market for air travel could sustain the development of one new airliner. If both make a new airliner, none of them is able to break even. What Airbus did was moved first and set up a massive manufacturing capacity in Toulouse, France before the product development was complete. They were able to start taking orders earlier and got a significant market share from that. This is a form of an aggressive commitment strategy that converts a simultaneous game into sequential game in favor of the first mover. Aggressive commitment is called the hawk-dove strategy where in the aggressive mover is the hawk and tries to recover an investment in spite of higher costs.

Games with finite repetitions (End Game Effect):


In this section, we analyze the impact of game repetitions to the strategy of a 2 player matrix form game. If the game has a finite number of repetitions, we expect the players to co-operate till the final repetition. In the final repetition, they will not co-operate and they could misbehave without getting punished for the same. Consider the game of soccer. A player is allowed 2 yellow cards before he or she gets a red card. As a result, you see more yellow cards towards the end of the game then during the early stages of the game. This is also known as the End Game Effect.

This usually becomes prominent during the bankruptcy proceedings of a company. When a company is on the verge of bankruptcy and requires significant debt restructuring, there are more incentives to misbehave then to co-operate.

When GM was on the verge of bankruptcy and asked for debt restructuring in 2008, the government bought a controlling stake in GM. The US Government sold off its stake for a handsome profit after GM was back in the black a few years later.

Greece could ask for a similar debt restructuring from EU to extend its 30 year loans to 50 year loans and reduce the debt payments. In return, EU could get a controlling stake in Greece through a majority vote in Greek Parliament. This could avoid the End Game Effect that has produced the stale mate in present debt negotiations.

Games with Infinite Repetitions:


In this case, the game can be repeated a multiple number of times and the number of repetitions is not known. For example, you have a burger stand at the IPL stadium and set the price of your burgers everyday with new offers given out to cricket fans every day.

An important application of such games is in the diamond industry where the diamond businesses such as De Beers and its competitors have to set a price for the diamonds knowing that the resources are finite but not going to end in the near term. Here the players set a high price which is profitable to all to begin with. But as soon as one player deviates and sets a low price, they set a low price for all the subsequent periods and this wipes out all the industry profits. This is akin to a penalty clause in the agreement.

The incentives to co-operate are high if there are a few competitors and the interest rates are low. If there are more competitors and the interest rates are high, there are more incentives to deviate.

Consider a probability of co-operation as p and a payoff for co-operation as X for each. If the game is repeated a number of times, and the payoff for deviation is 2X in one term and 0 for the rest we get a probability of co-operation as

X*(p+p*p+p*p*p+…) > 2X
=> X/ (1-p) > 2X
=> 1/ (1-p)>2
=> 1-p < 1/2
p>1/2 – here the probability of co-operation is more than 50% since the payoffs are very even.

If the value of p is close to 0, indicating that there is not going to be a market next year, the chances of co-operation are going to be very low. If p is closer to 1, indicating that there will be a market next year with a high certainty, the chances of co-operation are going to be very high.

This highlights the tradeoff of giving up long term profits for short term gains.

Consider the case of OPEC oil pricing and shale oil prices. OPEC used to charge $100 per barrel for crude oil till the American and Canadian shale oil producers started selling shale oil in USA and reduced the oil imports significantly. OPEC responded by cutting the price of oil and started a price war by pricing the oil at $40 per barrel. Shale oil business has a high non recoverable expense of setting up the well and the well life is typically a year. The costs however are lower. If the oil price drops, the cost of setting up new wells becomes infeasible. As a result, shale oil output will get reduced eventually and that is when OPEC will raise the price of oil most probably.

Entry strategies:

4 important entry strategies:
Commitment Strategy: A credible commitment of the entrant to stay in the market may stop incumbents retaliating.
Types of commitment:
·         High sunk cost investments Eg. Production  Capacity
·         R&D for a particular market
·         Advertising into 1 brand that cannot be re-directed to another market
·         Exit from other strategic markets
Eg. Market entry of Deutsche BA in German airline industry: If it enters then Lufthansa can choose to retaliate or not. If Lufthansa chooses to retaliate, Deutsche BA can choose to stay in the market or exit. This can be solved using a game tree as shown below:
This game tree is solved using backwards induction. If Lufthansa has chosen to retaliate, Deutsche BA can chose to stay or exit. If Deutsche BA chooses to exit, its losses are -3 and if it chooses to stay, its losses are -4. In this case, it is beneficial for Deutsche BA to exit.

Now Lufhtansa has the choice to retaliate or not given Deutsche BA has entered. Deutsche BA knows that Lufhtansa is going to retaliate if it enters and in this case, Deutsche BA will have to exit.

What Deutsche BA can do now is invest in a commitment strategy by investing in additional airplanes. The more planes to fly is a sunk cost investment. This changes the exit payoffs for Deutsche BA from -3 to -5. Now it is optimal for Deutsche BA to stay and is better for Lufthansa not to retaliate. The outcome of this game now with the commitment strategy will be that Deutsche BA will enter and Lufthansa will not retaliate, with both making a profit of 4. The outcome of the game was thus changed by committing.

Value Chain Re-configuration:

Entrants will enter with a cheaper product that will appeal to the more price sensitive buyers. For the incumbents, this is not a particularly threatening move.  Over time, this firm will improve their products and take large chunks of the market from the market leaders. The market leaders will not be able to replicate the low cost business model of the entrant.

Eg. Bloomberg started in 1981 by providing basic financial data. They served only the small investment analysts and brokers who could not offer the services of the main stay firms. Over time they started improving their data offerings and analysis and started eating into the market share of Dow Jones and Reuters.

 

Judo Economics:

The art of Judo is about taking the strength of your rival and using it to your advantage. It works with an entrant whose size is small against the incumbent whose size is large. While charging a lower price, the entrant will also limit his market size by limiting their capacity. This will make it less profitable for the incumbent to cut prices as we will see below:

Pl = entrants price
Ph = incumbents price
Xe = size of market addressed by entrant
Xh= total size of the market
The entrant also signals they are not going to increase market share in the near future.

How does the incumbent react to this? The incumbent will see the entrant coming in and lose market share equal to xe to the entrant. One option would be to fight back and drive the entrant out of the market. This would require charging prices lower than those of entrant. So his prices go down from ph to pl, leading to lower profits.

The incumbent will not attack if the losses from accepting the entrant are less than the losses from attacking the entrant.
Ph*xe < (ph-pl)*(xe+xh)
Ph*xe is what incumbent loses since the entrant charges the lower price pl. If you lower the price from ph to pl, the loss is equal to this price difference times market size.
The factors that determine this are:
1.   
    Market Size: If the market size is large, there are less chances of retaliation because it is more expensive to retaliate
2.      Capacity or market share of entrant: The smaller xe is, lower are the chances of retaliation
3.      Price difference (ph-pl): If pl is much smaller, it is going to be much more difficult for incumbent to retaliate.

These 3 factors influence the success of the entrant in the Judo Economics strategy
Eg. Amazon and Barnes and Noble: When Amazon entered online retail in 1994, Barnes and Noble did not retaliate. Barnes and Noble feared that an online book store competition would trigger a price war and cannibalize the sales of the classical book stores. Amazon started gradually dragging customers away from the brick and mortar book stores.

Niche Market:

The entrant here focusses on a niche market that makes it very difficult for the incumbent to retaliate. This is very similar to Judo Economics.

Eg. Local phone services offered by NetCologne just in Cologne. Deutsche Telecom was then the incumbent. Deutsche Telecom was not able to reduce prices just for one city and so NetCologne was able to carve out a niche for themselves in Cologne.

Eg. Unsuccessful niche market strategy: Deutsche BA entered the German market to offer flights on only certain pair routes in Germany. However, Lufthansa can retaliate on particular routes. Lufthansa was able to reduce prices on the Munich-Dusseldorf route where Deutsche BA reduced its prices. It was fairly cheap for Lufthansa to retaliate as they were able to focus on the niche market very easily.

How do incumbents deter entry?

Blocking entry by reducing costs may be cost effective if the overall profits from reduced costs are still higher than what you would achieve if you do not reduce the costs and the competitor does (We are assuming infinite price elasticity of demand here.)

Blocking entry will amount to doing something that is costly to you to deter entry. If you accommodate entry, your profits will be lower due to the lost market share (duopoly profits).  We compare the net present value of blocking to the net present value of accommodating.  Which of those 2 is larger is going to determine whether you are going to deter entry or accommodate entry.

First of all incumbent could simply raise entry barriers. Eg. If a diamond producer secures access to all the diamonds that can be mined, it is going to be difficult for a new entrant to enter. These are structural entry barriers where in you acquire more resources than is required to meet the demand.

Taking advantages of economies of scale and scope could help raise entry barriers. If you could produce more or at a larger scale, your marginal costs would be lower and you will be able to charge a lower price. This lower market price will make the market unattractive to the new entrant.

Leverage experience advantages: You can get better and cheaper at doing things based on your experience. The closer you are to the technology frontier, the more difficult it is for others to come in.
Marketing advantages such as brand loyalty could also act as an entry barrier. Eg. Kleenex was the first brand to enter market of paper towels and built a brand that became synonymous with paper towels. Kleenex became the dominant player with much larger market share than competitors due to this brand building.

Raising switching costs by selling complementary products or signing people up for long term contracts, it is going to be difficult for new entrants to get a critical mass of consumers.

Limit Pricing:

Aggressive pricing before entry has happened (ex ante) where as predatory pricing happens after the entry has happened.

Limit pricing: Keep prices low in spite of the fact that you have a monopoly position. This could send a signal to the potential entrant that there is low demand so don’t bother coming in. Another signal you could send is that you are a low cost incumbent and so the entrant should expect a steep price war.

This only works if we have incomplete information. Eg. There is uncertainty of the cost structure.

Eg. There used to be ferries across the English Channel taking commuters from England to France. When the plans to build the Channel Tunnel were announced, these ferry operators lowered their prices indicating that the market demand is low and the prices won’t pay off for the cost of building the tunnel. However, after the tunnel was built, they raised their prices back again to the original levels.

Predatory Pricing:

Predatory pricing definition applies if you have a competitor and that competitor will be driven out of the market by low prices that you charge. This can be used to induce exit and also deter future entry. This is widely used in the semiconductor industry by memory makers where the prices of memory modules have dropped precipitously over the last 5-10 years and many memory makers have had to close their shops or merge with others due to this. This has been investigate by anti-trust authorities in USA.
Predatory pricing by The Times and The Independent in UK. As you can see, The Times ended up gaining the full market share after this price war.

Entry Deterrence by pre-emption:

Here you over invest to produce very cheaply and reduce your cost of production to a point where it becomes unfeasible for potential entrants to stay profitable.
Another method of pre-emption is go for horizontal differentiation and produce many variants of the same product. This leaves less space in the market for new entrants.
You can choose outlets more densely than would be optimal.


Reference:
1.      Coursera MOOC: Competitive Strategy taught by Prof. Tobias Kretschmer at LMU Munich
2.      MIT 14.11 Pure Strategy Matrix Form Games and Nash Equilibria (MIT OCW)

3.