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The 2002 SB&D Investment
100
Pretty Good Year, But One With an Asterisk
By Lee Burlett
In contrast to the 2002 SB&D Job 100, the 2002 Investment
100 looks like a winner. But looks can be deceiving. Last
year a record threshold of $80 million tied the previous record
of $80 million set in 2000. Those two years proved there were
some very large companies making some very large financial
commitments in the region. Yes, it's been a good two years
on the investment front, two years that virtually matched
one another.
The 2002 SB&D Investment 100 didn't match the record
$80 million threshold set in 2001 and 2000, but it came close.
This year, any investment announced in the South that totaled
$78 million or more made up the largest 100 investments announced
in the South by various industries and companies. This year's
ratio ranged from $78 million for the 100th largest announcement
to $1.7 billion (that's with a "B") for the largest
investment made in the region.
This year's SB&D Investment 100 totaled an impressive
$24.97 billion in investment. That's an excellent total considering
last year's I-100 summed up at $25.75 billion, the largest
total ever. The $25.75 billion topped the previous record
mark set in 1999 of $24.6 billion, so this year's total is
the second best ever.
There were two megadeals over $1 billion on this year's list.
That's the same as last year and one better than the year
before. The 1996 SB&D Investment 100 remains the megadeal
king with five deals announced with over $1 billion in investment.
So, in comparison to other years, years that were not recessionary,
the 2002 Investment 100 looks very strong, with a high threshold,
a good representation of megadeals and a total investment
that ranks second in "100" history.
But, as mentioned in the headline, an asterisk should be
placed on this year's Investment 100. If you read our methodology
on the first page of the section, you know that we use all
announcements in the "100" that were made public
by the corporation. If they said it, and it was written, then
we counted it. Hey, it's not egg on our face if they don't
build it. It's egg and much more thrown at them if the deal
becomes a dog. And dogs are what we smell in this batch of
Investment 100 deals.
Now, don't get us wrong. There's only one industry sector
in which the odor wafts. Its the electric power generation
industry. In calendar year 2001, there were 37 power plants
publicly announced by utilities in the South. I can assure
you all 37 will not be built, or at least won't be built any
time soon. There was a record 21 power plants announced in
1999 and 20 more announced in 2000. At that rate, every person
in the South will have his or her own power plant by 2125.
Alright, we admit that's a gross exaggeration. But 37 power
plants to be built in the South after 41 were announced over
the last two years means there are exactly 78 more power plants
announced in the South the last three years than were constructed
in California during all of the 1990s. Many of those generation
facilities will not be built.
While power plants made up 37 percent of this year's Investment
100, there were other deals that were more noteworthy because
of the jobs they created (power plants create very few jobs).
A few that you will find in our ranking include the $1.2 billion
(that's with a "B") invested by NewCo in Lake Charles,
La. With that investment came 500 new jobs compared to the
30 or 40 created by the average power plant. Sony-Toshiba-IBM
ganged up to turn an impressive $400 million advanced chips
deal that meant 300 high-paying jobs in Austin. Ford spent
$375 million in Norfolk and added 200 jobs. Toyota chose Alabama
for its V-8 engine plant and invested $220 million and hired
350. And WorldCom (another dog, maybe?) spent $180 million
and announced 3,600 jobs in northern Virginia's Loudoun County.
We crowned the WorldCom announcement "Deal of the Year,"
even though it may or may not actually happen considering
the company's current situation. And we can't forget another
deal that was no dog. Nestle announced an investment of $165
million and 1,000 jobs for its new frozen food plant in Jonesboro,
Ark.
New vs. Expanded
New versus expanded investment announcements were a wash
in this year's Investment 100. There were 51 new deals that
made the list compared to 49 expansions. The 51 new deal total,
the highest in four years, was obviously affected by the 37
power plant announcements. While the Southern Business &
Development 100 did not exist in the last real recession (1991),
we suspect that new deals will surpass expansions during downturns.
Why? Some of the new deals are dogs, while expansions don't
occur as readily when times are tough. Last year, for example,
there were 41 new deals making the list (once again driven
by 20 new power plants), compared to 59 expansions.
Industry Trends
Because of their capital intensive nature, manufacturing
and utilities have dominated the SB&D Investment 100 over
the last several years. We've already discussed electric utilities
and their effect on the list. But other industries had major
effects as well. Federal government industry classifications
do not clearly show which industries are spending money more
readily than others. But our own classifications clearly show
that the oil and gas industry is alive and well in the South.
The same can be said for the chemical industry. Those two
sectors accounted for 19 of the largest 100 investment announcements
made in the South. The 19 deals is a major increase from one
year ago when only five big investments were made in oil and
gas and chemicals. But the 19 deals is off the record mark
of 30 oil, gas and chemical deals making the I-100 in both
1998 and 1999.
2002 SB&D Investment 100
Bureau of Labor Statistics Industry Categories
| Industry |
# of 100 Deals |
| Manufacturing |
43 |
| Service |
16 |
| FIRE |
2 |
| Transportation/Public Utilities |
38 |
| Government |
1 |
Also doing well in 2001 was the transportation industry.
It wasn't a particularly good year for automotive, however
seven big deals in one of the most active Southern industry
sectors made the list. Last year's I-100 featured 13 large
transportation investments and 13 the year before that. So
transportation, while represented, didn't measure up to previous
years.
An industry not normally seen in the SB&D 100 emerged.
It's an industry we believe you are going to hear much more
from in the future. Biotech and pharmaceuticals had their
best investment year ever in the South. Four big deals made
the list, led by the Human Genome Science project in Montgomery
County, Md. and Biopure in Sumter, S.C.
For the fourth consecutive year, the semiconductor industry
did very little. Only one deal made the list, though it was
a memorable one. Sony, Toshiba and IBM got together to build
an advanced chips facility in Austin. So the news is not all
bad in that sector.
2002 SB&D Investment 100
| Industry Sectors |
# of 100 Deals |
| Utilities |
37 |
| Oil & Gas |
11 |
| Chemicals |
8 |
| Transportation |
7 |
| Distribution |
5 |
| Food Products |
5 |
| Biotech/Pharmaceuticals |
4 |
| Health Care Services |
4 |
| General Manufacturing |
4 |
| Electronics |
3 |
| Info Tech/Internet Related Services |
3 |
| Rubber & Plastics |
2 |
| Wood Products |
2 |
| Agribusiness |
1 |
| Financial Services |
1 |
| Telecommunications |
1 |
| Headquarters |
1 |
| Government |
1 |
SB&D Investment 100: The States
For the second consecutive year, Texas is not sitting atop
the annual SB&D Investment 100. Last year, Virginia, Louisiana
and South Carolina all surpassed Texas' total of deals making
the Investment 100. This year, however, only Louisiana's 17
big Investment 100 deals could top Texas' total of 13. Following
Louisiana and Texas with excellent investment years were Florida,
Mississippi and South Carolina.
Louisiana earned the top state spot this year with several
oil, gas and chemical deals, a bunch of power plants, a wood
products deal and a steel announcement. Louisiana came in
second in the state category last year with 13 I-100 deals.
This year is the first time Louisiana has topped all other
states in the Investment 100.
While nine of the South's 17 states saw their big investment
deals drop in 2001 from 2000, there were some real highlights
this year. For example, Florida set a state record with 9
Investment 100 deals. Its previous high was three. Mississippi's
total rose from two big dollar deals last year to 12 this
year, even though nine of those 12 were power plant announcements.
Louisiana set a record with 17 I-100 deals and South Carolina
almost tied its best ever mark of 12. Missouri's big investments
were up, too.
Yet, as mentioned most Southern states saw their large capital
investment deals drop. Georgia's dropped from six to two,
Kentucky's from seven to one, Oklahoma's from eight to four
and Virginia's big dollar deals fell from 15 in the 2001 SB&D
Investment 100 to 7 this year.
The Southern States
SB&D Investment 100 Deals 2002 vs. 2001
| |
2002 |
2001 |
| Alabama |
2 |
5 |
| Arkansas |
1 |
0 |
| Florida |
9 |
4 |
| Georgia |
2 |
6 |
| Kansas |
3 |
1 |
| Kentucky |
1 |
7 |
| Louisiana |
17 |
13 |
| Maryland |
1 |
0 |
| Mississippi |
12 |
2 |
| Missouri |
5 |
1 |
| North Carolina |
7 |
5 |
| Oklahoma |
4 |
8 |
| South Carolina |
11 |
12 |
| Tennessee |
6 |
7 |
| Texas |
13 |
9 |
| Virginia |
7 |
15 |
| West Virginia |
4 |
6 |
SB&D Investment 100: Just Missed Deals
As for just missed deals, Florida turned an astounding number
with 21 making the junior list. With its 9 Investment-100
deals, Florida was home to 30 announcements of $30 million
or more. That surpasses its largest number of big investment
deals by 14, when 16 big dollar deals were announced in the
Sunshine State in 1998.
Florida's capital investments of $30 million or more (both
I-100 and JMDs) were made in a variety of industry sectors
from wireless circuits to internet services to a desalinization
plant. It should be noted that of Florida's I-100 and just
missed deals, only two were power plants. Also garnering some
excellent just missed investment deals were Louisiana, Missouri,
South Carolina, Texas and Virginia.
| State |
# of Investment JMDs |
| Alabama |
6 |
| Arkansas |
2 |
| Florida |
21 |
| Georgia |
5 |
| Kansas |
3 |
| Kentucky |
7 |
| Louisiana |
10 |
| Maryland |
2 |
| Mississippi |
9 |
| Missouri |
10 |
| North Carolina |
9 |
| Oklahoma |
2 |
| South Carolina |
10 |
| Tennessee |
9 |
| Texas |
13 |
| Virginia |
17 |
| West Virginia |
2 |
SB&D Investment 100: Per Capita Performance
To correctly measure a state's performance at garnering large
corporate capital investment projects, you must factor in
the state's size and population. Economic development activity
is directly related to population. For example, it's impossible
to compare Texas' Investment 100 numbers with Kansas' numbers.
With 21 million people, Texas is more than eight times the
size of Kansas.
Each year Southern Business & Development factors in
the number of SB&D Investment 100 and Investment JMD deals
turned by each state per million residents. Looking at the
"100" this way changes the makeup of the ranking.
By studying the per capita chart, you'll notice states at
the top that are not necessarily considered economic development
giants. But giants they are when the playing field is level.
The Southern States
SB&D I-100 and JMDs
| State |
# of deals $30 million or more |
| Florida |
30 |
| Louisiana |
27 |
| Texas |
26 |
| Virginia |
24 |
| Mississippi |
21 |
| South Carolina |
21 |
| North Carolina |
16 |
| Tennessee |
15 |
| Missouri |
10 |
| Alabama |
8 |
| Kentucky |
8 |
| Georgia |
7 |
| Kansas |
6 |
| Oklahoma |
6 |
| West Virginia |
6 |
| Arkansas |
3 |
| Maryland |
3 |
The Southern States
SB&D Investment 100/JMD Performance Per Capita
| State |
# of deals per million people |
| Mississippi |
7.5 |
| Louisiana |
6.1 |
| South Carolina |
5.3 |
| Virginia |
3.4 |
| West Virginia |
3.3 |
| Tennessee |
2.6 |
| Kansas |
2.3 |
| Kentucky |
2.0 |
| North Carolina |
2.0 |
| Florida |
1.9 |
| Alabama |
1.8 |
| Missouri |
1.8 |
| Oklahoma |
1.8 |
| Arkansas |
1.2 |
| Texas |
1.2 |
| Georgia |
0.8 |
| Maryland |
0.6 |
As you can see by studying the adjoining chart, Mississippi
is at the top of the Investment 100 on a per capita basis.
Also doing well are Louisiana and South Carolina. Georgia,
with 0.8 big investment deals turned per million residents
ranked near the bottom for the first time in the 10 years
of the "100." Texas, which is also ranked near the
bottom, is in familiar territory. Texas has ranked at or near
the bottom in investment deals turned per million residents
for the last three years.
On paper, the 2002 SB&D Investment 100 is better than
average at worst. Furthermore, it tops the numbers posted
by the Job 100 by a long shot when both rankings are compared
to other years. The $25 billion invested by the top 100 projects
in the South is a mere $750,000 off the record set by the
top 100 investment projects last year. But we question whether
the 37 power plant announcements, the largest industry sector
showing by far in this year's I-100, are all going to be built.
We think not, therefore the 2002 Investment 100 can be labeled
as one that is skewed to an unknown degree.
View 2002 Investment
100 Chart
You can email Mike Randle, editor and publisher of Southern
Business & Development, on this article at mike@sb-d.com
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