noggins wrote: Fri Dec 11, 2020 2:05 pm
Whats wrong with capitalists ruthlessly exploiting their assets? Thats the point isnt it? If a company sells some asset or division its only because some buyer values it more.
It's not as simple as that. I'll give a very simplified example. Suppose shareholders raise $2,000,000 to start a retail business. $1,000,000 buys premises and $1,000,000 covers everything else - stock, wages etc. The business makes 7.5% return on investment ($150,000) which is very nice. But the shareholders realise that business rents are about 5%, so their business can be considered to be making 5% on the $1,000,000 tied up in the premises and 10% on the rest of the business. So they sell the premises for $1,000,000 and rent it back at $50,000 per year (the going rate of 5%). Paying for the rent from a year's profits leaves $100,000 profit, or 10% return on the $1,000,000 tied up in the business. With the $1,000,000 raisd by the sale, the business can create another retail outlet following the same model elsewhere, giving a total return of 10% (or, of course, do something else such as return the $1,000,000 to shareholders for them to invest elsewhere as individuals).
But now consider what happens when economic conditions turn bad to the extent that the original business would have made zero profit. By renting instead of owning the premises, the business now has to find $100,000 rent for the two sites, but has no profit to pay it, so the business is insolvent and fails (in the real world, it would probably get a loan, or have a rights issue, or do something more complicated). The problem is that by focusing so narrowly on one thing, the business success becomes more volatile. (It works both ways - if economic conditions had got more favourable, the profits would have increased faster).
If you look at what businesses actually do, you'll find a mixture of ones which sell off bits to focus on their core business, and others which do the opposite (buy other businesses or start up new divisions) to diversify the business. Both work in moderation, but an excessive greed will eventually destroy a business.