Chilean
Visionarys Bold Ventures
May Be Vindicated by Foreigners |
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[En Español]
By CRAIG TORRES
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
SANTIAGO, ChileManuel Cruzat Infante built and lost empires in Chile over the past
two decades as local banks turned hot and cold on his investments. Now foreign investors
are taking an interest in some of his ventures, and that may vindicate his flagging
reputation as Chiles boldest entrepreneur.
At a time when much of the new investment in Chile still flows into the production of
copper and other basic materials for export, Mr. Cruzats conglomerate, CB Group SA,
is betting on real estate, online banking and brokerage operations, and railroads. None of
these investments has enthused local bankers, who have cut back on loans to CB Group for
the past three years, executives say.
But last month the International Finance Corp., a World Bank subsidiary, more than doubled
its equity stake in CB Groups rail-transport subsidiaries to 25%. UniRail Corp., a
New York-based rail investment and management firm, also took a 10% stake in CB
Groups rail holdings, giving the effort some much-needed international recognition.
Mr. Cruzat "has had the vision to see railroads as a very beat-up asset in a changing
transportation environment," says Larry McCaffrey, president of UniRail.
Future Trends
Mr. Cruzat is an unusual Chilean. In a country that worships conformity, he is an outsider
who tends to invest in futuristic economic trends. He and his aides chide the local
financial system for staking their future on telephone and power companies. "Here,
the most important companies are electric utilities. In the U.S., they are almost
irrelevant. Something is wrong," says his like-minded son, also named Manuel, who is
a CB Group director.
During the 1970s, Mr. Cruzat controlled pension-fund companies, forestry and fishing
concerns, copper mines, vineyards, banks and brewers, an empire that earned him the
nickname of "Chiles Howard Hughes." The government split up the group
because Mr. Cruzats banks had made large loans to other Cruzat companies, and
regulators were concerned that the related-party loans were a risk to the financial
system. Still, many of the sold-off companies are flourishing in the hands of others, a
bittersweet vindication of Mr. Cruzats economic prescience. In another country, Mr.
Cruzat might be considered a brilliant venture capitalist; in Chile, he is considered a
risky visionary whose long-term projects dont pay enough attention to near-term cash
flow.
"Cruzat is thinking 20 years from now, not today. Banks are a bit scared of
him," says Alejandro Montero, a partner at Celfin Ltda., a Santiago investment bank.
"He is not a down-to-earth guy, but he is very intelligent and a visionary."
Railroad Investments
In railroads, at least, Mr. Cruzat has a clear win, his partners say. The concessions
include a 1,500-mile cargo line running from central to southern Chile, as well as lines
linking Bolivia with Chile and Argentina. Bolivia is a landlocked country rich in minerals
and other natural resources that needs to use its rail lines more extensively to exploit
the countrys natural wealth and gain access to imports. Tonnage on both of CB
Groups principal rail concessions is growing in the double digits. The Bolivian line
is profitable; the Chilean line is earning money on an operating basis, but still posts
net losses because of monetary charges.
In real estate, Mr. Cruzat wants to build cities that can compete with Latin
Americas clogged, smoggy and increasingly insecure capitals. The experiment is under
way between Santiago and Valparaiso, the congressional seat, where CB Group is building
Curauma, a 9,000-acre planned development for 200,000 people.
Set in wooded hills around a lake, Curauma already holds 630 families. There is a private
school and day-care center, as well as plans for a university and industrial park. CB
Group has raised Curaumas land values through zoning and neighborhood design. The
project will take more than a decade to finish, too long for most Chilean banks. The lack
of financing has forced CB Group to sell land options and other assets, and plow profits
back into roads and infrastructure.
Online Visions
Mr. Cruzat also wants to build Chiles online financial supermarket. CB Group
operates financial-services concerns in Chile and Peru, with $110 million in assets under
management and more than 4,000 clients. It is talking to online brokerage firms in the
U.S. about bringing the technology to Chile. The idea holds promise because Chiles
creaky financial system is full of duplicated costs. Banks cant sell pension-fund
products, for example.
But Chile is a poor country where computers are still a luxury of the upper class.
There are also regulatory hurdles. "This project is going to require investment and
will have negative cash flow for many years," says Henry Rudnick, head of research at
CB Capitales, the brokerage unit. "We have to look for a foreign partner that
understands," he says.
The Wall Street Journal
-Printed Version-
Tuesday January 12th, 1999
Page A-19 |
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