The impact of political risks on public-private partnership (PPP) opportunities in Asia

Similar documents
"The Comprehensive Survey on the International Business Strategy in Japan"

Private Financing of Infrastructure in Asia

Chief Executive Perspectives: 2009

Asia-Pacific Alternatives & Wealth Management Awards

SINGAPORE REPORT. Compiled by: The American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Singapore 1 Scotts Road #23-03/04/05 Shaw Centre Singapore AND

BlackRock Global Funds Asian Tiger Bond Fund

AAPA Shifting Trade Patterns The Changing Asia Market

Asia-Pacific: Sustainable Development Financing Outreach. Asia-Pacific: Landscape & State of Sustainable Financing

Infrastructure Investment in Asia

Product Key Facts PineBridge Global Funds PineBridge Asia Dynamic Asset Allocation Fund

SUPPORTING INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT IN ASEAN ECONOMIES: THE ACCESS TO RISK MITIGATION INSTRUMENTS. Knut Gummert, OECD Southeast Asia Division

How Does the AEC Matter? Dialogue on Trade and Investment Coherence: Enabling Thai SMEs for AEC January 2013 Bangkok, Thailand

Product Key Facts Franklin Templeton Investment Funds Templeton Asian Smaller Companies Fund

FINANCE TO ENSURE ASIA S ECONOMIC GROWTH DR. RANEE JAYAMAHA CHAIRPERSON - HATTON NATIONAL BANK PLC

SMALL CHANGE: LITTLE MOVEMENT IN LATEST APAC TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL RANKINGS

Regional Cooperation for Financial Stability and Resilience

Asia and the Pacific: Economic Outlook and Drivers

A Stocktaking and Comparative Assessment of Insurance Statistics in Selected Asian Countries: Preliminary Findings

EXAMINING REIT JURISDICTIONS, STRUCTURES AND INVESTOR APPETITE ACROSS ASIA PACIFIC MARKETS

2017 Asia and Pacific Regional Economic Outlook:

Who is following the BRICs?

Private Equity and Institutional Investors: Risks and Opportunities in Cambodia and Lao PDR IPBA, Manila March 2018

PRODUCT KEY FACTS. Quick facts. BOCHK Wealth Creation Series BOCHK All Weather Asian Bond Fund. April Issuer: BOCHK Asset Management Limited

MALAYSIA REPORT. Compiled by: The American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Singapore 1 Scotts Road #23-03/04/05 Shaw Centre Singapore AND

PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS SHEET

PRODUCT KEY FACTS Macquarie Unit Trust Series- Macquarie Asia New Stars Fund 16 December 2018

Financing for Sustainable Urbanization

Improving public investment efficiency for infrastructure development

BEA Union Investment Capital Growth Fund

PRODUCT KEY FACTS. BlackRock Global Funds Asian Tiger Bond Fund. December Quick facts

Infrastructure Financing Challenges in Southeast Asia

Asia Business Council Annual Survey 2011

Financing Sustainable Infrastructure In Asia. Fei Yu Deputy Representative Asian Development Bank North American Representative Office

EDCF Approaches to Support Inclusive Development of Partner Countries

Public-Private Partnership Monitor Key Trends and Findings

Visa s International Financial Literacy

INDONESIA REPORT. Compiled by: The American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Singapore 1 Scotts Road #23-03/04/05 Shaw Centre Singapore AND

PineBridge Investments Asia Limited, based in Hong Kong (internal delegation) State Street Custodial Services (Ireland) Limited

Global Economic Management and Asia s Responsibility Masahiro Kawai Asian Development Bank Institute

Statement of the Asian Development Bank s Operations in 2017

GPR/APREA AsiaPac Performance Snapshot

2017 Taiwan Investment Conference

PRODUCT KEY FACTS. Principal Global Investors Funds Global Equity Fund April 2018

Bank of America Merrill Lynch The Future of Financials Conference. November 6, Citi Investor Relations

CAMBODIA REPORT. Compiled by: The American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Singapore 1 Scotts Road #23-03/04/05 Shaw Centre Singapore AND

The Evolving Role of Trade in Asia: Opening a New Chapter. Fall 2018 REO Background Paper

BROWN ADVISORY FUNDS. Brown Advisory Macquarie Asia New Stars Fund (the Fund )

PRODUCT KEY FACTS. Principal Global Investors Funds Global Equity Fund April 2017

THAILAND REPORT. Compiled by: The American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Singapore 1 Scotts Road #23-03/04/05 Shaw Centre Singapore AND

Leading the way in Asia, Africa and the Middle East. Richard Meddings Group Finance Director

GROWTH & INCOME INDEX 2014 UNIT TRUST FUND INVESTOR BEHAVIOUR STUDY MALAYSIA

Enabling the prospects. EY s 2014 attractiveness survey India

Key findings: Economic Outlook

BlackRock Global Funds. Singapore Prospectus and Product Highlights Sheets

FDI in Myanmar and Its Outlook. Aung Naing Oo Director General / Secretary MIC

Strengthening public finance in North and Central Asia. An overview

SECTOR ASSESSMENT (SUMMARY): PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT (PUBLIC EXPENDITURE AND FISCAL MANAGEMENT) Sector Performance, Problems, and Opportunities

Asian Noodle Bowl of International Investment Agreements (IIAs)

Franklin Templeton Fixed Income Group. Franklin Templeton Investment Funds Franklin Asia Credit Fund - I (acc) USD. Data as of 30 November 2018

VIETNAM REPORT. Compiled by: The American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham) in Singapore 1 Scotts Road #23-03/04/05 Shaw Centre Singapore AND

For More Efficient Tax Administration in Asia

Demographic Trends in Japan and the Future of Life Insurance

Why Corporate Governance is Important in APEC Economies

PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS SHEET

Role in the Context of Asia s AML/CFT Compliance Regime

THE ASEAN BUSINESS OUTLOOK SURVEY 2011

Feasibility Analysis Simulation Model for Managing Construction Risk Factors

Global/Regional Economic and Financial Outlook. Odd Per Brekk Director IMF Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific APEC SFOM, June

CHAPTER 2 International Trade Activities of Thai SMEs

Inaugural Infrastructure Project Finance Securitisation in Asia

CBRE CAMBODIA SEA MARKET & VALUATION TRENDS 28 SEPTEMBER 2018

GASIFICATION TECHNOLOGIES CONFERENCE 2015 INDONESIA-CURRENT OUTLOOK FOR FOREIGN INVESTMENT. Richard Cant-North American Director October 12 th, 2015

In the appendices of this document, we will explain detailed information with respect to each class of products:

Presentation for Institutional Investors (FY16 1 st Half)

Growing Revenue with a Superior Balance Sheet

Minutes of Meeting. ADB/OECD Anti-Corruption Initiative for Asia and the Pacific. Participants. Chairs of the Meeting. Summary of the Discussions

Comparison Of GST Rates And Revenue From GST In Selected Asian Countries. Initial Standard Rate (%)

Asia Key Economic and Financial Indicators 20-Oct-16

HSBC GIF Managed Solutions - Asia Focused Growth Quarterly fund report Q2 2014

Actuarial Supply & Demand. By i.e. muhanna. i.e. muhanna Page 1 of

INFRASTRUCTURE NEEDS

PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS SHEET

World Bank Perspective for PPP in the Road Sector in India

Monthly Outlook. June Summary

Pre-poll Methodology for Asiamoney Brokers Poll 2016

HSBC GIF Managed Solutions - Asia Focused Income Quarterly fund report Q2 2014

Global Insurance CFO Survey Asia supplement

THE SCOTTISH ORIENTAL SMALLER COMPANIES TRUST PLC

DKSH Holding Ltd. Presentation Half-year results 2018

The effects of the financial crisis on developing countries mapping out the issues. By Julian Jessop

Financial Results for the First Three Months of the Fiscal Year Ending March 31, 2017 [J-GAAP] (Consolidated)

Malaysia s export growth at record high in 2017

Table of Contents. Executive Summary. Profile of Participants

Asian Banking, Depositor Preference, and Deposit Insurance

Strong Asian Growth. Asian Bond Markets Initiative

Would the Integration of Asian Financial Markets Benefit From Regional Rating Agencies?

Financial Results for the First Nine Months of the Fiscal Year Ending March 31, 2017 [J-GAAP] (Consolidated)

Asia Key Economic and Financial Indicators 13-Jul-17

Financial Institutions Profiles Series. Manulife Financial: A Leading Canadian Financial Services Company. (Table of Contents)

How to Increase Bond Market Liquidity an AsianBondsOnline Survey

Transcription:

The impact of political risks on public-private partnership (PPP) opportunities in Asia Tillmann Sachs, PhD Candidate, tillmann.sachs@gmail.com Dr. Robert LK Tiong, Associate Professor, clktiong@ntu.edu.sg Abstract Political risks have strong impact on opportunities in public-private partnerships (PPP). This paper presents the results of a survey conducted among PPP practitioners from multiple backgrounds and countries on the impact of political risks on PPP opportunities in Asian countries and sectors. The level of perceived political risks determines the costs in PPP projects. The survey shows that political risks differ significantly across the 14 Asian countries and 14 PPP sectors surveyed. The survey shows that with increasing political risks, PPP opportunities become less and the costs of PPPs increase as well. The political risk profiles between matured and developing countries in Asia do not correlate significantly, thereby allowing for the suggestion that with increasing economic development, PPP opportunities may also increase. Introduction In Asian countries, the number of public-private partnership (PPPs) opportunities is increasing. Under PPPs, private sector entities provide public sector goods and services such as utilities, infrastructure, social services, and public real estate. The success of PPPs depends on the successful identification, allocation, mitigation, and management of risks. Political risks are key risks in the public-private relationship. Some political risks are insurable (A to D) by public and private insurers while others aren t (E and F): - A: Currency inconvertibility and transfer restriction (CI/TR) - B: Expropriation - C: Breach of contract - D: Political violence - E: Legal, regulatory, and bureaucratic risks - F: Non-governmental action risks Impact of political risks on public-private partnerships (PPPs) A: Currency inconvertibility and transfer B: Expropriation C: Breach of Contract D: Political violence E: Legal, regulatory, and bureaucratic risks F: Nongovernmental action risks Insurable sovereign risks Figure 1: Influence diagram of political risks The survey covers PPP opportunities in Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. 1

PPPs are possible in a number of sectors. In the different countries, not all sectors are equally developed for PPPs. The survey covers following PPP sectors: - Utilities: power, water and waste water, and waste treatment and management - Infrastructure: toll road, rail, sea port, and airport - Social infrastructure and public real estate: mail, IT and telecommunications, education, health, leisure and sports, administration, and security The respondents were asked to indicate their perception by using a seven grade scale from extremely low to extremely high. The survey consists of three parts: one is on political risk assessment in PPP opportunities in Asian countries and sectors, the other one asks for perceptions on the likelihood and impact of the six political risk factors on financial decision criteria in specific projects, and the thirs asks for absolute values of these parameters. Asian countries Ranking of political risks within countries The survey shows that within the Asian countries, the political risk factors vary in their perception. In Bangladesh for instance, currency inconvertibility and transfer restrictions are perceived as having the highest negative impact on possible PPP opportunities. For all Asian countries, except Korea, Japan, and Singapore, legal, regulatory, and bureaucratic risks are perceived as having the strongest negative impact on PPP opportunities. These are followed by currency inconvertibility and transfer restrictions, breach of contract, then nongovernmental action or outside risks, and expropriation. The least risky factor is political violence. The picture differs significantly for the matured economies of Korea, Japan, and Singapore. They seem to bear little internal political risks and the worst political risk that may impact PPP opportunities in these matured economies is induced by actions outside the span of control of the host governments. However, the perceived second riskiest factor is legal, regulatory and bureaucratic risks followed by breach of contract, political violence, and expropriation. The least critical factor in these comparatively strong economies is currency inconvertibility and transfer restrictions. This comparison of survey results indicates that PPPs in developing countries need to mitigate different risk profiles than in matured economies. While developing and matured Asian economies have in common that breach of contract risk is higher than expropriation risk, it is the opposite for currency inconvertibility, political violence, legal and regulators risks, and nongovernmental action risks. In fact, there is only a weak positive correlation between the two country sets of r = 0.143 and the level of significance of this correlation is less than 75%. Future PPP opportunities in Asian countries The survey responses indicate that in the near future, there will be less PPP opportunities than from 2010 to 2025. While in the developing Asian countries there will continuously be increasing opportunities in 2016 to 2025, the peak for PPP opportunities in the matured economies of Japan, Korea, and Singapore will be between 2010 and 2015. 2

Comparing the survey results on the future PPP opportunities by country provides a more accurate picture. While India is the single champion, Cambodia, Bangladesh, and Pakistan show least opportunities in PPPs throughout the years. Singapore ranks second best in 2007, but is drastically declining in the following years. Vietnam and Indonesia in contrary are most exceptional and consistently pick up in promising PPP opportunities. Malaysia is first picking up and then declining while Philippines is the reverse. Japan remains unchanged at rank seven. South Korea, China, and Thailand vary at a high rank level but show neither drastic up nor down developments. Taiwan starts from the third highest level and will at first pick up momentum but then decline and remain at a lower level. PPP sectors Ranking of PPP sectors with respect to political risks In general, PPP opportunities in utilities are perceived riskiest, followed by infrastructure PPP opportunities. The survey suggests that social infrastructure and public real estate are least exposed to political risks. Ranking of political risks within sectors Except for rail, legal, regulatory, and bureaucratic risks are the single worst risk category across all sectors. The risk profiles across the aggregated sectors correlate positively with each other. Legal, regulatory, and bureaucratic risks and non-governmental action risks are perceived the most critical ones. Currency inconvertibility and expropriation are perceived least risky. Political violence and breach of contract are ranked medium across the aggregated sectors. Future PPP opportunities in sectors In general, the peak for PPP opportunities will be between 2010 and 2015 while in the near future, there are fewer opportunities than after 2016. Following figure illustrates the ranking from the least to the most attractive sectors Mail, security, administration and education promise the least PPP opportunities in the future. PPPs in power, water and waste water, and leisure and sports promise the greatest opportunities. Opportunities in rail and waste management and treatment are continuously imcreasing over the years, while IT/telecommunications, airports, and toll roads vary in the middle range. Health remains relatively unchanged and PPP opportunities in sea ports decline. In aggregation, from 2007 to 2025, social infrastructure and public real estate promise the least PPP opportunities, while infrastructure is second and the most PPP opportunities are with the utilities. Project specific political risk quantification With increasing political risks, investment appetite decreases. Also with increasing political risks, the expected minimum internal rate of return (IRR), minimum required debt-service-coverageratio (DSCR), the risk margin on loans, and the insurance premiums increase. Investment 3

appetite, loan spread, and insurance premium are chosen to best show the effect of political risks on the PPP project participants objectives. The survey shows that there are also positive correlations between loan risk margins and minimum required DSCR, and positive correlations between investment appetite and minimum expected IRR. The survey respondents were asked to provide their perception on the likelihood of occurrence and possible consequence of the six single political risk factors on these five financial decision criteria in specific projects. Also, respondents were asked to provide absolute values on project specific financial criteria as reference. The doctoral research on quantifying qualitative information on risks (QQIR) has been applied to quantify these perceptions. The project specific risk perceptions correlate with the general country and sector perceptions discussed before 1. If the perceived political risks increase, the amount of investment decreases 2. If the perceived political risks increase, the expected IRR will increase 3. If the perceived political risks increase, the minimum annual DSCR will increase 4. If the perceived political risks increase, the risk margin on a project loan will increase 5. If the perceived political risks increase, the insurance premium will increase 6. There is zero or a negative correlation between risk margin on loans and insurance premium 7. With decreasing equity commitment, the risk margin on a project loan increases 8. With decreasing equity commitment, the insurance premium increases 9. With decreasing investment appetite, the minimum required DSCR increases 10. There is a positive correlation between increasing investment appetite and expected IRR 11. There is a positive correlation between increasing minimum required DSCR and risk margin on loans Table 1: Risk and return Direct survey response QQIR validation No. of responses true [%] false [%] Correlation Level of significance 21 90.48% 9.52% 0.51 90%-95% 22 81.82% 18.18% 0.6 90%-95% 23 82.61% 17.39% 0.71 97.5% - 99% 21 95.24% 4.76% 0.21 <75% 20 100.00% 0.00% 0.43 75%-90% 21 14.29% 85.71% 0.85 99.90%-99.95% 22 90.91% 9.09% 0.65 90%-95% 21 66.67% 33.33% 0.71 90%-95% The numerical results fall within the actual market data, presented by HSBC. n.a. 0.68 90%-95% 0.17 <75% HSBC market data presentation QQIR results UK PFI Asia PPP Impact of political risks on PPPs in Asia Leverage > 90% 60% 80 % 72% Bank Risk Margins < 100bp > 100bp 188bp Base case equity risk premiums 12% - 30% 10% - 20% 14% ADSCR Min. 1.18 1.2 1.2 1.4 1.36 Tenor > 30 years 12 15 years n.a. subject to market Maturity 1 2 years 2 5 years n.a. Insurance premium n.a. n.a. 115bp 0.40 75%-90% Table 2: UK PFI vs. Asia PPP Financing Snapshot [HSBC] in comparison to QQIR results (Partial source: Tho, L. (2006) Public Private Partnerships Financing PPP projects. 3 rd Asian PPP Summit, Singapore, May 25 th, HSBC presentation) Conclusion The three data sets of survey findings are consistent and also correspond with current PPP market data. This survey has clearly shown that political risks have a significant impact on a country s development. The higher the perceived political risks, the lower are chances for PPP opportunities in these countries and the costs for PPPs in such countries increase as well. While for example Bangladesh, Cambodia, and Pakistan are perceived riskiest, they also are perceived promising the least PPP opportunities. A reason may be quoted from a survey respondent: PPPs 4

require stable legal and regulatory frameworks. In contrary, the survey also yields the result that in sectors, the risk-return perception may be different. While for instance power is perceived being among the riskiest project types, power also promises some of the highest future opportunities. In general, utility projects are perceived riskier than infrastructure projects or social infrastructure and public real estate projects. These also are perceived promising more opportunities. However, one may not jump to the conclusion that in political risky countries such as Indonesia, only investments in risky projects such as power projects are the most promising opportunities, nor that in countries with little political risks such as Singapore educational projects offer least PPP opportunities. For project appraisal, opportunities and risks must be assessed country and sector specific and may contradict the here described general trends. Acknowledgements Many thanks to all survey respondents for their time and effort in answering the questionnaire and responding to additional queries and evaluations. The survey has been commissioned by James Neal, Ernst & Young, Partner, Global Head of Project Finance. The survey has been supported by Daniel Wagner, Senior Cofinancing Specialist (Guarantees), from the Office of Cofinancing Operations (OCO) at the Asian Development Bank (ADB), Bela Onken, Senior Project Manager, Team Project Finance, KfW- IPEX Bank, Prof. Dr. Hans Wilhelm Alfen, Chair of Construction Economics, Bauhaus University Weimar (BUW) and head of EU-Asia network for PPP enhancement, and Dr. Andreas Wibowo, Ministry of Public Works, Indonesia. 5