7.2. Financial Structure: Categories, Instruments and Sources (fund suppliers) — Financial Strategy of the Sponsor/Private Partner [81] (2024)

7.2.1. Sources of Funds

The two main types of funds raised by a project company, as in any corporate finance structure, are debt and equity.

Debt may be in the form of loans or bonds. Equity may be take the form of pure equity or capital shares, and quasi-equity products (junior or subordinated debt, mezzanine debt, and so on); these are senior to the equity shares, but subordinated to the (senior) debt or main debt.

There are multiple sources and sub-categories for both the main categories of funds. The main ones are explained on the following pages.

TABLE 1.6: Sources of Funds and Fund Providers

Main Category/Instrument

Fund Providers and Main Features

Equity

Capital shares

Typically a contractor/industrial developer with an interest in construction and/or the O&M aspect of the asset.

Sometimes a financial investor (that is, not an industrial partner), usually as co-investor. These are typically infrastructure funds or other risk capital investors (in some cases, an institutional investor will directly invest in the project). (See the brief description, in the box 1.25 of the role of infrastructure funds and other financial investors).

On some occasions, the government may invest in equity shares in the SPV, acting as a financial partner, with the investment coming directly from the procuring authority, or through the structured funds of a trustee or by “strategic investment funds”.(see chapter 5.5)

In some highly sophisticated markets, retail investors are becoming common, entering into the project structure through Initial Public Offerings (IPOs).[82]

Junior or subordinated debt, mezzanine debt

Typically provided by industrial developer/contractor shareholders for tax efficiency purposes.

May be provided by third party financial investors (including government on some occasions as described above) to provide higher protection, but still higher returns than conventional debt.

Debt (senior debt)

Loans – bridging loans/short-term or mini-terms, long-term loans

Commercial banks and investment banks are the most usual debt providers. Others include the following.

  • MDBs: Multilateral/regional development banks (World Bank, International Finance Corporation, Inter-American Development Bank, CAF Bank, Asian Development Bank, African Development Bank, and so on). See section 7.2.3 below.
  • ECAs: Export Credit Agencies and/or Bilateral Development Banks. See box 1.26.
  • National Development Banks (NDBs): National development banks or national financial agencies (for example, Banobras in México, Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) in Brazil, Instituto de Credito Oficial in Spain, and so on). See section 7.4.1.

It should be noted that MDBs and ECAs in particular, but also NDBs, may either provide finance or facilitate access to finance by means of guarantees (and sometimes credit risk insurance in the case of some ECAs).

  • Institutional investors: More recently and in sophisticated markets, institutional investors (such as pension funds, insurance companies and sovereign funds) are providing debt to PPPs, usually through project bonds under a private placement scheme as explained below.
  • Shadow lenders and debt funds: Some specialized infrastructure funds may also provide debt to PPPs.

The most conventional scheme for project loans (the loan subscribed by the SPV) is a long-term loan. However, the private partner may, in some projects, opt for short-term loans with the aim of refinancing it at term (or the private partner may be forced to do so, depending on the ability of the respective market to provide long-term loans from the outset).

Short-term loans or loans aimed to be refinanced are called mini-terms when they are structured under project finance (that is, on the basis of the project creditworthiness) rather than being a loan fully guaranteed by the sponsor (which is conventionally referred to as a bridge loan)[83].

Bonds or project bonds[84]

Bonds as an instrument for debt come primarily from “capital markets”, i.e. institutional investors (pension and annuation funds, insurance companies, and sovereign funds), wealthy and super-wealthy investors (directly or through “family offices”), through an IPO or through “direct placements”. In some markets and for some projects, the bonds may also raise funds from retail investors.

Some emerging markets (such as Chile, México and more recently Perú, amongst others in Latin America) are relying increasingly on project bonds as a way to finance infrastructure, relying either on the local institutional investors or on international investors[85].

Also, some multilaterals and national agencies may act as buyers/investors to boost the infrastructure capital markets.

Other debt structures

PPP projects may include other financing instruments and structures (especially in PPPs where the main Capex relates to equipment and supplies) such as leasing (operational or financial), supplier credits, supplier financing (when the supplier of equipment accepts a deferred payment, usually structured in promissory notes, that may be discounted with or without recourse – forfeiting – to a third party), or Islamic finance structures.

Note: Shadow lending is a term used to mean loans provided by “shadow banks” which includes all entities outside of the regulated banking system that perform the core banking function, and credit intermediation (taking money from savers and lending it to borrowers). Money market mutual funds that pool investors’ funds to purchase commercial paper (corporate IOUs) or mortgage-backed securities are also considered shadow banks (IMF, Finance & Development, http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2013/06/basics.htm).

BOX 1.25: Infrastructure Funds and Financial Partners[86]

For new projects in developing countries, the main equity provider is usually the contractor. Most of the construction groups have a dedicated arm or subsidiary to manage their PPP business and to invest equity in the SPVs for their projects.

However, a pure financial investor (that is, one with no interest in the PPP project other than equity investment) may also be an equity partner.

The most common kind of financial investor is an ”infrastructure fund”. Such funds are structured similarly to any other investment fund (for example, a private equity fund). These are funds in which a number of original investors contribute their money (acting as “limited partners” or LPs), and a “management company” is in charge of managing those funds, investing them on behalf of the LPs, and overseeing the assets during the life of the fund.

The typical investor in a fund (LP) is an institutional investor (pension funds, sovereign funds, and insurance companies), but the LPs may also include family offices, high net worth individuals, and even banks. Some LPs are increasingly investing directly in the projects through their own platforms (but usually only in larger projects).

Financial investors in PPPs and infrastructure, including infrastructure funds, are more interested in projects that are already operational (so as to avoid the construction risk and enjoy a more immediate access to the “yield”, that is, to the distributions from the project company). Their investment in the assets when they are in their operating period is also good for the developer industry, as this will help developers to recycle capital and have cash available to invest in new projects. However, participation of the investor industry in greenfield projects (newly tendered DBFOMs) should be promoted by governments so as to increase the capacity of the developer market in a particular PPP program.

Specialized financial investors should be considered positively and approached by governments when promoting their PPP programs. Contracts should be carefully structured so as to facilitate the participation of this kind of equity investor (for example, to attract these investors the PPP contract should allow reasonable flexibility regarding equity share transfers).

7.2.2. Introduction to Financial Structuring and Financial Strategy

Financial structuring (from the private sector/sponsor point of view) refers to the art of designing the mix of funds to be used to finance the project, especially with respect to how much debt to raise and with what repayment profile. This maximizes the private partner’s equity IRR (or for the same targeted IRR, to be more competitive in the price submitted in the bid).

It includes the analysis and decisions regarding debt instruments, when more than one is available (for example, loans versus bonds), and also the potential definition of different tranches or different loan agreements (for example, whether or not to raise subordinated debt which is more expensive but more flexible than the senior debt).

At a more defined level, financial structuring must also determine several factors: the order and timing of drawdowns, the repayment profile of the different sources of finance, and the required financial support (for example, parent guarantees, bank guarantees) from sponsors and key sub-contractors.

Equity funds are always committed (or underwritten) before bid submission. By definition, the submission of an offer requires a firm commitment by the bidder to invest the capital as requested in the Request for Proposal or as committed in the submitted financial plan.

Debt may be also committed before bid submission when the tender process requires it. This requirement is common in dialogue and other interactive processes[87], and in some processes that pre-select a shortlist of bidders. In open tender models, the common approach worldwide is to request “sufficient” evidence regarding the availability of the finance[88]. This is further discussed in section 7.3.

The prospective bidder will analyze the options and investigate the availability of different sources of finance during bid preparation (or in an earlier stage when conducting a preliminary assessment of the opportunity, before deciding to invest significant resources in assembling the proposal). The bidder will incorporate these options and approaches into a financial structure so as to define its financial base case.

Financial strategy is a term that may be confusing as it overlaps with financial structuring. For the purpose of this PPP Certification Guide, financial strategy refers to the decision as to how and when to approach funders, especially lenders (for example, when the financial package is not required to be fully committed at bid submission[89]). Financial strategy includes the analysis of two potential options regarding the debt raising and structuring.

  • Short-term loans assuming the risk of refinancing the loan, usually after construction. These can also be called a bridging loan strategy or a mini-perm (when the short-term loan is arranged on a project finance basis). This provides access to the potential upside[90] of de-risking the project scheme after construction and a greater ability to switch between debt and capital markets, or to capture falls in general interest rates; and
  • A long-term project finance loan from the outset. This introduces less flexibility related to interest rate swaps (the most extended scheme to minimize interest risks and usually a requirement by lenders), but offers higher certainty and less risk. When the project finance scheme relies on issuing bonds in the capital markets, the financial package implementation is more complex. Disintermediation or fundraising through capital markets is only an option for countries with active national institutional investors (pension funds, insurance companies) or with access to global institutional investors which will usually require a credit rating provided by a rating agency[91].

From the public sector standpoint, availability of finance is one of the key elements for the success of a PPP, and it is a pre-condition that must be met if the government is to move ahead with a PPP scheme.

As discussed in section 5.6 (#a, the financial challenge), in countries where there is no sufficient availability of finance (a minimum number of lenders and capacity to lend for the long term, for example, more than 10-year terms), PPPs may not work. In some limited circ*mstances, governments may help to fill the potential gap of availability (in terms of volume of debt accessible in the respective market) by providing a portion of the debt through a national bank or national agency (see next heading). Governments can also assume or share foreign exchange risks to facilitate access to cross border financing for projects. In other cases, financial support by Multilateral Development Banks is paramount.

But even in cases where the financial market is sufficiently capable of absorbing significant debt levels, there will be projects that will not be accepted by the lending market because the risk profile (even when properly structured) may not be acceptable, or there may occasionally be projects that are so large that they exceed the size of the financial market. This is explained in sections 7.3 and 7.4.

Financial structuring and strategy is the responsibility of the private investor. Therefore, the government should not create restrictions as to where the private investor should raise the finance from (for example, by insisting on local banks), or what instruments or structure should be negotiated, other than setting up maximum leverage, or insisting on a lending competition (when appropriate) – see section 7.5.

Appendix 6A includes a deeper description of financial structuring and the fundraising process.

7.2.3. The Role of the Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs)[92]

When dealing with PPPs in EMDE countries, a significant role is played by MDBs, such as the World Bank Group (usually under the International Finance Corporation, IFC), the Inter-American Development Bank (directly or through the Inter-American Investment Corporation, IIC), the Asian Development Bank (ADB), the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), the European Investment Bank (EIB[93]), the African Bank for Development (AfDB) and the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB). Other agencies with a more regional focus are the CAF Bank for the Andean region or the Banco Centroamericano de Integración Económica (BCIE) for Central America, among others.

MDBs provide financing for projects (PPP and other public or private projects) — most frequently in hard currency — for long terms. These are usually longer terms than commercial lenders who may not offer sufficient length or amount to the project finance structure. The presence of these institutions provides protection to the commercial lenders under A/B loan structures due to the preferred creditor status of most of the MDBs. An A loan is one provided by the MDB, and the B loan is a commercial loan syndicated to the commercial lenders which is protected indirectly by a cross-default clause. The presence of the MDB may be paramount for those international commercial banks assuming project risks in an emerging market and agreeing to provide cross-border finance.

In addition, an MDB may provide guarantee facilities (partial risk and partial guarantees), or specific guarantees against political risks both to the commercial banks and investors (for example, the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency [MIGA], as part of the World Bank Group, provides such guarantees). Examples of partial guarantees are numerous.

One interesting example is the participation by the IDB in the IIRSA project in Perú. IIRSA Amazonas Norte is a 960 kilometer (km) network of toll roads located in northern Peru, which link the Amazonian region in the eastern interior of the country with its Pacific coast. The project was financed with a project bond issued under 144-A for an amount of $224 million, based on Recognition Certificates of the Annual Payment for Work (CRPAOs) committed to by the government, which also had a partial guarantee by IDB for $60 million. This example is interesting as it illustrates how MDBs may support the development of sophisticated financial solutions in EMDE countries.

More recently, these institutions have begun developing their own infrastructure funds (IFC launched in 2011 a $1 billion infrastructure fund[94]) or are providing funds to privately managed infrastructure funds as another LP.

However, the support of MDBs in the PPP context goes beyond the finance provision, and includes the following:

  • Support in identification and selection of projects;
  • Support in PPP structuring, acting as advisors to governments or providing funding for hiring advisors to obtain a better structure and design for the PPP; and
  • Policy advice to strengthen the policy and PPP framework.

BOX 1.26: Bilateral Financial Support: The Role of ECAs

MDBs are not the only international players in the financing of international projects. Most countries (developed and some developing) have established “Export Credit Agencies” (ECAs). These are financial (or insurance) institutions that provide financial support to projects developed by their national companies abroad.

This support is more usual in export contracts, providing financial facilities to the foreign buyer, public or private. However, ECAs also play a role in project finance structures, including PPP projects.

Their participation is obviously linked to the participation of a bidder from the ECA’s country, which may be in the form of finance to the project, but is most frequently the provision of guarantees (to the lenders to the project and also, in some cases, to the equity investors). Some country’s ECAs provide both forms of support, and some others provide only guarantees or insurance against credit risks (including political risk). Some notable examples are the Export-Import Bank (EXIM) and the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) (US), CESCE (Spain), Hermes (Germany), SACE (Italy), the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) (Japan), and the Export-Import Bank of Korea (KEXIM) (Republic of Korea).

The provision of that support is subject to the conditions settled by the “OECD Consensus” whose aim is to regulate the conditions to avoid the financial dumping competition among countries by controlling the potential subsidization of the financing.

7.2.3. Islamic Finance Particularities

In Islamic countries, financing has a series of particularities that relate to religion. Banks and lenders in general have to operate in accordance with Sharia (the Islamic law). Sharia law influences the types of investments that are permissible and influences the way in which a financial transaction is handled. For example, interest payments are not permitted, but there may be a legitimate bank profit based on the bank sharing the profit and loss of the enterprise to which it is lending.

Appendix B to this chapter provides information on this special subject.

7.2. Financial Structure: Categories, Instruments and Sources (fund suppliers) — Financial Strategy of the Sponsor/Private Partner [81] (2024)

FAQs

What is the structure of a financial instrument? ›

Structured financial instruments comprise a range of products designed to repackage and redistribute risk. They are pre-packaged investments based on a single security, a basket of securities, options, commodities, debt issuance or foreign currencies, and to a lesser extent, derivatives.

What are the elements of the financial structure? ›

Financial structure refers to the mix of debt and equity that a company uses to finance its operations. It can also be known as capital structure. Private and public companies use the same framework for developing their financial structure but there are several differences between the two.

What are the funding structures? ›

The financial structure comprises various sources of capital for your business. It includes short-term liabilities, short-term debt, long-term debt, and equity. A company can use any or all of these instruments in unique proportions to fund its long-term and short-term working capital requirements.

What is financial structure with example? ›

Financial structure gives an insight into a company's leverage and cost of capital. For example, an asset to equity, debt-to-equity. It helps the investors determine the organization's leverage position and risk level. read more, etc., are some ratios that give an idea about financial structure.

What are the 3 main categories of financial instruments? ›

There are typically three types of financial instruments: cash instruments, derivative instruments, and foreign exchange instruments.

What are examples of financial instruments? ›

Financial instruments are tools like stocks, bonds, and derivatives used in finance for investing, trading, and risk management. How do stocks and bonds differ? Stocks represent ownership in a company, while bonds are debt securities issued by entities including governments and corporations.

What are the 7 components of a financial plan? ›

A good financial plan contains seven key components:
  • Budgeting and taxes.
  • Managing liquidity, or ready access to cash.
  • Financing large purchases.
  • Managing your risk.
  • Investing your money.
  • Planning for retirement and the transfer of your wealth.
  • Communication and record keeping.

What is financial structure analysis? ›

The Financial Structures analysis test assesses candidates' knowledge of the different financing options (debt, bonds, capital increase, etc.), their comparative advantages and the actors involved in choosing a financial structure.

How do you create a financial structure? ›

4 Steps to structure your company's financial planning
  1. Make a budget forecast. ...
  2. Understand the company's costs. ...
  3. Understand and record your financial transactions. ...
  4. Control and reduce expenses.

What is a good debt to equity ratio? ›

The optimal D/E ratio varies by industry, but it should not be above a level of 2.0. A D/E ratio of 2 indicates the company derives two-thirds of its capital financing from debt and one-third from shareholder equity.

How to calculate the financial structure of a company? ›

The formula to determine a company's capital structure, expressed in percentage form, is as follows. Where: Common Equity Weight (%) = Common Equity ÷ Total Capitalization. Debt Weight (%) = Total Debt ÷ Total Capitalization.

What is the difference between capital structure and financial structure? ›

Capital Structure is a combination of different types of long-term sources of funds. Financial Structure is a combination of different types of long-term as well as short-term sources of funds. The Capital Structure is a part of the Liabilities section of the Balance Sheet.

Does leverage increase risk? ›

However, it should be used cautiously since too much leverage can increase risk and lead to losses. Taking the time to understand how this works and assessing your risk level will help you take advantage of its benefits without overexposing yourself to potential losses.

What is the conclusion of financial structure? ›

In conclusion, financial structure is the blueprint that shapes a company's financial landscape. It encompasses the mix of debt and equity, the cost of capital, and the sources of funds that fuel a company's operations and growth.

What is the general structure of financial accounting? ›

Financial statements follow standard formats and accounting principles based on location, such as Indian Accounting Standards, GAAP, or IFRS. The statements include income statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement, and statement of changes in equity.

What are the structures of financial reporting? ›

As you have seen, there are four basic financial statements: the Income Statement, the Statement of Owners' Equity, the Balance Sheet, and the Statement of Cash Flows.

What are the features of a financial instrument? ›

Financial instruments act as stores of value (like money).
  • Financial instruments generate increases in wealth that are larger than from holding money.
  • Financial instruments can be used to transfer purchasing power into the future.

What is the financial structure of the balance sheet? ›

The balance sheet (also referred to as the statement of financial position) discloses what an entity owns (assets) and what it owes (liabilities) at a specific point in time. Equity is the owners' residual interest in the assets of a company, net of its liabilities.

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