Asia needs a robust
bond market that can match the financing requirements of huge infrastructure
projects in the region and the growing appetite for long-term assets among
local pension and insurance companies, a seminar at the Asian Development
Bank’s (ADB) 46th Annual Meeting heard today.
“Pension funds,
insurers, sovereign wealth funds and other holders of long-term money could
provide a real shot in the arm for private infrastructure investment,
particularly through bond markets,” ADB vice-president for Private Sector and
Cofinancing Operations Lakshmi Venkatachalam, told the seminar. “The problem
right now is that the project risk profiles and investors’ risk appetite are
largely not matched,” he added.
Beyond a handful of
active countries and sectors, infrastructure project financing in Asia remains
under-developed and under-served – despite the region’s significant savings.
The economic
slowdown in Europe and pressure from Basel III have curtailed the risk appetite
of international banks, while banks in Asia are too focused on their own
markets, and only for favored sectors such as oil, gas, and power. Banks in the
People’s Republic of China and India are among the most active project finance
players in their home markets.
Last year, ADB
approved a first-of-a-kind $128 million facility, developed with India Infrastructure
Finance Company Limited (IIFCL). ADB and Indian finance companies will provide
partial guarantees on rupee-denominated bonds issued by Indian companies to
finance infrastructure projects. ADB will then assume part of that guarantee
risk in the expectation that the initiative will free up bank loans for
redeployment into new projects, channeling more funds for public infrastructure
bonds in India, international bonds for Indian projects, and even for projects
beyond India in the near future.
Another encouraging
sign for the public finance market is that Asian governments are now more
receptive to the concept of public-private partnership, and are lining up
rigorously selected and better-designed infrastructure projects for possible
financing.
In the meantime,
international financial institutions are expanding their activities and
products towards private infrastructure finance to help fill the current gaps.
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