Title: IFC in Russia: Strategy and Financing Instruments
1IFC in Russia Strategy and Financing
Instruments
- Association of European Banks
- Moscow
- May 25, 2005
2Outline
- Evolution of IFCs Strategy in Russia
- Financing Instruments
- Focus on Local Currency Finance
- Focus on Housing Finance
3IFC Investment Strategy in Russia
1990s Focus on TA - privatization and capital
markets - small amount of investment After 1998
Focus on foreign partners - DeltaCredit
Bank From 2001 Shift to local sponsors -
Russian Standard Bank - NBD Bank,
Centre-Invest, ICB St Pete Continued support
for foreign companies expanding into Russia -
Raiffeisen Bank - SocGen (BSGV) Mortgage TA
project Sustainable Energy Finance Project
4IFC Portfolio in Russia by Year
For IFC account
5Sectoral Focus
- Financial Markets
- - independent banks
- - new products (housing finance, leasing,
consumer finance, microfinance) - Real Sectors
- - retail, manufacturing, regional hotels
- - transport/logistics, agribusiness,mining
6IFC Portfolio in Russia by sector (as of June 30,
2004)
Total for IFC account US 1,123
7IFCs Largest Country Exposures(Portfolio for
IFCs account, as of May 2005)
8IFCs Products and Services
- Corporate loans
- Financial intermediaries
- Syndicated loans
- Project financing
- Equity and quasi-equity
- Guarantees
- Advisory services
9Key Investment Guidelines
- Private sector
- Financially, economically, environmentally, and
socially sound - 25 percent maximum IFC share of project cost
- Investment size
- 1 million to 100 million in standard projects
- An increasing focus on support for small and
medium enterprises, mainly through lending to
local financial institutions
10Loans and Intermediary Services
- Fixed or floating market-rate pricing
- Features
- Tailored to cash flow
- Loan maturities of 7 to 12 yeas
- Appropriate grace period
- Lending to projects through banks and leasing
companies
11IFC Financial Products Equity and Quasi-Equity
- Equity investment based on anticipated
- return
- Never the largest shareholder
- Passive investor
- Often considered local shareholder
- Long-term investor
- Quasi-equity convertibles, warrants, preferred
shares, subordinated loans
12Focus on Local Currency Financing
- Objectives
- Hedge exchange rate risks
- Help develop local capital markets
- Products
- Structured finance
- partial credit guarantees
- securitization
- Ruble-linked loans
Russian Standard Bank
Center-Invest Bank
13Russian Mortgage Market
- Mortgage market tiny
- Total outstanding mortgage debt less than 1
billion 0.1 of GDP - Demand for housing finance high
- Weaknesses in legal framework improving
14 Mortgage Investments/GDP
15Russian Mortgage Market
US MN
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
2001
2002
2003
2004
16Russian Mortgage Market Structure
- Commercial
- US Moscow/St. Pete (400-600 mln)
- US 10-15, 5-15 years, true mortgage
- Quasi-Commercial
- Sberbank, Fed. Mortgage Agency
- RR, 13-15, 5-27 years
17Securitization the Great White Hope
- Legal problems
- No SPVs, no tax-neutrality
- Other aspects untested
- Market problems
- No data
- No market
- No long-term funding
- IFC focus
- Now Primary market
- Future Securitization structure
18Housing Finance Recent Investments
- Georgia
- Bank of Georgia
- Russia
- RZB Russia
- Delta Credit Bank (2)
- Societe Generale
- The Baltics
- BalAEF (2)
19Housing Finance Recent TA
- Russia
- Fannie Mae training
- MBS Law assistance
- Securitization working group
- Ukraine
- MBS Law assistance
20IFC Approach to Housing Finance
- FIRST PRIMARY, THEN SECONDARY
- Proven standards (from worldwide experience)
- Focus on mortgage origination
- Move to Ruble finance (as soon as possible)
- Long-term develop secondary market
- Eventually, securitization
- IFC has done first securitizations in several
markets worldwide
21Housing Finance Next Steps
- Primary mortgage market development project
- Combining TA and funding
- Targeting domestic banks (regional)
- Launched in April 2005
22Focus on Energy Efficiency Finance
- Combining TA, GEF guarantee, and funding
- Energy intensity of the Russian economy
- End user inefficiency
- Rising energy tariffs
- Large EE potential in Russia
- Increasingly large potential for financial
savings - New business opportunities
23Program aims at stimulating private sector EE
investment in Russia through
- Overcome the liquidity barrier for EE projects in
select financial institutions (FIs) - Encourage funding of EE projects
- Improve expertise in EE project development at
company level and processing by FIs - Build relationships between FIs, energy service
companies, vendors
CREDIT LINES
PORTFOLIO GUARANTEE
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
24Energy Efficiency Projects Examples
- Replacement of purchased heat by in-house
generation (Metalworking) - Decrease annual heating expenses by 82.
- Investment 546,000. Simple payback 4.4 yrs.
- Installation of a steam boiler and steam turbine
for electricity generation (Food processing) - Generate in-house cheap electricity
- Investment 1,250,000. Simple payback 1.6 yrs.
- Installation of co-generation steam turbines
(Pulp and paper industry) - Decrease expenses for heat and electricity
consumption - Investment 2,860,000. Simple payback 1.6 yrs.
- Installation of co-generating module for in-house
electricity and heat production (Wood working
industry) - Decrease of expenses for electricity consumption
- Investment 2,700,000. Simple payback 2.7 yrs.
25Program Focus Project Criteria
- Ownership private sector projects
- Size gt 50,000, lt 1 million
- Payback period lt five years
- Technical investment must be in a proven
technology
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