Business Standard

GLOBAL PENSION FUNDS KEEN ON HIGHWAY PROJECTS

- MEGHA MANCHANDA New Delhi, 20 July

Internatio­nal pension funds with an appetite for staying invested for several years are expected to be primary suitors for the highway contracts to be auctioned next month by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI).

Experts say the government wants to generate cash to support its next tranche of investment in the highways sector. They are of the view that foreign pension funds would be keen to bid for such projects because they typically invest in those with a longer duration, unlike private companies, which look for quick results.

“Since most of the constructi­onrelated risk is taken care of by the government, the private sector would be interested in these contracts because the traffic is already establishe­d and the government is hopeful of getting surplus cash post auctions,” said Adil Zaidi, partner-economic developmen­t and infrastruc­ture advisory, EY.

He said the government should plan the highways and alignments it intended to auction.

During consultati­ons with the government, pension funds and sovereign wealth funds had suggested that the financial packages to be offered by the Under the toll-operate-transfer (TOT) model, the right to collect toll on select highways built by the government is proposed to be assigned for a specific period to developers or investors against an upfront payment. During the tenure of the contract, the operation and maintenanc­e (O&M) responsibi­lity would remain with the developer | Monetisati­on of publicfund­ed national highways expected to attract long-term institutio­nal investment | Global funds keen to participat­e in operationa­l highway projects with stable toll revenue outlook | In August 2016, Cabinet authorised the NHAI to monetise public-funded projects that are operationa­l and are generating toll revenues for at least two years after the commercial operations via TOT | The monetisati­on will be subject to approval of the competent authority in the government should be large-sized. For instance, of the 11 projects that are likely to be auctioned in the first round of auctions in August, a particular pension may be interested only if it wins at least three or four such contracts. The value of these projects should not be Ministry of Road Transport and Highways/NHAI on a case-to-case basis | Around 75 operationa­l projects completed under public funding were identified for potential monetisati­on using the TOT model | This model would provide an

efficient O&M framework, less than $200 million.

Global pension funds might be attracted by the certainty of the return on investment, an analyst said.

Last year, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs authorised the NHAI to monetise 111 publicly-funded requiring reduced NHAI involvemen­t in projects | Further, the corpus generated from the proceeds of such project monetisati­on could be utilised by the government to meet its requiremen­ts on developmen­t and O&M of highways in the country National Highway (NH) projects that were operationa­l and were generating toll for at least two years after the Commercial Operations Date (COD) through the toll-operate-transfer (TOT) model. Around 75 operationa­l NH projects completed under public funding have been preliminar­ily identified for potential monetisati­on using the TOT model.

This model would provide an operation and maintenanc­e (O&M) framework, requiring the NHAI’s reduced involvemen­t in projects after constructi­on completion.

Further, the corpus generated from the proceeds of such project monetisati­on could be utilised by the government to meet its fund requiremen­ts regarding developmen­t and O&M of highways in the country. This could help the developmen­t and strengthen­ing of highways in unviable geographie­s.

The government aims to cater for that category of investors which is averse to taking constructi­on risks but is adequately equipped for making long-term investment­s in road infrastruc­ture, e.g. institutio­nal investors including pension and insurance funds, and sovereign funds.

In the past Macquarie, Brookfield, Cube Highways, and other such global funds took equity in NH projects worth ~4,150 crore, from which private promoters had exited.

The auction can also be seen as a move to allow the entry of sovereign funds from Abu Dhabi and Qatar into such projects.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India