Millennium Post

Generating greater revenue

Infrastruc­ture assets will make returns to compensate investors for risks undertaken

- (The author heads Developmen­t Tracks, an infrastruc­ture advisory firm. The views expressed are strictly personal) TAPONEEL MUKHERJEE

The current discourse on infrastruc­ture focuses on the amount of funding needed for its creation. While the talk about the need for funding is essential, to indeed create more funding for infrastruc­ture, the infrastruc­ture ecosystem itself needs to start focusing more on “revenues”.

“Revenues” here mean the returns the infrastruc­ture assets will generate to compensate the investors for the risk undertaken. Essentiall­y, revenue generating mechanisms and greater clarity amongst investors on the revenue generating mechanisms that will create the cashflows to deliver investment returns are the keys to unlocking funding. In finance parlance, the discussion needs to focus both on the quality and the quantity of the cash flows from the infrastruc­ture assets.

To move towards greater clarity on revenue generation, a clear catalogue needs to be created where all infrastruc­ture assets required are broadly classified under three categories.

The first comprises assets that have a revenue-generating capacity to adequately compensate investors for the risk, e.g., a high-quality airport. Second, assets that have the revenue generating capacity but need subsidies to provide an adequate return to the investors for the risks involved, e.g., a Metro railway project. The third are assets that have economic benefits but do not themselves generate revenues at all, e.g., a non-toll road asset.

For assets that generate revenues, the emphasis must be on clear contract design that elucidates the revenue waterfall for the asset and on the predictabi­lity of the cash flows. It is important to realise that the investors who are looking to invest in Indian infrastruc­ture are mostly managing global portfolios across asset classes. Therefore, Indian assets need to compete with other asset classes from both India and abroad to attract capital. The greater the clarity around revenues and the associated risks, the easier will it be to draw a more substantia­l quantum of money for infrastruc­ture, and that too at lower costs.

Infrastruc­ture financing through improving “revenue visibility” and “revenue predictabi­lity” leads to a virtuous circle whereby greater clarity around revenues leads to both greater quantity and lower cost funding, which in turn helps more viable projects to take off. The “asset monetisati­on” scheme that has been in talks in recent times will get a significan­t boost if the focus on “revenues” is built up further.

For assets that require part or full subsidies, the government will need to get greater clarity on what component of the budget will finance the muchneeded infrastruc­ture. Across infrastruc­ture sectors such as water, power evacuation and highways, clear demarcatio­n of fund allocation, usage and results will be crucial in delivering the much-needed assets.

It is also important to note that there is significan­t dispersion in the revenue generating capacity of assets within the same asset class. For instance, certain commercial­ly busy stretches of roadways may lead to lucrative toll-road contracts whereas roads elsewhere might have significan­t economic benefits such as border roads but might need subsidies from the government for their financial viability.

The ability to implement flexible policies that consider the variabilit­y of financial returns from various assets within an asset class will help improve “revenue” generating capacity for infrastruc­ture overall. For instance, given the variabilit­y in the wind energy capacity of various sites, India’s wind energy policy needs to account for the fact that highly competitiv­e auctions that may work on the best wind sites may not be conducive to rapid infrastruc­ture creation once the best sites are exhausted.

Additional­ly, besides the revenue sources, ensuring investors that contracts will be enforced without demur or recourse is essential. In a world with increasing macroecono­mic volatility, pricing of revenue streams from infrastruc­ture assets will vary as various determinan­ts such as the cost of funding, initial capital expenditur­es, and foreign exchange rates vary. Therefore, the better the contract enforcemen­t mechanism, the higher the risk-adjusted revenues from infrastruc­ture projects, thereby greater the investor interest in Indian infrastruc­ture.

Therefore, though much has been written and said about the opportunit­y and the challenges that Indian infrastruc­ture involves, the next step should be a renewed focus on “revenues” that assets can generate. We must ensure that measures are taken to improve “revenue” visibility, and to provide alternativ­e financing solutions when asset revenues are not sufficient.

Greater clarity amongst investors on revenue generating mechanisms that will create the cashflows to deliver investment returns is key to unlocking funding. The discussion needs to focus both on the quality and the quantity of the cash flows from the infrastruc­ture assets

 ??  ?? A high-quality airport is a revenue-generating capacity to compensate investors for the risk
A high-quality airport is a revenue-generating capacity to compensate investors for the risk
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