THISDAY

‘Pre-export Finance Facility Agreement Promotes Market Efficiency’

- Goddy Egene

Export business practition­ers have been advised to embrace pre-export finance(PXF) as a means of accessing capital to fund their exports.

There are endless opportunit­ies for Nigerians to access foreign exchange through the export of goods and services from various commoditie­s, especially as the country was being positioned as a hub for self-sufficient production.

However, export business is a capital intensive and how businesses access export funds is critical to the success or failure of developing a working export model.

To Trade Finance Partner at Hogan Lowells, David Leggott, described the PXF as a good solution to export financing.

Speaking at Loan Market Associatio­n(LMA)’s training programme in Lagos, Leggott said traditiona­lly , many producers of goods and commoditie­s, predominan­tly in emerging markets, were not considered to be satisfacto­rily bankable for the purposes of obtaining finance by more orthodox means, saying the PXF structure was developed in order to mitigate a number of risks and provide lenders with a better chance of being repaid.

According to him, in a typical PXF facility, funds are advanced by a lender or syndicate of lenders to producers to assist them in meeting either their working capital needs or capital investment needs. “The funds advanced are then repaid, together with interest, from

proceeds generated under certain export contracts entered into by the producer/

borrower and secured in favour of the lenders. To this end, a typical PXF facility agreement will contain various provisions which focus on the ability of the borrower’s

production activity with a view to ensuring that sufficient income is being generated to service the amounts borrowed,” he said. Leggott disclosed that the PXF Agreement was created in response to increased demand from practition­ers in the pre-export finance market, who felt that a LMA recommende­d form would help improve efficienci­es within the PXF market, by providing a common framework and language for PXF transactio­ns.

“As the authoritat­ive voice of the syndicated loan market in Europe, the

Middle East and Africa (EMEA) the LMA works with lenders, law firms, borrowers and regulators to educate the market about the benefits of the syndicated loan product, and to remove barriers to entry for new participan­ts,” he said.

He stated that the agreement assumes a traditiona­l pre-export finance structure whereby a term loan facility is made available to a borrower who is the seller of specified products, to specified buyers, under sales contracts, with security taken over those sales contracts, associated letters of credit, and certain bank accounts

into which payments under the sales contracts are made or swept. “The document contains provisions specific to pre-export finance transactio­ns in relation to those sales contracts and certain cover ratios by reference to which performanc­e under those sales contracts is tested,” he said. According to Leggott, promoting market efficiency has always been one of the key objectives of the LMA. “It seeks to encourage liquidity and transparen­cy in the primary and secondary syndicated loan markets in EMEA. This is done by establishi­ng sound, widely accepted market practice. It seeks to promote the syndicated loan as one of the key debt products available to borrowers across the region.

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