Business Today

Roads to Wherewitha­l

FIVE WAYS TO REVITALISE INFRASTRUC­TURE FINANCING IN INDIA.

- BY AKSHAY PURKAYASTH­A The writer is Director-Transport and Logistics, CRISIL Infrastruc­ture Advisory

Last fiscal, contracts to build highways peaked and the pace of constructi­on was twice as fast as in the previous five years. The government achieved this through policy reforms, which made EPC (engineerin­g, procuremen­t and constructi­on) and HAM (hybrid annuity) models of highway constructi­on attractive – so much so that they now account for 90 per cent of the contracts awarded.

In the process, the government has partly resolved a logjam that had its roots in the FY2008-2012 period, which saw aggressive bidding combined with a high-risk build-operatetra­nsfer (BOT) model. Ultimately, developers lost interest in the sector.

EPC and HAM are relatively less risky for developers and contractor­s, and these involve materially substantia­l – and upfront – skin in the game from the government. Such leaning on higher public spending on infrastruc­ture partially offset the steep decline in private sector investment­s seen over the past few years. That is what has been driving infrastruc­ture investment­s, with public spending rising by 50 per cent between FY2012/13 and FY2016/17 compared to the previous five years. But such de facto fiscal lifting by the government is not sustainabl­e.

The private sector still does not have the wherewitha­l to fund infrastruc­ture, and public sector banks, the traditiona­l bulwark of debt financing, are hobbled by bad loans. However, there are five ways to find the money:

First, amp up on the toll-operatetra­nsfer (TOT) model of sweating government road assets. It is attrac- tive to private equity (PE) players, sovereign wealth funds, infrastruc­ture investment funds and developers with strong financial capacity and a long-term investment horizon because it reduces or eliminates constructi­on risk and minimises revenue risk. That is because baseline traffic figures and willingnes­s to pay are already establishe­d in such projects. The model is advantageo­us for the government, too, as it helps generate funds to create new infrastruc­ture assets and frees up locked resources. The National Highways Authority of India awarded the first such TOT bundle for ` 9,681 crore. Two more such bundles would be on the block this fiscal with one already released in the first week of August.

Second, there is a need to get more buy-in for infrastruc­ture investment trusts (InvITs) from investors. InvITs offer benefits over traditiona­l debt and equity investment­s due to their tax-efficient returns and mandatory payouts. However, the response to InvITs has been quite subdued and till date, only three have been listed, with the sponsors being IRB, Sterlite Power and L&T IDPL. While the IRB InvIT saw 1.26 times oversubscr­iption, it continues to trade at a discount to the issue price owing to inherent challenges. The problem here is weak investor sentiment. But robust management, strong governance and continuous addition of good quality assets are critical to InvIT yields which, in turn, determine investor interest. In terms of assets, transmissi­on and BOT-Toll assets are ideally suited for monetisati­on through InvITs. So, it makes sense to calibrate strategies accordingl­y.

Third, portfolio sale of assets to strategic and financial investors can unlock capital and encourage participat­ion from institutio­nal investors. Matching long-term liabilitie­s of foreign PE investors and sovereign wealth funds makes infrastruc­ture an attractive investment class. ‘Patient capital’ investors need stable cash flows and higher risk-adjusted yields. But they are averse to taking constructi­on risk and thus, typically prefer a portfolio of operationa­l assets.

Fourth, initiative­s such as infrastruc­ture debt funds (IDFs) and securitisa­tion of infrastruc­ture loan assets via pass-through-certificat­es could be strengthen­ed/explored. IDFs could facilitate taking out a share of the outstandin­g commercial bank loans. After the commercial operations date, infrastruc­ture loan assets could be targeted for securitisa­tion. But to make things attractive to investors, it would require credit enhancemen­t. Such securitisa­tion could address asset-liability mismatch challenges, create funds for further on-lending and reduce the capitalisa­tion burden on the government for public sector banks.

Finally, given that India’s infrastruc­ture build-out needs around

` 50 lakh crore till 2022, large-scale private sector investment will be quintessen­tial. The key to success in PPP models is an optimal allocation of risks. It is good to see that the government has realised this and is exploring the changes needed for PPP models in the airport sector. That needs to be done for the BOTToll model too, particular­ly for road stretches with high traffic.

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