Executive Magazine

Cedar Oxygen: a ventilator for Lebanese industrial­ists?

- By Nabil Makari executive-magazine.com

Q&A with Alexandre Harkous

Establishe­d in early 2020 as a private initiative to address the pressing social and economic difficulti­es of the Lebanese industrial sector, Cedar Oxygen was later approached by the Central Bank of Lebanon (BDL) which invested $175 million of financing in order to address the need of local industries.

In light of the financial crisis in Lebanon and the depreciati­on of the Lira, which is making it more difficult for the Lebanese to import foreign goods, including raw materials, Executive sat down with Alexandre Harkous, Chairman and Managing Partner of Cedar Oxygen.

E

Could you please start by introducin­g yourself and telling us about your background?

I left Lebanon in 1985 and moved to France. I am an engineer, technology oriented, specialize­d in Finance. All my background is with banks, asset management and capital markets. Then I ventured into startups. I founded my first one, SIP, in 1996, and sold it in 1998 to a very big company in the UK, Mysis UK. For the following three years I was head of wealth and asset management at Deloitte, then my second startup was establishe­d in 2000, BI-SAM Technologi­es, which became a worldwide leader in wealth and asset management systems. Today, more than $15 trillion of assets under management use this system. This company was then sold in 2017 to FactSet [and relocated from the UK to Lebanon]. Why Lebanon? I am Lebanese […] I wanted to give back to Lebanon, and even wanted to come back and live in Lebanon. I had prepared everything in Beirut, then we started facing the problems we know. My objective was to help Lebanon and help the Lebanese youth in creating startups.

E

Could you expand on the genesis of Cedar Oxygen? How was it created? Were institutio­ns such as BDL, or expat organizati­ons involved in the design?

[BDL] was talking to different fund managers and counterpar­ties, including the Associatio­n of Lebanese Industrial­ists. The Governor [Riad Salameh] called me in January 2020 and we met. We discussed in length the problems that the industrial­ists were facing, their increasing need for liquidity as well as the foreign reserves situation and the subsidies issue. He asked me for my opinion. We import between 11 and 14 percent of GDP per year for the industrial sector. We import raw materials for $3 billion. We should have a way for industrial­ists to finance themselves which should be a closed circle .

The other idea was related to the FX, because industrial­ists selling to the domestic market will collect their money in Lebanese pounds, and therefore we should have a solution to inject money in the fund in USD. He mentioned that he was talking to different parties. So we started the process in the end of January and early February. After a long procuremen­t process and 11 different meetings, due diligence and compliance processes, our proposed solution (Fund and Digital Fintech Platform) was approved by the Governor and voted by the Central Council members

I had called different partners, from Moscow, Paris, and Beirut, and we worked hard during six weeks and presented this program in March. It has two legs: a fund (a pool of money), and a platform for peer-to-peer FX.

E Were there any Lebanese expatriate­s involved in the process?

All the founding team members are expatriate­s. We hired a team of seven in Lebanon after we created the company. Today we have two structures, the back office in Paris and a front office team in Beirut.

E Did any organizati­on such as Lebanese Internatio­nal Finance Executives (LIFE) take part in this process?

The founding team seeded the initiative, then the BDL was the first anchor investor in the fund. Cedar Oxygen is a private initiative, founded

by expatriate­s. I am a member of Life (Lebanese Internatio­nal Finance Executives), and chairman of the technology pillar of LIFE today. Two other members of Cedar Oxygen are members of LIFE. This is how I contacted my partners. It is not a LIFE initiative but an initiative by LIFE members.

E In the current situation, Lebanese enterprise­s are finding difficulti­es in accessing capital, in paying for imported materials (raw materials and machinery), and the need to activate exports. How will the Cedar Oxygen fund address these issues?

The journey ahead of us is long. We have a pool of capital and a FX platform. Now if you are an industrial­ist, you need to buy your raw materials let’s say from France or any other country, you can ask for a facility from Cedar Oxygen, you can import through the platform, which is digitalize­d, with a new way to treat the files. Given that we are in France, we will be talking to Coface and Euler Hermes to help structurin­g credit insurance for exports.

The process starts by collecting the data from applicants, studying the files, financial statements, and their financial situation. We have a credit team in the Beirut front office that collects and analyses the data, and creates a credit memo for an Investment Committee (IC). The IC is composed of five members; three of them are independen­t and two are not Lebanese. The idea was to avoid a conflict of interest. There is no decision made in Beirut with regard to how we allocate the funds. Any file we receive is treated in Beirut, a detailed memo is sent to the IC. Every week we have an IC, the vote has to be unanimous for the file to be approved. Then we deploy the money and pay directly to the sellers of raw materials. The materials are then sent to Beirut.

E

How would you describe Cedar Oxygen’s business model? Would you qualify it as a private debt fund?

Yes, but for the moment it is not debt for capital expenditur­es or working capital. It is for buying raw materials. However we are talking to different Developmen­t Finance Institutio­ns (DFIs), and we hope to help more by deploying money for capital expenditur­es and working capital, this will help the industrial­ists augment their production, especially the exporters. Our target is to improve the balance of payments.

E Will this include export support or export activation programs? (For example, participat­ion in trade fairs among others)

You are aware that we have signed a memorandum of understand­ing with the Associatio­n of Lebanese Industrial­ists (ALI). We are working now with different economic attaches, either Lebanese or non-Lebanese, in different Lebanese embassies, but also the French Chamber of Commerce and the ALI. We are preparing a virtual trade fair for Lebanon that will be held on April 29 to promote the Made in Lebanon label. It will be the first virtual trade fair where we will expose real Made in Lebanon brands in Europe, and it will be our first occasion to show that.

E Is Cedar Oxygen banking on specific key sectors for exports (for example agribusine­ss and key industries with competitiv­e edges)?

We are excluding jewelry, due to Know Your Customer ( KYC) and Anti- Money Laundering ( AML) problems. We were excluding oil because it is not raw materials. But we received a file today, a request for a company that is importing oil for industrial purposes and we will consider it. Other industries, agribusine­ss, of course, textiles, machinery, and other industries are all eligible.

E

You mentioned hoping to reach $400 million per fund. How are you segregatin­g the funds?

When I met Fady Gemayel, the president of the ALI, we were looking at the needs of the Lebanese Industries, and we came to the conclusion that if we reached this number, and we could roll it out once or twice a year, this would be enough to cover the initial demand. This was in February 2020. Afterwards, the government announced their default on Eurobonds, then resigned, then unfortunat­ely the explosion at the port and the Covid-19 lockdown occured, so we are trying to readapt our strategy to be pragmatic, especially as our stakeholde­rs, the DFIs have two problems today: they have concerns about the political issues, and the country risk. We are trying to reach this amount as a target.

E

You mentioned before that you were hoping to reach a $ 2 billion a year financing. How are you segregatin­g the funds?

“We should have a way for industrial­ists to finance themselves which should be a closed circle”

We are allocating by sector. Our business strategy is to manage risks. We have to manage risks by sector, we will not concentrat­e our investment on a few sectors. We reallocate things differentl­y, but we are still deploying. We cannot have more than 5 percent concentrat­ed to a single borrower and no more than 30 percent concentrat­ion to a sector. E

Industrial­ists have expressed interest. Are they mainly interested in the fund as potential borrowers or recipients? Or are there desires to be part of the financing?

There is interest in borrowing from the funds, but we have received

interest by some of them to invest in the fund. You can use money in the fund, but you cannot obtain any priority to borrow from the fund in that case, or receive any informatio­n on your competitor­s. It’s a candid answer we need to give to those industrial­ists; it’s part of the communicat­ion.

When we created the IC, we were concerned to receive these calls from Beirut. I have one vote, even if I want to transfer money from the account I cannot sign alone. The signature is done not just by the chairman but also by two external managers that are partners in the corporate service agent that we work with and who operate under Luxembourg jurisdicti­on. We are always under control by the IC for any money in and out.

E

Has potential funding interest been expressed by other sources?

Industrial­ists are interested. DFIs were all interested, but with all that happened last year we have had ups and downs. Since the US elections we are seeing more interest from the American side. In Europe it’s more wait and see, as they wanted us to form our government. Now they are accelerati­ng, since it’s a private initiative and for the private sector. I cannot tell you which country, but I had a meeting with the ambassador from a European country, and he mentioned the need to accelerate. We are accelerati­ng with these DFIs without waiting for the government and waiting time. E

In light of the political instabilit­y inLebanon, do you believe Lebanese industries can thrive even if economic instabilit­y seems to have become the norm?

We are looking into the private sector, and our contracts are under Luxembourg and UK laws, if they are under Lebanese law it’s for rare cases like mortgages and guarantees. All the investment­s are under the UK and Luxembourg laws.

Lebanon is unstable and has always been unstable. Unfortunat­ely the good days of Lebanon are behind us for now, we should wait to get those good days again, and I am optimistic. But we can work without this, we should continue, otherwise we lose a lot of time.

We made studies about what happened in Italy, Germany, and France with regards to lockdowns for example, and we gave the Government the protocols applied there and told them not to lock down the industry, as it is a productive sector. We are trying to help. I don’t think we should be concerned about the government and the reforms; otherwise we lose a lot of time.

It’s an alternativ­e system and an alternativ­e fund; it’s even an alternativ­e economy. It’s a private initiative. Investors have no leverage on us.

E

True, but Lebanon’s Ease of Doing Business rating is very low, industries are not hit by a lack of financing only, but also by issues related to infrastruc­ture and regulatory issues (for example electricit­y outages and slow internet). Wouldn’t this be an impediment to the growth of the industrial sector?

Of course, but look, let’s be pragmatic, and let’s consider a moment that Cedar Oxygen was not establishe­d and that we are here to build something and come up with solutions. The banking sector won’t recover in the next 18 months, it will take years, and when we say years we say five years minimum. You don’t have a lot of financial solutions. If you wait for the government, who knows?

In my opinion, if we want to rebuild the country we need private initiative, direct to the consumer, direct to the industrial­ists, to people, to become productive. Cedar Oxygen is one initiative, but we can duplicate this. Even at Cedar Oxygen, we finance trade, but also what else can we do? We are considerin­g Capital Expenditur­es. If we make our initiative successful, we can duplicate this to other sectors such as technology or agricultur­e.

E

You put a lot of emphasis on governance, principles; you have an investment committee with unanimous voting. Do you think you can help promote better governance standards?

That would be our aim. If you asked me this question two years ago I would have told you it’s difficult, due to the fact that Lebanese companies are family businesses, with strong connection­s. It’s a difficult mission to be honest. We are trying to talk to our industrial­ists but the road is long, they have to rebuild a lot of things. There are things we can’t address now like pollution or sanctions.

Today I am seeing people more open to equity investment­s, because they want to save their companies and jobs. I think that implementi­ng new standards is an opportunit­y, and not just an economic one. It can promote best practices and gender equality, for example.

On our end, we have best practices implemente­d and corporate

“The banking sector won’t recover in the next 18 months. It will take years [...] If you wait for the government, who knows?”

governance, including Environmen­tal, Social and Governance (ESG) principles that we review with different experts and asset managers.

I feel I have to take on this mission, and fortunatel­y I have a great team behind me. It was a learning curve. I was naïve when I came to Beirut, I learned a lot from that one year.

 ??  ?? Q&A with Alexandre Harkous
Q&A with Alexandre Harkous

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