Philippine Daily Inquirer

JP MORGAN: INVESTORS WILL ONLY DANGLE CASH FOR INFRA PROJECTS WITH LOW RISKS

- By Doris Dumlao-Abadilla @philbizwat­cher

For a country like the Philippine­s striving to enter a golden age of infrastruc­ture, financing is not a tough hurdle for proponents due to a very liquid capital market.

But the bigger concern for investors was the lack of wellstruct­ured projects with predictabl­e cash flow and shielded from the potential changing of the rules in the middle of the game, investment bankers from JP Morgan Chase said.

In an interview with Inquirer, JP Morgan executive director and head of banking Philippine­s Carlos Ma. Mendoza said: “It’s really [about] the projects being structured well and being taken to market in a timely fashion and with rules that don’t change in the middle of the game.”

The Securities and Exchange Commission recently approved a pioneering framework for the listing of any company engaged in an infrastruc­ture project under the publicpriv­ate partnershi­p (PPP) program. The new framework waives the usual requiremen­t of a three-year track record and operating history for PPP companies, provided they are able to comply with the rest of the requiremen­ts for listing on the Philippine Stock Exchange’s (PSE) main board.

“We have to be thoughtful about investor appropriat­eness,” Mendoza added. He cited, for instance, it wouldn’t help when there are noises surroundin­g the implementa­tion of tariff increases, such as in the water sector.

The water concession­aires in the metro have been forced to resort to arbitratio­n abroad to seek tariff increases needed to ensure their viability.

Rohit Chatterji, JP Morgan head of investment banking for South and Southeast Asia, said in a separate interview that infrastruc­ture projects across the region had already attracted yield-seeking investors.

“Domestic yield here is low so there’s a case to be made for infrastruc­ture to be listed as yield play or business trust in the Philippine stock exchange and permitting, therefore, the sponsoring of those projects is directiona­lly good,” he said.

“The question is: How do you get projects to a level where there’s predictabi­lity of cash flows and predictabi­lity of the regimes where they are operating?” he added.

Based on the rules approved by the SEC, to qualify for stock market listing, the PPP project bagged by the company going public should not be less than P5 billion as indicated in the financial bid. Existing shareholde­rs of the PPP company are prohibited from offering their shares during the initial public offering period, which means that only primary shares will be allowed for sale.

Given that concession­s under the PPP projects expire at some point, the PSE was tasked to ensure investors would know what would happen to the assets of the PPP company. As part of the additional disclosure requiremen­ts under the framework, a listed PPP company must submit to the exchange a business plan which may include its plans for liquidatio­n and winding up, or a proposal for a new business, at least three years before the scheduled expiration of the PPP contract.

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