Removing barriers to FDI

One would expect that this global marketplace has encouraged all countries to make their markets more attractive destinations for investment. In Canada, Georgia and Rwanda, efficient bureaucracy allows a foreign company to establish a subsidiary in less than a week. In Angola, this same process can take half a year.

Leasing industrial land in Nicaragua and Sierra Leone typically requires half a year as opposed to less than two weeks in Armenia or South Korea. In Pakistan and Sri Lanka it can take up to two years to enforce a commercial arbitration award; in the United Kingdom and Kazakhstan, less than two months.

Investment opportunities in 2011 and beyond
After a year of stagnation, FDI is expected to rebound by 15-30 percent in 2011, according to UNCTAD, the UN body dealing with trade and investment. The growth in FDI is likely to continue to come primarily from Asia and Latin America. In fact, last year marked the first time developing and transition countries worldwide attracted more FDI than high-income countries. However, despite an optimistic outlook for 2011, investors are worried about the civil unrest in the Arab world, increasing commodity prices, sluggish economic growth in many economies, high unemployment and the associated depressed consumer demand, and risks related to currency volatility and national debt.

Increased investment is a priority for many countries and companies alike. For countries it provides access to new sources of capital and new markets, generates jobs, allows for the transfer of technology and for associated diversification of economic activities. It also provides access to competitively priced goods and services. For companies, investment creates opportunities to access resources, expand markets, enhance strategies and increase efficiency. Consider Aspen Pharmacare, a South African pharmaceutical manufacturer.

Its 2008 decision to enter the East African market resulted in a major upgrading of a pharmaceutical manufacturing center in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, creating jobs and providing access to affordable generic drugs for a much larger group of customers. Another example is General Electric’s recent decision to build a research and development facility in Brazil. Brazil will gain from high-skill jobs and the transfer of new technologies, while GE will gain access to the Latin American market and its talent pool while cutting production costs.

Countries need to be proactive about improving their attractiveness to FDI. However, many drivers of foreign investment—such as a country’s location, market size, and availability of natural resources—cannot be influenced by decisions and actions of policymakers. Furthermore, other policy-related drivers of FDI—such as macroeconomic performance, infrastructure quality, and human capital—can only be influenced in the medium- to long-run. In contrast, there are factors related to laws and institutions that countries can address and improve in the short-term.

Indeed, the factors driving investment decisions are changing, making many new markets more attractive to foreign investors. Research by the McKinsey Global Institute suggests that there are more high-return investment opportunities in Africa than any other developing region. To capitalise on this opportunity, countries in Africa and elsewhere can follow the examples of Colombia, Georgia, and Rwanda, which have dramatically reformed their business environments. In fact, a World Bank Group study finds that among the 10 economies that have improved their business environments the most over the last five years, four are from Sub-Saharan Africa – Rwanda, Burkina Faso, Mali and Ghana.

How to attract more FDI
What actions can governments take in the short-run to boost their international FDI competitiveness? A new global benchmarking report of the World Bank Group (www.investingacrossborders.org) surveyed more than 2,000 attorneys and investment consultants in 87 countries to identify specific legal and administrative barriers that foreign companies faced in each of the countries. The study finds that countries with well-designed laws, efficient administrations and strong institutions have higher FDI stock and lower political risk.

In contrast, the report finds that regulatory restrictions continue to impede FDI in many countries. Almost 90 percent of the countries surveyed limit foreign companies’ ability to participate in some sectors of their economies. The differences are significant even among economies at similar levels of development. In Africa, for example, some countries have opened up all major economic sectors to FDI (for example Rwanda, Senegal or Zambia), while others still do not allow foreign investment in key industries such as electricity distribution and transmission (Cameroon), rail transport (Morocco) or banking and insurance (Ethiopia). In general, while light manufacturing, construction and tourism sectors are open to FDI in all economies, many countries impose foreign ownership limits in services sectors such as media, transportation, electricity and telecommunications.
Some countries require the directors or managers of foreign-owned companies to be nationals or permanent residents of the country of incorporation. For example, executive officers of Brazilian companies must be either Brazilian citizens or foreigners who hold a permanent resident visa. In Zambia and the Philippines, majority of the directors must be residents. In Canada, at least 25 percent of the directors must be resident Canadians. In Greece, Madagascar and Mauritius at least one of the directors must be a resident. Such requirements limit the foreign companies’ freedom to appoint any executives that the parent company feels would be most competent in managing the local subsidiary’s operation.

Foreign companies need foreign exchange to conduct business with overseas partners. Yet some countries prohibit foreign companies from holding bank accounts in foreign currencies, including Colombia, Morocco and Venezuela. Other countries first require an approval from the central bank or another public authority, as is the case in Pakistan, Burkina Faso or Papua New Guinea.

When it comes to resolving commercial disputes, all countries allow the use of arbitration, and many have modernised their laws and set-up effective arbitration centers. In other countries specific barriers still impede foreign companies’ ability and interest to use arbitration. In Russia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Azerbaijan, arbitrators must be locally licensed attorneys. In Argentina and Costa Rica laws prohibit foreign lawyers from representing their clients in arbitration. In Chile and Ecuador, arbitration proceedings must be conducted in Spanish. In contrast, in most other countries around the world such restrictions do not exist.

Some basic principles should guide the design of countries’ laws and regulations for attracting foreign investment. First, all investors should be treated fairly. For example, the process for opening a local subsidiary should be governed by the same rules for all companies, regardless of their home country. Any difference in treatment should be due to a company’s size, legal form, or commercial activity—not the nationality of its shareholders. Next, countries should have clear, transparent laws and regulations allowing for efficient commercial transactions. A country’s legal regime should provide investors sufficient security to make them feel comfortable operating and expanding their businesses. In addition, the authorities should adopt effective regulations that both ensure fair protections for the greater public good, and eliminate unnecessary and burdensome bureaucracy. Finally, countries can enhance their competitiveness by creating supportive public institutions. The shapes these institutions take will depend on the country and context in which they are created. Yet in all cases supportive institutions are those that provide public officials with incentives to supply the public with useful services at least cost in terms of corruption and rent seeking.

It is an ambitious agenda that is relevant to all countries. As the world’s economic power continues to shift, more and more investors are looking globally for the best, most lucrative and most stable opportunities. With the heightened political and business risk worldwide, countries must act now to create predictable and transparent conditions attractive for FDI.  

Pierre Guislain, Kusisami Hornberger and Peter Kusek are, respectively, director, investment policy officer and senior investment policy officer at the Investment Climate Department, World Bank Group

GE’s gas engine business honoured

Holidaymakers sipping a Coca Cola while sunning themselves on a Greek island this summer might not realise it, but they are part of a chain of innovation in the energy sector that is helping to reduce Europe’s carbon emissions.

Coca-Cola has used technology developed in the Austrian town of Jenbach, after which GE’s Jenbacher gas engine business is named, to significantly cut carbon emissions from its European bottling plants, helping the European Union to meet guidelines on environmental targets.

The Coca-Cola Hellenic Bottling Company has been installing a total of 15 combined heat and power (CHP) plants at bottling facilities in 12 countries, featuring GE’s Jenbacher units, which are able to run on nearly any gaseous fuel source. They will generate electricity to meet the need for a reliable source of on-site power, while also capturing the by-product heat generated by the engine for heating purposes.

As well as making good business sense, the engines have a wider benefit. Thanks to the greater energy efficiency and lower emissions of CHP technology, each bottling plant utilising GE’s Jenbacher gas engines will be able to eliminate more than 40 percent of its annual carbon dioxide emissions.

CHP: The key to energy efficiency
The European Commission wants European Union countries to help the continent achieve a 20 percent reduction in emissions by 2020. Currently, the European Union generates 11 percent of its electricity using cogeneration, saving Europe an estimated 35m tons of oil equivalent a year.

Technology such as GE’s for gas engines is therefore vital if Europe – and the rest of the world – is to address its energy problems. Currently, two-thirds of all fuel is wasted globally. And the problem is likely to grow: global demand for energy is set to increase by 44 percent in the next 20 years. Growing at the same rate will be calls to cut greenhouse gases. The pressure for companies to reduce waste and drive energy efficiency will continue from all quarters.

Hence the importance of technology like combined heat and power. Also known as cogeneration, CHP is inherently more energy efficient than using separate power and heat generating sources, making it an effective anti-pollution strategy. That’s why from coal mines in the Ukraine to cow farms in the American countryside to luxury hotels in Singapore, businesses are using GE’s Jenbacher gas engines to power their facilities in one of the cleanest, most efficient ways possible.

Many recognise that renewable sources of energy such as solar and wind power will play an important role in meeting those needs. But, those technologies cannot do it alone. That means finding cleaner, more efficient ways of using fossil fuels.

A commitment to innovation
But being able to generate more energy and reduce harmful emissions from fossil fuels can only come with technological advances, and it is here that Jenbacher’s innovation comes into play. Beyond its ability to operate on natural gas at top efficiency, GE’s Jenbacher gas engine technology makes it possible to generate power while disposing of environmentally harmful gases (such as from landfill, agriculture, mining and chemical plants). The utilisation of these gases for power generation ensures the long-term economic viability of GE’s Jenbacher power systems, while continuing to set the environmental standard for energy production and waste management around the world. By enabling the use of a broad range of gases, GE’s gas engines will continue to reduce emissions and encourage efficient use of natural resources.

The recently-launched J920 provides top of its class electrical efficiency. Developed as part of ecomagination, GE’s commitment to build innovative solutions to today’s environmental challenges, the engine can provide enough energy for 18,500 average European households. With an electrical efficiency of 48.7 percent, it prevents around 1,500 tons of CO2 emissions every year – the equivalent of removing 800 European cars from the roads. Coupled with a significant reduction in lifecycle costs and lower fuel consumption, the new engine is an important step in not only helping companies meet the competitive challenges of the global economy, but in giving added impetus to the march towards more efficient use of energy resources.

The development of the J920 is just one example of GE’s longstanding commitment to innovation – a concept that has guided the company from its earliest years, when Thomas Edison perfected the light bulb, to the revolutionary technology of today.

Three drivers of innovation
But innovation, by its very nature, cannot be static; so GE’s approach to innovation continues to evolve. The company’s recent Innovation Barometer – which polled 1,000 business leaders in a dozen countries – revealed three key changes to the way innovation is happening today, all of which chime with GE’s approach.

First, cooperation is vital: innovation is no longer about a single organisation’s success. Second, innovation is driven as much by smaller and medium-sized firms as larger ones. And third, to effect change, finding solutions that work at a local level is crucial. More than three quarters of respondents in the survey said innovation must be tailored to local market needs.

Jenbacher products therefore place GE at the forefront of this new paradigm. The company’s flex fuel enables distributed power generation to be provided in remote regions throughout the world, and the engines themselves are able to run on nearly limitless resources: biogas, landfill gas, steel gas, ethanol, methane. This refusal to subscribe to the ‘one-size-fits-all’ theory of innovation highlights how the Jenbacher team is applying its products to meet particular needs in particular segments, as it works closely with its customers to learn what issues they have and develop specific solutions.

An award winning technology
With a commitment to technology embedded in everything we do, GE’s Jenbacher gas engine business is delighted to have been named Best Carbon Markets Energy Efficiency Pioneer for Western Europe in the World Finance Carbon Awards 2011. These awards pay homage to companies from around the world which offer the pioneering methodologies and are making the investments required to achieve the significant reduction in carbon output that is needed to safeguard the environment.

It is only through constant innovation and technological excellence that the world will be able to address its energy needs in the years ahead. Such innovation will continue to be one of the defining features of both Jenbacher gas engines and GE Energy.

It is through technologies like gas engines that the world will be able to contain its carbon footprint, something that is vital if we are to protect the future of the environment in a sustainable, effective way.

Prady Iyyanki is CEO gas engines for GE Power & Water

ITG outlines pan-African vision

The March 2003 launch of Internet Technologies Angola (ITA) was inauspicious. Group CEO Barney Harmse’s start-up had little in the way of meaningful cash behind the project, the accommodation for staff was basic or non-existent, and the transport means were poor.

Despite the glaring drawbacks in its Angolan venture, ITG – which now consists of several operations in various African countries – quickly grew on a raft of technological change and huge consumer demand.
In December 2004 it managed to roll out a national network in Namibia, despite enormous practical difficulties and being a late starter in the country’s already competitive ISP market. It launched officially in March 2005. Today ITG boasts almost 100 employees, and turnover is expected to hit R200m (£17.8m) this financial year – a huge turnaround.

Setting a standard
The long list of achievements continues to grow, though clear landmarks stand out: the first commercially available Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) network was implemented in June 2006 in Namibia, a mere year or so after officially launching the company. Another year later, VSAT and Broadband was launched.
Not long after, CEO Barney Harmse oversaw an International Data Gateway License and Voice Trial License. “We have moved from success to success without hesitation, with poise and precision and a relentless focus,” he says. “We are very proud of the entire African project. To do business in Africa takes a special breed of entrepreneur, entrepreneurs that can dig deep in their souls when the going gets really tough, and find the courage to continue with the dreams they have.”

The continent presents unique challenges to companies just starting out, Mr Harmse says. “Things like lacking infrastructure, operating in diverse cultures with many different languages across the African continent makes it extremely difficult to stay focused and motivated. Our ability to overcome these challenges and achieve success in that country, then gives us the strength and confidence to move onto the next country.”

His colleague Miles October, Managing Director of ITA, agrees. “One of the toughest periods of our lives was when we first started out in Angola. When we arrived we were not able to speak the local language. We knew very little about the business/regulatory environment or how to go about organising ourselves in terms of registering a business.”

To make matters worse, Luanda is one of the most expensive cities in the world to live in – so the ITG team did not have much time to find its feet. But Messrs Harmse and October spoke to as many people as possible with experience of setting up a company in Angola – and they soon had a good idea of what was required to establish an internet business in the country.

Always responsible
Now there are also social responsibility projects in which ITG aims to provide telecommunications infrastructure in rural establishments way off the beaten track across Africa. Due to the vast geographic distribution of these communities, costs significantly increase for implementations.

“As part of our social responsibility projects we have provided free internet access to a few underprivileged schools in Luanda,” says Mr October. “We regularly sponsor food and clothes to an orphanage close to our office. We have also started a project to sponsor the setup up of an Animal Welfare Society in Angola.”
Meanwhile, the backbone of the company is growing at a tremendous pace. Usefully, the regulatory environment is providing the group with opportunities that were previously closed for other companies.

ITG is well aware that people remain its core assets though, and to keep them motivated the company challenges them with more technological and market change. The more deregulated the market becomes, the more passionate Mr Harmse’s team become to achieve the next level of success. “The steady de-regulation of the telecommunications industry is something that drives the exhilaration inside the company and from a group perspective, its drive into Africa,” says Mr Harmse.

 “We have a drive to implement networks and solutions right across Africa. At the moment ITG owns and operate companies in six African countries… Angola, Namibia, Botswana, South Africa, Mauritius and Zambia,” he says. “In terms of their satellite business alone they already have customers in eight countries, being Angola, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Nigeria, Central African Republic, DRC, Ghana, and soon South Africa. By 2015 we would prefer to have a presence in even more African countries where we will distinguish ourselves, I strongly believe, from the rest of the local and international market.”

Corpbanca focuses on efficiency savings

Corpbanca is Chile’s oldest operating private bank, with one of the fastest-growing loan portfolios in the country and one of the most successful stories of the Chilean banking industry. In 1995 the bank was bought by a group of investors who, led by Álvaro Saieh Bendeck, developed a strategic plan to grow the institution into a global bank across the entire spectrum of financial services. In 1995 the bank’s capital was $50m with a subordinated debt with the Central Bank of $600m; at the end of 2010 the bank had no debt with the Central Bank and its market value was over $4bn.

As of December 31, 2010, Corpbanca was the fourth largest private bank in Chile in terms of the size of its loan portfolio, with a 7.3 percent of market share. Corpbanca’s risk management strategy has enabled it to maintain favourable solvency ratios and risk indicators: throughout 2010 Corpbanca had a capital-weighted assets ratio of 13.4 percent and a risk indicator of 1.9 percent, lower than the industry’s average. Corpbanca provided an average annual return on equity of 25 percent in 2010, higher than the market average.

These results are explained by the banks:
– Strong risk management – the bank has one of the lowest risk indices of the major banks
– Efficiency – it’s a key driver in Corpbanca’s strategy, which explains why the bank has one of the lowest efficiency ratios of the industry
– Development of new innovative products
– Successful consolidation of wholesale business
– Focus on customer satisfaction

These have helped Corpbanca’s local stock achieve the highest return of a bank stock in the Santiago Stock Exchange during 2009 and 2010, of 79 percent and 129 percent respectively. In recognition of this strong performance, Feller Rate improved Corpbanca’s local risk classification from AA- to AA in May 2010.

Strategic overview
Corpbanca’s vision is to become the best bank in Chile: become the number one bank to its customers, increase its market share, systematically exceed the Chilean banking system’s ROE and be a great place to work, attracting and retaining talented employees. To achieve these goals the bank is focusing on four main strategies.

– Portfolio rebalancing. By innovating in first class products, focusing on the most profitable segments and utilising its aggressive sales force, the bank hopes to achieve organic growth by offering competitive products and services in all lines of its business. The bank’s strong franchise in the retail banking segment offers the potential for significant growth in its loan portfolio – and increased market share and profitability can be gained by continuing to cross-sell services and products to existing clients. It has also instituted processes to facilitate the offering of additional financial services to clients, with the aim of increasing revenues from fees for services.

– Maintaining first class risk standards. A dedicated risk management team monitors risks across all areas of the bank’s business, with robust valuation models and solid provision policies. The Retail Risk and Companies Risk divisions actively participate in establishing credit policies, approvals, monitoring, collections and operational risk associated with the business. The Risk Committee meets periodically to review and consider proposed loans – and the bank’s conservative credit approval standards and reserve policies help minimise the risk of ultimate loss.

– Continue with efficiency measures. This is a consequence of the bank’s cost control culture and the centralisation of all its processes. It seeks to increase operating efficiency by continuing to reduce costs, broadening its array of distribution channels and enhancing the network by adopting cost-saving technologies. Branch operations continue to be updated, allowing for an increased level of customer ‘self-help,’ and the bank is working to increase customers’ use of internet banking. Currently, customers can obtain account information, make bill payments, transfer funds and perform other transactions through the bank’s website. A central information system gives the bank efficient electronic access to up-to-date customer information in each of its business lines and calculates net earnings and profitability of each transaction, product and client segment.

– Lead on customer satisfaction. Quality of service is key to Corpbanca’s growth strategy, both in acquiring new customers, and establishing and strengthening long-term relationships. The bank continually develops new processes and technological solutions to understand the needs of clients and in turn measure their satisfaction – a new division exclusively focused on customer satisfaction was recently established.

Performance targets
Each commercial division also has its own specific strategies to help the bank achieve its key goals.

Consumer banking
The bank is striving to increase its retail loans portfolio in a profitable way. In retail banking this means focusing on clients that have a monthly income higher than CLP1.2m ($2,500). To achieve this, the bank has opened new branches located in geographical areas which are closer to the target market, designed products specifically to satisfy these clients’ needs, and established incentive programmes for its sales force and commercial staff to focus on this type of client.

For the low income segment, the Corpbanca brand Banco Condell is looking to consolidate its number of clients and offer a more personalised service – this new strategy and completely different management should help the brand achieve higher profits.

Wholesale banking
For corporate clients, Corpbanca is offering integrated solutions to provide more sophisticated products according to the client’s needs. This has been a key driver for the success of this area in the last two years. The commercial relationship has not been oriented only to the senior management of corporations but also to its owners, offering sophisticated products at all levels. To strengthen the transaction service of this segment, the bank is improving its cash management service products which imply an increase of the reciprocity index in order to reduce its funding cost.

SMEs
Corpbanca is hoping to establish a more significant presence in the SME segment and increase its market share. For this purpose, the bank has significantly increased its sales force for 2011. The SME unit currently offers an array of products, including products (such as lines of credit) backed by governmental warranties created to develop small and medium sized businesses.

Malta’s evolving economy

The small island nation located in the Mediterranean Sea has few natural resources, restricted fresh water supplies and no domestic energy sources. Until the late 1980s, the Maltese economy was heavily dependent on tourism, a limited manufacturing sector and its favourable position as a freight trans-shipping stopover, but that has changed radically over the past 25 years.

Working closely with an emerging financial services industry, the government aims to grow that sector to 25 percent of GDP by 2015. The growth of Malta’s financial services sector is to be attributed to a highly experienced, professional talent pool, a sound legal and regulatory framework, a ‘can do’ and reasonable time to market culture, and cost-competitiveness. Already, Malta is seen as a viable alternative to Dublin and Luxemburg as a base for investment funds and operators alike.

“Malta has evolved from an offshore tax haven set up in the late 1980s to a fully fledged financial services centre,” says Dr Rosanne Bonnici, partner at law firm Fenech & Fenech Advocates. “According to the University of Malta, the number of professional investor funds locating here since 2007 has grown to over 400, an increase of over 40 percent.”

Although the country is sometimes still referred to as an offshore tax haven or a low tax jurisdiction, neither term correctly describes Malta’s tax system. In response to a request from the European Commission that Malta abolish tax provisions that might distort competition within the EU, a number of changes were introduced in 2007 creating a tax regime that is fully EU sanctioned.

Safe benefits
It is still, however, favourable. The Maltese fiscal regime has played an essential role in creating an attractive business environment. Malta has also proved to be a sought-after holding company jurisdiction and a base for conducting international activities. These regimes are underpinned by Malta’s favourable tax system and its key advantages, which include the fact that Malta is the only EU member state with the full imputation system (with certain distributions also triggering a right to tax refunds in the hands of the shareholder, bringing the overall effective Malta tax rate to five percent or less), an extensive network of double taxation treaties, with benefits being granted unilaterally when no bilateral treaty is in force, and an ideal tax residency status for individuals.

Regulatory bureaucracy is also kept to a minimum, making it possible to set up a company in Malta in two to three days. “Clients intending to establish operations will find all the expertise and support they need to incorporate and maintain Maltese companies,” Dr Bonnici says. Dr Bonnici, winner of this year’s World Finance award for Best Tax Consultant in Malta, is widely recognised as one of the country’s leading tax lawyers, and heads Fenech & Fenech Advocates’ tax practice. The firm also includes an inhouse corporate services group and accordingly provides clients with a comprehensive A-Z service.

It is no wonder, then, that investors are moving in and Malta is winning awards. The country is in fact emerging alongside traditional rivals to London, such as Switzerland, as a European location for hedge fund managers. Managers who have moved to Malta recently include Clive Capital, Vector Commodity Management, Duet Asset Management, Finisterre Capital and Belay Partners. Custom House Global Fund Services relocated its headquarters from Dublin to Malta in 2008, with Chairman Dermot Butler noting that the regulator in Malta is “more pragmatic, business friendly and helpful than anywhere else.” 

In preparing its Global Competitiveness Report 2010-11, the World Economic Forum reviewed 139 countries and ranked Malta 10th soundest banking sector and 11th in financial market development. In the third edition of the Global Financial Centres Index (published by the City of London University in February 2008), Malta was named as one of the top three financial centres likely to increase in importance over the next two to three years. Only Dubai and Shanghai were placed above Malta in the index.

Mediterranean appeal
“There are, of course, many other reasons to take a look at Malta,” says Dr Bonnici, whose firm is one of the largest full service law firms in Malta. “In addition to our well-regulated financial services sector, Malta offers excellent opportunities for efficient tax planning for the private and corporate client alike.” Fenech & Fenech Advocates advises clients across a wide range of practice areas, including the highly specialised areas of financial services and taxation through its well established Tax Department. High net worth clients welcome the firm’s expertise in related areas of corporate law, trusts and foundations, amongst others.

Many of those high net worth clients also appreciate the lovely climate and beautiful harbours of the island. Malta has a long maritime tradition: with its strategic location inside the Straits of Gibraltar, the island has been a position of naval importance to conquering nations from the Phoenicians to the British. Today the Maltese maritime flag is ranked second largest in Europe and seventh largest in the world, and many beautiful Maltese registered yachts can be found moored in her marinas.

“We are proud of what we have achieved in Malta,” Dr Bonnici says. “A recent survey of investor and fund manager views on domiciliation, migration and fund servicing in the Mediterranean for International Fund Investment recognised our island as the best know Mediterranean fund domicile, with 76 percent of respondents aware that it is an option for those looking for a base in the European Union. Malta is becoming a real destination of choice.”

KTPB debuts first Turkish sukuk deal

The Kuwait Turkish Participation Bank (KTPB) issue is the first ever sukuk out of Turkey. The $100m debut sukuk was issued mainly to fund KTPB’s future expansion plan and general corporate purposes. The transaction attracted a large amount of liquidity across the GCC, Europe, and Asia regions, resulting in the book being oversubscribed 1.5 times.

KTPB (or Kuveyt Turk Katilim Bankasi, in  Turkish) is a fully fledged commercial bank which has operated primarily in the Republic of Turkey since 1989. It undertakes all its business in compliance with the principles of interest-free banking, a central tenet of Islamic finance and a practice known as ‘participation banking’ in Turkey. As a result of this, and following the introduction of a new banking framework in 2005, Kuveyt Turk was reclassified as a participation bank and renamed to Kuveyt Turk Katilim Bankasi A.S.

Today the bank is 62 percent owned by Kuwait Finance House. It offers interest free banking, primarily to corporates and SMEs, but also targets retail banking segments such as mortgage related businesses – although these amount to less than 20 percent of the loan portfolio.

KTPB ranks third among the four participation banks in Turkey by deposits, with a 22 percent market share, and ranks 19th largest by unconsolidated assets of the 49 banks in Turkey. The bank has 156 branches throughout the country.   

Structure overview
The issue consists of three year fixed rate Sukuk Trust Certificates. The certificates are denominated in US dollars and offered under Regulation S. The offering is structured as a Wakala Sukuk on the basis of the transfer of the beneficial rights and interest in a portfolio, consisting of 51 percent ijarah receivables and 49 percent murabaha receivables. The issuer for KTPB’s inaugural sukuk is KT Turkey Sukuk Limited (Sukuk SPV), an exempted company with limited liability incorporated in the Cayman Islands. KTPB assumes the roles of the obligor, guarantor, managing agent and seller in the transaction. The certificates were cleared through Euroclear and Clearstream and are listed in the London Stock Exchange as a primary listing. KTPB conducted a non-deal roadshow in Dubai, Abu Dhabi, London and Bahrain in July 2010, which attracted favourable attention. The sukuk pays a semi-annual coupon of 5.25 percent and has been geographically distributed throughout the Middle East, Europe, and Asia.

For more information email: info@liquidityhouse.com; www.liquidityhouse.com

Brazilian banking sector rides growth

Banco Pine is a publicly-held multiple bank specialising in servicing the corporate segment, especially companies with annual revenues above R$150m. It is a client-focused, relationship-based bank; its strategy is based on a deep understanding of each of its clients, including their histories, businesses and potential.

Through this, the bank builds customised solutions and offers alternatives to suit each client’s profile and expectation.

This strategy requires product diversity, qualified human capital and agility – characteristics that are consistently developed by the bank.
 
Product diversity
Banco Pine has developed a wide base of products, including several credit and onlending alternatives in domestic and foreign currencies. In addition, the bank has established a solid sales desk for it clients, being able to offer hedging derivatives in FX, interest rates and several commodities. It is also a provider of financial and strategic advisory services, including M&A, and is a niche player in the DCM and syndicated loan markets.

Credit is Banco Pine’s flagship product, and the main entry door for the client to the bank. It has an established track record and expertise in this segment, ensuring market leadership, agility and solidness in the lending business.

The bank has a unique policy of evaluating each transaction diligently and completely. All credit decisions follow a strict credit policy, and need to be approved unanimously by the credit committee.

As part of its business model, the bank has a relatively low number of clients assigned to each origination officer, enabling for a closer credit monitoring and constant and proactive client management. The same is valid in the credit department. Transactions are analysed and monitored by a staff of approximately 16 percent of the bank’s personnel.

PINE has also an efficient loan and collateral formalisation and documentation policy and process, which keeps the credit portfolio robust and with very low default rates.

The loan portfolio is well dispersed across various economic sectors. The bank acts prudently with diversified exposure to each of the sectors.

Sales desk
The main objective of the sales desk is to offer alternatives for clients to hedge against adverse market moves, giving more predictability to a client’s balance sheet.

Banco Pine has important credentials in this business. Most importantly, the expertise acquired over the years qualifies the bank to quickly respond to market conditions, offering adequate hedge products to mitigate gaps in its clients’ balance sheets.

The main areas of business are currency, commodities and interest rates. The main products are traditional derivatives instruments such as non-deliverable forwards (NDFs), options and swaps.

All hedging transactions are executed with clients that already have an active credit relationship with the bank, rated between AA and C. Most of these transactions are short-term, with duration of 120 days. The sales desk keeps no mismatches, since all material market risk is hedged through the BM&FBovespa or directly with counterparties through OTC transactions.

PINE Investimentos
Banco Pine’s investment arm offers unique solutions for its clients in capital markets, asset management and financial advisory. With a highly qualified team that is deeply knowledgeable of the market, this area operates as an advisor and not as counterparty, serving the interests and needs of its clients in a customised manner in line with market demands.

Moreover, one of its goals is to provide personalised, high value-added financial advice, offering resources and alternatives for financial and capital restructuring, which demands complex solutions and long-term relationships in line with client profiles and expectations.

Funding
The bank’s funding sources are highly diversified. It funds in the local market from companies, individuals and institutions, mainly through CDs, Letras Financeiras and other instruments such as LCAs. It also funds through the Brazilian Development Bank for its onlending business.

In the international market, the bank funds through senior and subordinated debt, with foreign banks and investors and trade finance lines from correspondent banks. It also has close relationships with multilateral agencies such as the International Finance Corporation and the Inter-American Investment Corporation, regional agencies like the Inter-American Development Bank, and bilateral agencies such as the German Investment Corporation, the Dutch Development Bank and the US Agency for International Development. As a rule, the bank hedges 100 percent of the currency risk from offshore funding transactions.

A good example of this kind of funding is the syndicated A/B loan contracted on January 21st, 2011. The transaction, which reached $106m, was globally coordinated by the Inter-American Investment Corporation (IIC) in the “A” portion and by three co-leading banks for the “B” portion (Santander, WestLB and Standard Bank), and by two joint lead arranger banks (Bradesco and Banco do Brasil). Demand for the issuance exceeded the initial offer, which was $75m.

The IIC carried out due diligence of the bank and also evaluated its commitment to social and environmental responsibility, as part of the loan approval process.

Asset and liability management
Historically, PINE maintains a conservative policy in relation to its liquidity position. On December 31, 2010, the liquidity position remained at comfortable levels, representing 43 percent of time deposits on that date. PINE also maintains a conservative asset and liability management policy. Accordingly, its funding sources are adequately aligned on terms and costs with the respective assets in the credit portfolio: while the weighted average maturity of the loan portfolio is 15 months, the weighted average maturity of the funding is 18 months.

Human resources
Banco Pine’s mains assets are its employees; it therefore attracts, retains and develops the best talent while maintaining a high-performance work environment focused on results and based on meritocracy. The bank constantly invests in training and qualification of its employees, encouraging deep knowledge of clients and products, which facilitates cross-selling opportunities that bring value to clients and to the bank.

Corporate governance
Banco Pine has active corporate governance policies, given its permanent commitment to shareholders and other stakeholders. The most important differentials of its corporate governance practices are:

– Two independent members and one external member on the board of directors
– 100 percent tag-along rights for all shares, including preferred shares
– Arbitration procedures for rapid settlement of disputes
– Fiscal council

The bank adopts best corporate governance practices, with an internal compliance and auditing structure that assures an operational environment based on the company’s best values.

A well-prepared bank
Today, Banco Pine has the main resources necessary for sustained growth: qualified human capital, comfortable capitalisation and adequate funding. In other words, the bank is ready to continue developing its strategy of providing complete service to corporations, building trust and loyalty on the one hand and profitability on the other.

These resources enable the bank to provide a continually improving service by creating new solutions, generating client captivity and promoting an environment that is propitious for cross-selling. Banco Pine is well prepared to continue growing with quality, capitalising on the momentum of the Brazilian economy.

BESA launches sustainability drive

Since its foundation, the activities of Banco Espirito Santo Angola (BESA) have been underlined by a serious commitment to sustainable development in Angola. The bank believes that economic growth should go hand in hand with the promotion of sustainability, and that only these factors in conjunction can assure the country and planet of a better future. This position certifies BESA’s corporate citizenship, implemented through a close relationship with its local community.

As an economic agent, BESA aims to play an active role in Angola’s financial and economic growth, as well as raising awareness of the importance of sustainable development in Angola and in the world.

BESA asserted sustainable development as a fundamental part of its strategy, which led to the creation of a new operational area, fully dedicated to projects aimed at spreading and promoting sustainability: BESA Social Responsibility. Although it is still in its formative years, its actions concur a great cause: a more sustainable world.

The future of the planet depends on the implementation of strategies and actions, between countries, organisations, institutions, the private sector and the civil society. As such, the bank assumes the responsibility of promoting sustainability with the commitment and seriousness which it believes it deserves from all world institutions.

This line of thought led BESA to join UNESCO, first through the Planet Earth International Committee, and now through the Planet Earth Institute (PEI), an organisation that pursues the work developed by the Committee and supports all its initiatives. Through this partnership, BESA participates actively in the initiatives promoted by PEI, drawing attention to the concerns and challenges that threaten the African continent, uniting efforts to strive towards effective change.

CSR activities
In Angola, BESA is pursuing a social responsibility strategy based on three key areas denominated BESAsocial, which supports social and educational initiatives; BESAculture, which promotes and divulges Angolan culture; and BESAenvironment; aimed at calling attention to environmental issues and preservation.
BESAsocial is dedicated to improving living conditions and investing in education to empower the Angolan people with knowledge and awareness on imperative issues.

BESA, in collaboration with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, developed a teaching programme that enabled Angolan refugees – both adults and children – to learn Portuguese. Since the programme’s inception in 2007, the programme has benefited thousands of refugees.

These social responsibility initiatives benefit from a diverse range of influential social partners, such as Angola’s Ministry of Health and the Angolan Medical Association, which worked with BESA to launch the Health Newspaper of Angola – an effort to spread information about health and preventive healthcare. This monthly publication is the first in the country dedicated to healthcare issues, it is distributed free of charge in hospitals, healthcare centres and pharmacies.

Angola’s cultural roots
BESA’s efforts to promote Angolan culture, nationally and internationally, have always been a key element in BESA’s social responsibility strategy.

The first initiative of the BESAculture Project – the launch of a book to celebrate the 40-year career of António Ole, an Angolan painter, filmmaker and photographer – took place in 2007. Ole is Angola’s best known artist abroad.

Following the organisation of several cultural initiatives that involved the promotion of important cultural manifestations, BESA promoted the launch of a book on the photographic work of José Silva Pinto, one of the Angolan photographers with greater projection at home and abroad. The book’s launch took place in the bank’s headquarters, and was attended by several personalities of Angola’s cultural scene and society.

In 2009, BESA added to its repertoire of books with an homage to the written word, by publishing a book of short stories by Angolan authors, including Arnaldo Santos, Ondjaki, Jacques dos Santos, Sónia Gomes, Maria Celestina Fernandes, Ismael Mateus, João Tala, Chô do Guri, Sousa Jamba and Yola Castro.

The BESA/UNESCO Exhibition
BESAculture has taken upon itself the mission of promoting and preserving Angolan Culture, supporting local artists and developing initiatives to enhance Angolan art and artists internationally. Photography has been one of the main fields of intervention of BESAculture. In the past three years, BESA has organised the BESAPhoto competition, addressed to Angolan photographers. The 2008 competition was met with much enthusiasm: 117 amateur and professional photographers living in Angola or abroad participated, sending in 418 works. Indira Mateta, a 23-year old photographer, was awarded with the first prize.

After the success of the 2008 edition, BESA decided to find a partner that would offer new opportunities to Angolan photographers. This led to the beginning of a partnership with World Press Photo (WPPh), an organisation that has contributed significantly to the promotion of photography across the world.

In 2009, 160 Angolan photographers took part in the second edition of the contest, submitting 1,370 works – a dramatic 227 percent increase from the first contest. WPPh defined the working philosophy and selected the members of the jury, which was composed of two foreign and two Angolan photographers.

Candidates were also given the opportunity to take part in a photo workshop, supervised by WPPh. These workshops are an important part of the BESA/WPPh partnership. For BESA, it is a way of contributing to the training of Angolan photographers and thus foster the emergence of new artists in the country. And for WPPh, it was a way of achieving one of its main objectives for Africa, namely to mobilise new visionaries in the field of photography and “to bring to the world images of the African continent captured by the Africans themselves.”

The 2010 competition was also an enormous success, with another improvement in the quality and quantity of works submitted. The jury was again coordinated by WPPh, which brought together prestigious photographers such as Jonathan Torgovnik (Newsweek), Monica Lopez Allende (The Sunday Times Magazine), and Angolan photographer Sergio Afonso, (graphics editor of SENAC – Rio de Janeiro). Mr Torgovnik and Ms Allende also participated in an open seminar for Angolan artists, promoted by BESA.

Another BESA project, developed in parallel with the photography contest, is the “Save and Protect the Planet” Exhibition, also in partnership with WPPh. The companies challenged five African photographers to travel to five Angolan cities and capture images related to sustainable development related themes. Kenyan Felix Maxi focused on “Soil,” Angolan Walter Fernandes chose “Megacities,” Zimbabwean Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi selected “Energy Resources,” Ghanan Nana Kofi Acquah focused on “Earth and Health,” and Tanzanian Mwanzo Millinga elected for “Groundwater.”

This project is part of a strategy to promote photography in Africa. According to WPPh, “the African continent offers a huge potential for photography… in the next few years the world will increasingly see Africa through the eyes of African photographers.” A catalogue of the exhibition was produced, containing information about the project and the photojournalists who took part in the exhibition.

Investing in the planet
BESAenvironment is also developing an active role raising awareness on environmental issues that threaten the country and the continent in general.

In this scope, BESA supported the production of the Environmental Education Thematic Kit, the first project implemented by the Planet Earth National Committee and organised under a partnership with the Ministry of the Environment of Angola. The purpose of this project was to distribute throughout the country a thematic kit of books containing environmental dates, explanations on sustainable development issues, and activity sheets. The kit also included a CD with contents related to the protection of the planet Earth. In a first phase, the kit was distributed to thousands of students in the provinces of Luanda, Huambo and Huíla.

BESA is also a founding member of the Planet Earth National Committee, created in November 2009. The committee’s members include governmental institutions and representatives from the private sector. In recognition of its contribution to the Development Committee of UNESCO’s International Year of Planet Earth, BESA was named ‘Bank of the Planet’ in 2009. The bank’s relationship with the committee started with a participation in Planet Earth magazine, a publication that addresses sustainable development related issues.

After receiving this prestigious designation, BESA’s cooperation with UNESCO rose to a new level, and it was nominated for the title of  Official Bank of Planet Earth UNESCO, 2010-2020. With this award, UNESCO aimed to further strengthen the cooperation between the two institutions. BESA has made its position clear on continuing to support UNESCO’s projects aimed at fostering sustainable development. It is on this basis that the bank positions itself as one of the main partners in the initiatives taken by UNESCO through the Planet Earth Institute, to disseminate messages about sustainability.

This new partnership is the outcome of the bank’s active role in promoting sustainable development and supporting a host of initiatives with aims such as revitalising the economy, promoting culture, supporting education and protecting the environment.

The first action jointly undertaken by UNESCO and BESA (in its role as Official Bank of Planet Earth), alongside the International Union of Geological Sciences, was to assert the importance of the private sector’s contribution in the promotion of sustainability. BESA was invited to make a presentation to the UNESCO/BESA Planet Earth Partnership conference, held in May 2010 at the UN Partnership Fair, during the 18th session of the United Nations Commission for Sustainable Development. This was the first time that an Angolan private institution addressed the UN, giving practical examples of the importance of private contribution, with suggestions on how the participation of private partners may be implemented.

In addition to its presentation on the importance of the contribution of private partners to the promotion of sustainability, BESA was also invited to present the “Save and Protect the Planet” exhibition at the United Nations headquarters in New York.

Advancing ambition
For 2011, increasingly ambitious initiatives have been planned. In partnership with the Ministry of Environment of Angola, BESA intends to create five provincial committees of the Planet Earth Institute and launch a training project for activists in environmental education, which will involve Angolan embassies all over the world. The ministry also plans to create an eco-village in South Kwanza province, where natural products will be promoted and several environmental education initiatives implemented.

Internationally, BESA recently presented a proposal at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris for the creation of the first UNESCO Centre of Excellence for the Education of Earth Sciences in Africa, based in Luanda, in partnership with the Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology and the Planet Earth Institute.
The centre’s academic strategy will be defined by the Angolan Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology, in cooperation with the University Agostinho Neto of Angola, the Planet Earth Institute (PEI) and the Newcastle Institute for Research on Sustainability (NIReS), based in Newcastle University in the UK. The first phase will address the development of highly-trained Angolan/African specialists, who can (within five years) form the kernel of an autonomous capacity based permanently in the Centre of Excellence.

All these initiatives and partnerships are part of BESA’s long-term strategy to promote sustainable development in Angola and around the world, participating actively in the process of raising awareness and drawing attention to the importance of the preservation of the planet and its resources for the sake of generations that follow. 

OAB committed to nation’s development

In a region that is in the throes of change, Oman Arab Bank SAOC sees stability and growth rooted in its traditional standing and historical values. The bank has embraced current global banking trends in management and infrastructure while remaining committed to its traditions – its sound conservative approach and policies have helped the bank to grow while maintaining asset quality and profitability.

Oman Arab Bank (OAB) began operating in 1984 after acquiring the branches of Arab Bank, Plc. which had been operating in Oman since 1973. In 1992 it expanded its operations in the Sultanate with the acquisition of all the retail branches of Omani European Bank, which OAB merged with in 1994. Oman Arab Bank currently has 53 offices and branches spread all over the Sultanate.

The bank offers a wide range of products and services to meet the needs of a broad client base: individual, corporate, and institutional customers, government agencies and other international financial institutions. These services include retail banking, private banking, trade financing, merchant banking, commercial banking and real estate lending.

Its competitive advantage revolves around four pillars: its diversified customer base, a conservative yet developmental approach, synergies developed through Arab Bank, and experienced and loyal senior management.

Pioneering customer care
OAB has an active retail banking and marketing department which continuously strives for better customer solutions and products to match their needs. Pioneering initiatives in e-banking and mobile banking have benefited customers with the latest technology while also increasing the bank’s customer base. Customers can choose from a varied product mix, from conventional banking to Bancassurance products, according to their specific needs.

The bank has also introduced online and mobile bill payment systems, and enhanced the systems to perform additional banking services such as payment, cashing and settlement of utility bills. For over a decade, Oman Arab Bank has invested in building a sophisticated infrastructure and a refined IT backbone, which can be aligned with evolving business needs quickly and effectively.

OAB employs more than 800 people, with a turnover ratio among the best in the industry; 56 percent of its employees have more than four years of association with the bank. OAB believes in continuous development and quality improvement of all its assets – including human assets. The overall Omanisation is currently 93 percent (the required level is 90 percent), while senior management Omanisation stands at 80 percent: the bank believes that local talent will play a vital part in the effective management of the post-crisis situation.

Crisis management
The financial crisis had a limited impact on the economy in the Sultanate and its financial and banking institutions. This is the result of the wise planning, far-sightedness and prudent policies of the government, which continued to carry out its plans, increased expenditure, and ensured that adequate liquidity was always available to the banks.

Meanwhile, OAB remained focused on playing its role in development. The bank is a pioneer in financing projects throughout the Sultanate, participating in all the projects established around Sohar Port, as well as projects in other regions. It is the bank’s firm belief that the main role of banks is to participate in national development – all OAB’s investments and loans are within Oman, with a view to dedicating all its support to this local goal.

Moody’s Investors Service has upgraded the long-term and short-term foreign currency deposit rating of Oman Arab Bank to A2/Prime-1 from A3/Prime-2; the outlook on these ratings has been changed from positive to stable. International credit rating agency Capital Intelligence has raised OAB’s foreign currency ratings to BBB+ long-term and A2 short-term.

Financial performance 2010
OAB has posted a net profit of RO 23.2m ($60.3m) for the year ended December 31, 2010, on par with its net profit of RO 23.1m ($60m) for the year 2009. Net interest income for the year stands at RO 33.4m ($86.8m), eight percent more than 2009’s RO 30.8m ($80m). Due to the ongoing financial crisis the bank faced losses in investments – however other operating income was RO 18.2m ($47.3m) for 2010, compared with RO 17.8m ($46.2m) for 2009. Due to higher net interest income and non-interest income the operating income of the bank was up from 2009, but increasing operating expenses, loan impairment and tax liability resulted in similar net profit for the year.

In 2010 the bank’s total assets grew to RO 953.7m ($2.48bn) – an increase of 11 percent over 2009. The loan portfolio increased to RO 660.3m ($1.72bn) from RO 565.6m ($1.47bn), a growth of almost 17 percent. Customer account levels grew by eight percent to reach RO 769.8m ($2bn) compared with RO 696.1m ($1.81bn) in 2009. Net worth of the bank rose almost 13 percent to RO 125.8m ($326.8m) from RO 111.5m ($289.6m). The loan portfolio increase matched that of the personal loan portfolio – personal loans made up more than 43 percent of gross loans as of 2010Q3 end, compared with 34 percent at the same period in 2009.
The bank is active toward its capital management, and as its risk weighted assets are increasing it is capitalising accordingly. In 2008 the adequacy ratio was 11.8 percent, but significant growth in adequacy helped it reach 13.4 percent in 2009 and 14.5 percent during 2010.

Omani banking sector
The Omani banking system experienced modest growth in 2010, similar to the overall economic growth. GDP grew 28.3 percent by September 2010, compared to a contraction of 27.4 percent up to September 2009. The petroleum and non-petroleum sectors witnessed growth of 54.2 percent and 11.4 percent respectively up to September 2010.

Total assets of commercial banks increased by 10.2 percent to RO 15.65bn ($40.64bn) in 2010, compared to RO 14.2bn ($36.88bn) in 2009. Total outstanding credit stood at RO 10.72bn ($27.86bn) in December 2010 and accounted for 68.5 percent of total assets. On a year-on-year basis, credit growth was nine percent as at the end of December 2010 compared to 6.2 percent in the previous year.

Total deposits (Rial Omani plus foreign currency) witnessed year-on-year growth of 14.6 percent to RO 10.52bn ($27.32bn) in December 2010 from RO 9.18bn ($23.83bn) in December 2009. Provisional net profits stood higher at RO 249.1m ($647m) at the end of December 2010, compared with RO 190.8m ($495.6m) a year ago.

Investment Management Group
Established in 1998, Investment Management Group (IMG) is the investment banking arm of OAB. IMG is licensed by the Capital Market Authority and Central Bank of Oman to carry out Investment Banking Activities. Being an established player in the market, OAB-IMG is the most comprehensive source on investment banking services in the Sultanate. Continuous product development and top-of-the-line advisory services have played a part in supporting equity market stability, public issues advisory and management, and research coverage of all major sectors of the economy. Mr Lo’ai B Bataineh (DGM Investment & Development) has led IMG since its inception and is supported by a qualified and experienced team.

Licensed in all major aspects of investment banking, OAB-IMG provides:
– Floor and off-the-floor brokerage
– MSM & Non MSM Trust Account
– Issue management
– Fund management
– Investment advice
– Portfolio management
– Margin trading
– Organisation and promotion of funds
– Custodial services

IMG’s Corporate Finance and Advisory (CF&A) division is an active player in issue management and advisory services, raising more than $1.8bn. IMG was the lead issue manager, underwriter and placement collection agent for the Voltamp IPO. It plays an active role in developing issue management process in Oman in coordination with the Capital Market Authority. Two major deals executed by CF&A in 2010 were a secondary issue of $10.6m for Oman National Engineering & Development Company SAOC, and a private placement of $5.2m for Muscat Gases Company SAOG.

The Asset Management division currently has assets under management (including custody) in excess of $800m. Through Asset Management, IMG was the first Oman-based institution to successfully launch a mutual fund investing in Oman & GCC after the global financial crisis. IMG has outperformed the Muscat Securities Market (MSM) by delivering a compounded return of 245.33 percent over the last 10 years (up to Dec 31, 2010) in contrast to MSM’s return of 156.04 percent.

IMG began brokerage operations in 2002 and is one of the top brokers on the MSM. IMG also has the distinction of executing the largest single deal on MSM, which involved the sale of a 49 percent stake of BP Group in BP Oman to Oman Oil Company (2002). Covering 10 regional markets including all GCC markets, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan and Egypt, IMG offers both broker assisted and online trading services for the Omani markets. Clients include high net worth individuals, pension funds, and institutional and corporate clients.

For more information Tel +968 24 827 300-02; Email l.bataineh@oabinvest.com, www.oabinvest.com

Service still king in automated trading

Alongside its professional trading, exclusive video tutorials and professional guidance, youtradeFX has truly mastered the art of customer service, a rare quality in the industry today.

A high level of computer knowledge is essential for employees at youtradeFX, as each trade paves a way for new developments and analyses for the professional team. Since the company was established in 2009, the dealers have incorporated a plethora of new and upcoming trading techniques such as algo-trading.

It is safe to say that today’s market is becoming more dynamic than ever before – more traders are depending on automatic trading to determine the most miniscule of opportunities while reducing risk. Algorithm trading has proven to capture signals one step ahead of the human being in efforts to provide stronger success in the online trading arena. Because excellent customer service is the most important goal of the youtradeFX team, algo-trading was immediately implemented to reduce subjective and impulsive trading behaviours to as little as possible.

Although the foreign exchange market is still considered a relatively new platform, the procedure of buying and selling is nevertheless considered multifaceted – self-discipline in this market is extremely hard to come by. However, algorithm trading eliminates the human subjective response and reduces emotion induced loss. Although this technique may reduce possible profit margins, algorithm trading allows traders to stop before it’s too late.

According to David Smith, a senior dealer with youtradeFX, using algo-trading and beginner techniques are vital to the company and its clients. “Not everyone knows how to read the market and not everybody knows how to contact an analyst who is experienced in positioning trades for them,” he says. “The algo-trading robot knows how to read the market and decides, based on research, patterns and techniques, how to properly optimise the client’s trades.”

Automating risk management
On the other hand, even though the robot knows how to project the trade, there are several levels on which the trade can be interpreted. “Some work on scalping, which are short term trades,” says Mr Smith. “The robot’s research can predict which one of the currencies is going to rise or fall abruptly, so they actually give us an opportunity to benefit with small action and result in big volume. It is a way to make big money in a short amount of time.”

Regardless of the size of the trade, the customer will always be taken care of – unlike many foreign exchange companies, youtradeFX holds its own dealing room. A personal response is always vital at the company.

The dealing room consists of approximately 20 qualified dealers; all have a certified degree in either business or economics and are all on staff 24/5. Additionally, Monday through Friday, there are always three designated analysts conducting detailed research on the markets and sending real time signals to clients.

The customer service at youtradeFX has become one of the most favoured qualities about the company. Since installing the user-friendly MetaTrader 4 trading platform, trading is easier and simpler – the rollout of MetaTrader 5 in April 2011 will add more features such as the ability to trade on several markets at once, including indices and stocks commodities.

According to Marianne Houllou, Sales Manager for English-speaking countries, “Upgrades, especially in the trading platforms, are extremely vital to us. My clients are so valuable to me that any improvements are essential in order for me to continue giving my clients the best services I can.”

Unique to youtradeFX are its exclusive video tutorials. These free videos are one-on-one sessions teaching beginner traders about the market. “I love teaching my clients how to view graphs and how to analyse the market – it is something that I am passionate about and I get to share and teach to others,” says Ms Houllou. “In addition to the videos, we give them our contact details; I am always available to help my clients via LiveChat, phone or email.”

Brazil enters new growth cycle

At the beginning of 2011, the Bradesco brand was considered the most valuable among Brazilian banks in a survey conducted by consulting firm Brand Finance, and the sixth most valuable among banks worldwide. This is just one of many international acknowledgments Bradesco has received over the years. Building on a 68-year tradition of excellent results – the bank began operations in 1943 – Bradesco posted record net income of more than $6bn in 2010, 25.1 percent up on 2009. The bank closed the year with total assets of $382.6bn, 26 percent more than in 2009, while total assets under management moved up by 24.3 percent to $523.7bn. Bradesco’s preferred shares appreciated by 12 percent in the year, versus only 1 percent for the Ibovespa, which comprises the most traded shares on the São Paulo Stock Exchange. Bradesco’s shares are also traded on the NYSE, in New York, and the Latibex, in Madrid, where they are renowned for their high liquidity.

These numbers are the result of the successful strategies adopted by Bradesco at the beginning of the last decade, when it began rapidly expanding its service network, bringing its products and services to millions of people hitherto deprived of the banking experience. Bradesco became the first financial institution to be present in all of the country’s 5,565 municipalities and ended last year with an estimated 60 million customers; in other words, a third of Brazil’s population is a Bradesco customer. 

The development of the country, and the accompanying increase in jobs and income, has fueled demand for financial services, and the bank is fully prepared to meet this demand, no matter how remote the region. One example is the country’s first floating bank branch, on the riverboat Voyager III, which covers the 1,600km between Manaus and Tabatinga, in the state of Amazonas, twice a month. There are 11 municipalities and 50 riverside communities located along the route, whose total population of 250,000 had access to banking services for the first time.

Bradesco was also the first bank to expand its loan portfolio in anticipation of demand for loans generated by economic growth, the current upward social mobility process and the creation of a strong domestic market. In December 2010, its loan portfolio totaled $176.2bn, 23 percent more than the same period in 2009.  The portfolio is of the highest quality, protected by strict risk evaluation and monitoring processes that are substantially more rigorous than the norm in the financial system. In December, the delinquency rate on loans overdue for more than 90 days stood at 3.6 percent, recording its fifth consecutive quarterly decline.

Bradesco ended 2010 with more than 44,000 service points, 3,604 of which branches and 32,307 correspondent banks, plus 32,000 ATMs. Abroad, the bank maintains branches in New York, Grand Cayman and Nassau, and subsidiaries in Buenos Aires, Luxemburg, Tokyo, Grand Cayman, Hong Kong, New York, London and Mexico.  
Bradesco BBI, an investment bank, has an exceptionally strong presence in the capital market. Last year, it was the lead manager for the primary offering of Petrobras common and preferred shares, the world’s largest ever stock offering, which raised $72bn, and took part in more than 80 percent of all issues registered with the Brazilian Securities and Exchange Commission (CVM). Bradesco Seguros e Previdência, one of the largest insurance companies in Latin America, posted annual revenue of $18.6bn, 18 percent up on the year before.

Technical reserves totaled $52bn, representing one third of Brazil’s entire insurance market.

Bradesco, with its wide range of products and services, is fully equipped to serve customers from all social and economic levels, from low-income individuals to the largest corporations.  This profile is in line with one of the bank’s oldest commitments and one of the values underpinning its corporate culture: supporting economic and social development in Brazil for the benefit of its citizens. This commitment is forever.  As a result, every year it invests more than any other company in the sector. In 2010, for example, it invested around $2.3bn in infrastructure, IT and telecommunications, as well as more $64m in the training of its 95,000-strong workforce.

If Bradesco is regarded in Brazil and abroad as a modern, solid, dynamic and constructive institution, which benefits both its customers and shareholders, this is due as much to its performance as to the responsible management that has characterized the last seven decades, not to mention the private social investments that have made it so distinguished among the Brazilian business community. In September 2010, its corporate governance practices received a GAMMA 7 score from Standard & Poor’s, the highest score ever granted by the firm. On the social and environmental responsibility front, it has signed up to the most important national and international commitments, including the Global Pact, the Equator Principles and the Principles for Responsible Investment. It also joined the Green Protocol, a Brazilian Environment Ministry initiative for the implementation of a common sustainability agenda in the banking sector. Bradesco is included in the Dow Jones Sustainability Index, the Bovespa Corporate Sustainability Index and the Carbon Efficient Index, a joint initiative of the São Paulo Stock Exchange and the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES).

In addition to its corporate initiatives, Bradesco also contributes to the welfare of the country and its population by investing in various social and cultural projects.  Through Fundação Bradesco, founded 54 years ago, the Bank has developed an extensive educational programme geared towards underprivileged communities, running 40 schools throughout the country which provide free, high-quality education to needy children and teenagers, in addition to a number of other social and educational activities. Since it began operations, Fundação Bradesco has provided more than two million students with an education, which, together with other courses – both on-site and distance learning – rises to more than 4 million. 

The Bradesco Sports and Education Program has provided volleyball and basketball training for around 2,000 girls aged between 8 and 18, in addition to classes and activities to supplement schoolwork.  Since 2010 the program has been implemented in a modern, 10,000sq. m sports complex equipped with courts, locker rooms and pools. Every year, Bradesco invests in hundreds of cultural and folk events and sponsors various initiatives designed to promote citizenship and respect for the environment.

It is a virtual consensus among market analysts that Brazil has entered a new growth cycle, tied to the responsible management of social and environmental issues. This country has become particularly attractive, with its robust domestic market, major infrastructure projects and excellent prospects for a continuous upturn in income and jobs. And Bradesco has played a primary part in consolidating this scenario. With its efficiency, brand strength and tradition of service excellence, the bank will continue contributing to an even better future.

Risk practices prove popular

Banco Popular became the property of Luis Carlos Sarmiento Angulo in 1996, one of the most outstanding economic groups in the country. Angulo in turn owns important financial institutions comprising Grupo Aval, with additional participation as well in areas such as real estate, public works, agro industry, gas and communications.

Group Aval is the largest financial group in the country, with 30.7 percent of the banking system’s total assets. It is comprised of Banco Popular and three other banks: Bogota, Occidente and AV Villas; as well as Corporacion Financiera Colombiana, Fondo de Pensiones y Cesantias Porvenir, and various affiliates of each entity which offer insurance, trust and stock market  services, and logistics for foreign trade operations.

Banco Popular’s membership of Grupo Aval has given it a significant strength for its business growth, thanks to the support and synergies obtained from the group’s nationwide integrated customers service network and the technological and operative optimisation of processes.

Commercial trend
Banco Popular ranks seventh among the 18 banking entities in Colombia by asset size, with total assets of $6.6m as of December 2010.

The bank mainly directs its activity towards financial intermediation, that is, credit granting, so that 69 percent of its assets are placed in its credit portfolio. As of December 2010 this showed a total of $4.5m, a 26 percent year-on-year increase.

Banco Popular has a defined orientation to consumer credit, and is leader in retired and employees credits, with wage income as payment source, by means of discounts on their salaries made by the employer and transferred directly to the Bank. This product, called ‘libranzas,’ allows beneficiaries to take care of their needs regarding education, health, housing improvement and recreation, and assures the bank high financial return, the atomisation of risk and low default. As of December 2010, this credit line totalled $2.3m – 52 percent of the bank’s total credit portfolio.

Also, due to its state-owned origin, the bank has a particular strength dealing with public sector clients, in services as well as in deposits and credit portfolio, mainly in libranzas.

Among the strategies launched in recent years is targeting of the medium-sized enterprise segment (companies with annual sales or income between $1m and $20m), without disregarding its participation in larger enterprises and corporate credits.

Additionally, the bank offers customers other services and products such as chequing accounts, savings, term deposits, credit and debit cards and electronic banking services.

With the merging of its affiliate Leasing Popular last year, other products were included in the bank’s portfolio such as factoring, real estate leasing, capital goods leasing, infrastructure and lease back, which enlarged its customers’ ability to enhance their business needs.

Besides the credit portfolio, the bank has an investment portfolio in fixed income securities, well controlled regarding size and risk, reducing the effect of market volatility. This generates significant liquidity benefits, as it allows  Banco Popular to obtain credits from the central bank, guaranteed with securities, most of them issued by the Colombian government.

Geographic and online coverage
Banco Popular has a broad national coverage through its own branch network and transactional integration with Grupo Aval entities. It is present in all main cities of the country and in most of the municipalities.
The bank has taken care to attract attention  and new customers with its sites, opening new offices, ATMs, non banking correspondents and technological centres – where internet services, ATMs and telephones are available.

Along with traditional services, the bank has made important efforts in developing electronic banking, offering products and services online or by other transactional networks.

Profits and quality
The results of the permanent updated strategy of the bank are shown in its profit performance, which in recent years has ranked among the top performers in the banking industry – and in some quarters, led the field.

With last year’s net profit of $184m, Banco Popular obtained a return over equity of 23.5 percent as of December 2010, far higher than the 16.7 percent average of the Colombian banking sector.

This result follows from the suitable strategies developed for the management of the banking business variables – including the bank’s emphasis on financial intermediation, with high productivity standards and low risk.

The bank’s growth has been accompanied by efficient management of credit risk, using a strict control on new credits and an appropriate payables collection process, which allows the bank to maintain better than average levels of credit portfolio. This is how the productive assets of the bank represented 91 percent of the total assets as of December 2010.

The bank also develops commercial strategies on segmentation in order to assist clients according to their particular needs, helping both client retention and recruitment.

On the other hand, Banco Popular maintains a funding mix for credit hedging, mainly through chequing accounts, savings accounts, term deposits, and controlling financial expenses with a considered balance of cost and term.

A large portion of the bank’s deposits are obtained by means of banking services agreements with clients, who are committed to maintain average amounts in their accounts as a reciprocity; these resources are characterised by their high level of permanence and contribute to the funding stability.

Better indicators of administrative efficiency have also contributed to the bank’s profits. As of December 2010, the operative expenses vs. financial income ratio was 33.8 percent – better than the 44.5 percent of the total Colombian banking system.

Technology
With the aim of offering a fast and secure service to its clients, the bank has made important investments to keep its technology up to date and optimise its internal processes – focused on strengthening its internal platform, data storage systems, telecommunications and security schemes. This has enabled the broadening of services and products offered, along with the business strategy for each one of the target segments of the bank.

The bank also works with alternate contingency and operation centres – which, in the event of an accident in its primary data centre, would allow the bank to restore operations and recover its processing and production capacity. For this reason, ICONTEC has ratified during the last six years the quality certificate ISO 9001 that was granted to the bank in the year 2004 for some of its products and services, including libranzas.

Conservative risk management
In accordance with the orthodox policies of the bank, the handling of risk is part of its culture and complies with all legal regulations regarding credit, market and liquidity risk, operative risk and assets money laundering control, established by the Colombian Financial Superintendence, according to the Basilea Committee guidelines.

The strong performance of the bank is acknowledged by risk rating agencies BRC Investor Service SA and Value and Risk Rating SA, which have granted maximum rating AAA for long term debt and ‘+1’ for short term debt.

These rating entities support the results in the equity capacity of the bank, its positive financial results, the credit portfolio growth, the focus on specific market niches and the outstanding position of quality and hedging indicators. As one rating agency states, “They manage to keep the bank as one of the soundest and most profitable credit establishments of the Colombian financial system.”

Outlook  
During the past years of world crisis, Colombia showed a positive performance, due to the conservative management of the monetary and fiscal policies and to the stability and soundness of the financial sector.
This has produced economic growth, improved the average living standards of the population and increased the foreign investment in different sectors such as mining, oil, energy and telecommunications.

For 2011 the country is expected to keep up its growth rhythm, which forecasts a good prospect for Banco Popular’s performance and continuance of its excellent indicators.

The promise of Paraguay

Many still think of Paraguay as the ‘forgotten country’ – and although that label is no longer valid, it’s not hard to see where it came from. Paraguay is bordered by much more populated countries – Brazil, Argentina and Bolivia – and it’s land-locked. Not exactly on the tourist trail, it was long ignored by all but the most adventurous travellers. Having been ruled by dictatorships for nearly all of its 200 years of independence, its reputation has been plagued by human-rights abuses. Further, until the last few years Paraguay’s economic performance has been – to put it mildly – undistinguished. For good measure, the banking sector nearly collapsed, not once but twice, in the final years of the millennium.

However Paraguay is too modest for its own good. Under much more enlightened governance it has been catching up fast, installing a wide range of economic and social reforms that increasingly put it on the global map for astute investors seeking the kind of opportunities that are only available in fast-modernising countries. The banking sector, for instance, is unrecognisable from the one that once thrived on the laundering of money, while taxation has undergone a thorough overhaul that has made it one of the most attractive regimes in the entire region.

Taken together, the reforms helped the country bounce back impressively from the financial crisis which reversed its seemingly unstoppable rise in gross domestic product.

Reforms continue apace under president Fernando Lugo, a former priest, and finance minister Dionisio Borda, who has an international reputation for what the IMF called “macro-economic stability.” Right now, he’s in the process of pushing a cost-cutting programme through the executive branch that will reduce public expenses by over three percent and he expects similar percentage cuts from Congress and the judiciary after the latter two branches went on a job-hiring spree.

In the next parliamentary session the government will take another step in the rehabilitation of the banking sector by passing a law that provides for the seizing of any laundered assets. “We are very tough on money-laundering here,” points out Conor McEnroy, Chairman of Sudameris Bank.

Global approval
The results of this belated programme of reform are unarguable, as the latest World Bank/International Finance Corporation’s survey on the ease of doing business shows. On all counts Paraguay is moving up the rankings. Overall it stands at 106 and, while there’s obviously room for improvement, it’s moved ahead of other nations in its region such as Argentina (115), Brazil (127), Ecuador (130) and Bolivia (149).

Similarly, the ratings in crucial areas such as protection of investors, the obtaining of credit, speed in providing construction permits and enforcement of contracts are improving all the time – and generally exceeding those of its neighbours, some of them by comfortable margins. For instance in terms of protection of investors – a prime consideration for foreign capital – Paraguay ranks at 59, which puts it well ahead of Brazil (74), Argentina (109) and Bolivia and Ecuador (tied at a dismal 132).

There’s still a lot of work to be done, as the IMF notes in its latest report. Some of the state-owned institutions are inefficient and cumbersome, and a lot of red tape remains to be cut.

However Mr McEnroy is a keen and involved observer of Paraguay’s rapid reforms and he likes what he sees. As head of Paraguay’s fifth-largest financial institution, he’s had a ringside seat. And on the basis of what he’s observed in the seven years since his Abbeyfield Group bought the then-ailing bank, the former Swiss Bank Corporation executive is more than optimistic for the nation’s future. “I see GDP growth of five to eight percent for the foreseeable future,” he told World Finance. “Paraguay is a country that has passed a milestone… How many countries have it to say that international reserves are more than twice national debt; and in the practice Paraguay has balanced budgets.”

He cites a few vital signs that suggest a bright tomorrow for a once benighted nation. Take, for instance, the kind of commodities that are in fast-rising, global demand. Paraguay is the world’s largest exporter of organic sugar. It’s also a big exporter of soya beans, sesame seeds and high-quality beef. In beef alone, the value of exports, mainly to Russia, the Middle East and Europe in the form of specialty products, is approaching the $1bn a year mark.

“Paraguay has an important regional and global role as a low-cost commodity producer for the food industry,” explains Mr McEnroy.  However, rather than rely on long-established industries – profitable as they are – the nation is also capitalising on its historic husbandry and agricultural skills by developing a high-margin horticulture industry in fruit and vegetables – notably oranges and limes.

Both industries are kick-started by fertile but inexpensive land. While good cattle country can be had for as little $50 a hectare, prime horticultural land is available at $4,000 a hectare, low by the standards of competing regions. As economists point out, the availability of land at these prices gives investors a low-cost advantage in export markets.

Mindful of the need to attract foreign investment, tax reform has been nothing short of revolutionary, particularly so for foreign investors. Under the so-called 60/90 law, foreign investors are permitted to repatriate the first 10 years of dividends from an investment without being charged withholding tax. In a similar capital-attracting concession, imported equipment is landed VAT-free.

The rest of the tax regime has been streamlined to attract foreign capital and know-how. The simplest way to understand it, say locals, is to think in terms of 10. Corporation tax is 10 percent, VAT on everything except luxury goods is 10 percent, and the individual tax rate is 10 percent (At the time of writing, however, the government was considering raising taxes on windfall earnings from exports, particularly of soya bean and beef, to meet a budget deficit – albeit a modest one by western standards).

FDI windfall
Unsurprisingly, foreign capital has been flowing nicely. Although most foreign investment originates from such reliable sources as the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank, the IMF (which is quite a fan of Paraguay’s progress) and other state, semi-state and multi-lateral institutions, foreign investors have begun piling into Paraguay as trust has built in the quality and permanence of the recent bout of reforms. From a low point of less than $40m in 2004, foreign direct investment (under the 60/90 tax incentive scheme) has since soared. By 2006, it more than tripled to $130m and, apart from a blip in 2009 because of the global financial crisis and a drought, it has grown ever since.

Predictably, the initial surge in outside capital originated from the Mercosur – that is, the regional common market – in the form of Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina, as well as from closely-connected nations such as Chile, Peru and Colombia.

But that’s starting to change, explains Mr McEnroy. In the last few years there’s been a steady stream of investment from European family businesses and offices, some of whom have long connections with the region and want to get on the bandwagon.

Industrial innovation
Traditional agricultural industries may have provided the foundation of Paraguay’s recovery, but new ones are emerging on the back of economic growth. The capital Asuncion, which has a population of 520,000 including many young professionals in the city proper, has become a preferred location for Spanish-speaking call centres for banks and telecom companies (among other industries) scattered around South America.

Another fledgling but promising assembly industry is Asian-designed, low-cost motorcycles and scooters for sale in Paraguay and further afield – but especially in Asuncion, where a staggering 65 percent of the population is under the age of 30.

As a junior member of Mercosur, Paraguay qualifies for special domestic-content rates of 40 percent that help give it an edge in this and other relatively recent assembly industries such as computers and electro-domestic goods.

Other industries that are rapidly transforming the nation’s economic landscape are brewers, energy (especially in the form of low-cost, exported hydro-electricity from the Itaipu station) and textiles.

Indeed hydro-electric energy is another engine of growth. “Paraguay has power to burn and is one of the biggest exporters of power in the world,” Mr McEnroy points out. “The agreement with Argentina on Yacreta will expire shortly and that with Brazil for Itaipu in a little over 10 years: soon we’ll be bursting at the seams with cheap energy for any energy intensive industry that wants to set up in Paraguay.”

The rich, fertile and vast land area is seen as another building block: forestry is booming, especially in the long-fibre trees used by the newsprint industry. And, proof positive that the world is finally taking notice of Paraguay, Asuncion has the seeds of a conference industry with the arrival of global brands such as Sheraton, Accor and Ibis.

Resource riches
The fabled Amazon is also a vital tool in Paraguay’s recovery. Widely seen as a muddy, piranha-infested river braved only by intrepid paddlers, it is in fact a vital artery to export markets; playing the same role that the Mississippi plays in the US. Another increasingly busy waterway is the 1,630-mile Paraguay River that is attracting the interest of some of the world’s biggest port operators, including one from Asia that is looking at a substantial investment along its banks. Meanwhile, traffic along the river – which runs through major trading nations such as Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay and Argentina – is growing, especially in grains and boxes.

“Shipyards are turning out barges as fast as they can build them,” says Mr McEnroy.

Oil exploration is on the rise. Having enviously eyed the enormous contribution that oil and gas have done for Brazil, Paraguay has only just changed highly protective laws to encourage exploration, in particular for methane and hydrocarbons. “Under the old laws, exploration licences were issued for 12 months at a time, which wasn’t nearly long enough, and were renewable only once,” explains Mr McEnroy. “But the government has brought licences to international standards and given companies eight years to prospect.”

Renewing its promise
Paraguay’s membership of Mercosur is seen as important for the nation’s future. South America’s leading trading bloc, it’s short for Mercado Comun del Sur – the common market of the south. Exactly 20 years old, it has a combined GDP of nearly $3trn but it differs from the European Union in being an economic and political agreement between just four nations – Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Venezuela under the left-wing government of Hugo Chavez would like to join Mercosur but Paraguay, fearing its influence, repeatedly exercises its veto to block its membership.

Paraguay’s recovery began in 2000 with, as is often the case, a severe economic shock in the form of a collapse of the banking sector. A newly independent central bank took control, shutting down corrupt banks, cancelling licences, tightening supervision and raising standards across the board except for the smaller and systemically less significant cooperatives. A direct result of this spring clean is that foreign-owned banks such as Sudameris dominate the sector.

Today, Paraguay’s rules for a bank’s capital adequacy would shame many of the institutions in Europe. “They’re some of the toughest in the world,” notes an approving Mr McEnroy. “Tier one capital must be a minimum 10 percent by law, but on average tier one is up to 17 percent. The tier one of Sudameris is 16 percent. We don’t do funky stuff in Paraguay. Regulation is plain vanilla, black and white, no grey. Banks are run very conservatively here.” Thus the central bank is an unapologetic advocate of the kind of old-fashioned banking practices that are on the way back around the world.

Mr McEnroy ticks off the main elements of Paraguay’s recovery. “The turnaround had a phenomenal effect on the economy,” he remembers. “Some of the main elements were the reform of state companies, although there’s still work to do there. The business of government was greatly improved, for instance in the collection of taxes. And corporation tax was reduced from 30 percent to 10 percent. The interesting thing is that, instead of tax receipts falling, the amount of tax collected rose by five times.”

A beneficiary of the reform process has been the local currency, the Guarani. As the IMF said in its latest report, “all available indicators suggest the level of the Guarani is consistent with its fundamentals.” Named for the nation’s original language, the Guarani has not been rebased since it was established in 1943 and, in a red-letter event, the currency will be re-based later this year with three zeroes being cancelled.

The important thing, as Mr McEnroy points out, is that the currency is holding its own in the Mercosur and beyond. “It will continue to appreciate modestly against the US dollar and the euro, as it’s been doing.”
The rise of Sudameris Bank says much about the new-look Paraguayan economy. As Mr McEnroy freely admits, it was not exactly the most impressive institution in the country when Abbeyfield bought it in July 2004. “It was the last bank in the queue,” he says. At the time it could boast net income of just $100,000 and $120m of assets (the Paraguayan economy is still about 45 percent “dollarized” – that is, the volume of greenbacks in use). But after seven years under a hand-picked management and board that includes senior central bankers drawn from around the region and from Europe, net income in 2011 will exceed $16m on assets of $700m. That kind of growth could not have happened in the moribund economy of the final years of the millennium.

A troubled history
Paraguay’s material and social development has been hampered by almost 200 years of dictatorships. Indeed the so-called Colorado party, which ruled uninterrupted for more than half a century and remains a powerful influence, routinely adopted populist economics that rode rough-shod over the vast majority of the population. When Lugo won the presidency in 2008 on a mandate of improving opportunities for Paraguay’s 6.3m people, it was the first time government had changed hands to an opposition party peacefully.

A former bishop of San Pedro, Lugo is only the second socialist president in nearly 200 years. He promised economic and social salvation for a country “deeply drowned in misery, poverty and discrimination.” So saying, he refused his presidential salary.

However Lugo is in a vulnerable position. In Paraguay’s bicameral system dominated by coalitions, President Lugo has no majority. The Liberal party, which is the biggest grouping in the governing coalition, does not support his reforms in their entirety. As the Bertelsmann transformation index, a measure of turnarounds in nations, notes, “the topic of land reform in particular is highly contested.” Indeed land-owners have long formed a powerful clique that protects its interests.

Still, this is clearly a different Paraguay. The workforce is young, aspirational, impatient and tech-savvy. As Mr McEnroy points out, 85 percent of the population own a mobile phone, a remarkable percentage in a country where the average per capita income is $4,900, although rising. And with rising incomes and material standards, the domestic market will grow in proportion, predicts the Sudameris chairman.

As that happens, Paraguay will inevitably take its due place on the world map. “This is the untold story, the last frontier,” he says.

Fancy flotations

In the break-out from the financial crisis, one of the much-debated issues has been whether the kind of private equity-sponsored initial public offerings seen before 2008 would ever make a comeback.

Although nobody’s predicting the imminent return of $50bn deals, two US flotations have gone some way to settling the issue. The IPOs of pipeline company Kinder-Morgan, which raised $2.9bn, and hospitals group HCA Holdings in mid-March, which investors rushed for nearly $2.8bn, reassured believers such as Kirk Radke, private equity specialist for 101 year-old global law firm Kirkland & Ellis.

For him, the flotations are a precursor of even better things to come. “Those IPOs validated the private-equity investment thesis and will go a long way to answering the questions in investment committees,” he told the magazine. “They are a very important part of the whole capital markets story because they show that equity markets are open and that this size of transactions can be done.”

The HCA float, in particular, astonished observers. Sponsored by Bain Capital and KKR, the Nashville, Tennessee-based group was expected to attract prices of around $27 for 124m shares. Instead investors snapped up 126.2m shares at $30, prompting optimism among market-specialists such as Bill Buhr, IPO stategist at Morningstar. “If you can price a $3bn deal for a hospital operator that has a few warts and so successfully, there are lot of [other] deals that could be done right now,” he told Reuters.

The hospitals group, which was taken private in 2006 in a $21bn buy-out, does indeed have a few warts in the form of heavy debt but the market has clearly discounted the burden in the prevailing environment of low interest rates.

But how much higher can these deals go? According to market insiders, $15bn is currently practicable at a debt:equity ratio of 2:1. “You need two things – debt and equity markets with that kind of capacity,” adds Mr Radke, whose firm is the 11th largest practice in the world by revenues with clients such as Samsung Electronics, Siemens AG, General Motors and BP.

The omens are promising. According to sources, David Bonderman, founding partner of TPG Capital, recently told a private-equity conference in Europe that transactions based on $10bn in debt could be mounted in the US, albeit in the club deals that will probably become typical of the rebound from the crisis. In general Mr Radke agrees with this prognosis: “These transactions can be put together in consortiums – the confidence is there – but the big question is where exactly are the US equities markets at? We’ll know that in coming months.”

As the fund-raising season gathers pace, with firms queuing up to tap sources of finance, the next big question will be put. Namely, exactly which private equity houses have emerged from the crisis with their reputations damaged, intact or even enhanced. “Exactly who will be successful in the coming year is the big question,” predicts Mr Radke. “That will tell us a lot about the new market.”

The total amount raised by the industry as a whole will also tell us a lot, particularly after last year when funds dried up. Just $225bn was raised globally in 2010, less than a third of the $700bn accumulated in 2007 and 2008, and the lowest annual total since 2004. Although giant buy-out firm Blackstone was able to raise $15bn for a new fund earlier this year, that was considered something of an aberration because most of the money was in the pot before the financial crisis. However a continuation of low interest rates in western markets is seen as nothing but helpful.

What’s good for America may also be good for Asia. Mr Radke’s latest annual fact-finding tour of the region’s capitals has convinced him that Asia could be ripe for an explosion of private-equity deals, albeit on its own terms. “The mood in the banks, sovereign wealth funds and other firms I spoke with was very positive. They are very aware of how the private-equity model adds value to portfolio companies,” he reports.

Investment in the region is occurring on three levels. “It’s local, regional and global,” he adds. “New regional funds are emerging in countries like Korea and Indonesia. Most of these are country-specific but they’re also very forward-looking. For instance, Korean investment professionals are looking at opportunities in their own country but also in the wider world. Overall the confidence of investors in Asia is much stronger than it was when I visited last year.”

In that wider world, yet another reason for optimism is the surprising re-emergence of less restrictive borrowing terms known as covenant-lite. Almost demonised by critics in the wake of the financial crisis, “cov-lites” get their name from the softer covenants contained in the fine print that gave more freedom to borrowers. Hardly any cov-lites were written in the last, highly risk-averse 2.5 years.

However, they are making a comeback across the board, not only in new deals but also in the refinancing of existing debt as borrowers seek more flexibility in conditions. So far this year, American companies including retailer J Crew and food group Del Monte have issued some $17bn in cov-lite loans. Although that’s way down on the $100bn written in 2007 alone, it’s a sign of a thaw in extreme risk-aversion.

For Mr Radke, this can be taken as a feather in the cap of the private-equity industry — an acknowledgement by lenders of its generally robust performance during the crisis. “It’s happening in new and old transactions,” he explains. “As clients retool their existing debt, more and more packages are being written under cov-lite terms. Cov-lite loans come with incremental increases in interest rates but they aren’t prohibitively more expensive than covenant-heavy packages. “

The less onerous terms make sense for both sides. Buyers are attracted to the additional yield and are happy to give up a measure of control in return, while private equity appreciates the extra latitude in the way it manages portfolio companies. And very importantly, as the industry holds these companies for generally longer terms than it did before 2008, it also permits private-equity owners to take a more strategic view and deal with unforeseeable events.

Indeed it may yet turn out that cov-lites function better than their covenant-heavy cousins. According to research by Citigroup, the cumulative default rate since mid-2007 for cov-lite debt is almost half that of regular leveraged loans.

Banorte expands franchise

Banorte is one of the largest banking institutions in Mexico in terms of assets, loans and deposits as well as one of the country’s most profitable banks over the past decade. It has the largest presence in Small and Medium Sized Enterprise (SMEs) banking, financing and capital access for home developers, third party correspondent banking and distressed asset management. It is the second largest mortgage bank, the third largest in car lending and financing to states and municipalities and the fourth most important in corporate banking and payroll lending.

Banorte’s main business is retail banking with 8.5 million clients and 1,500 corporate clients, having a footprint of 1,134 branches, 5,004 ATMs and 58,336 POS’s nationwide. It also provides a wide array of products and services to more than 7 million additional clients through its retirement savings funds, annuities and insurance companies. It operates a broker dealer, mutual funds, leasing, factoring and warehousing, among other business lines. It manages more than $55bn in assets and is the only large institution controlled by Mexican shareholders.

Current strategy
The main focus of the bank’s strategy in the recent past has been to strengthen its fundamentals, complement organic growth through acquisitions and expand its international presence. The main differentiators of Banorte among the top financial institutions in Mexico are continuous innovation, committed personnel, conservative risk management, increasing market shares and sound financial performance. Since its inception, Banorte has had a principle of shared responsibility and value creation, added to the genuine concern for preserving the environment, which has translated into a model of sustainability that takes into account all its stakeholders with a long-term vision, achieving as a result high standards of excellence in human resource management and corporate practices.  The bank was recently recognised as one of the best places to work in Mexico and to launch a career.  In corporate governance, 50 percent of its board members are independent and Don Roberto Gonzalez Barrera, our majority shareholder and architect of the modern Banorte was designated as Chairman Emeritus, while Guillermo Ortiz, the former Governor of the Central Bank and Minister of Finance, was appointed as Chairman of the Board. Also, the Social Responsibility Annual Report for 2009 achieved the level of GRI B+, proof of the continuous efforts to evolve as a socially responsible organisation.

As part of its expansion strategy, Banorte recently announced a merger with IXE, a Mexican bank specialising in Premium and Wholesale Banking. This merger will consolidate Banorte’s presence as the third largest bank in Mexico, with the second most important footprint in Mexico City and a leading presence in leasing, factoring, brokerage, mutual funds, investment banking, DCM and ECM, among other business lines. After the merger, Banorte will add Ps. 113.6n in assets and 155 branches to its existing base, among other things.

In the USA, Banorte has been undertaking a “three-pronged strategy” that has produced significant benefits for its clients via private banking and brokerage services through Banorte Securities, as well as retail banking through Inter National Bank (INB), a Texas-based bank, and remittances services through Uniteller in New Jersey and Motran in California.

Presence in financial markets
The bank’s shares trade in the Mexican Stock Exchange (Ticker: GFNORTEO), and is one of the 10 most liquid stocks in the IPC index.  Also, as part of a strategy to expand its presence in international financial markets and access new investor pools, Banorte established in 2009 a Level I ADR Program (Ticker: GBOOY) in the OTC markets, which recently started trading in the OTCQX International Premier electronic platform. Additionally, Banorte was listed in 2009 in the Madrid Stock Exchange’s Latibex market (Ticker: XNOR), being included in the FTSE Latibex All Shares Index and the FTSE Latibex Top Index as part of the listing. The bank has also issued in the past senior unsecured debt and subordinated debentures, all of which currently trade in the international markets.  

Future outlook
Over the next 12 months, the bank’s strategy will focus on increasing profitability by successfully integrating IXE’s operations into Banorte and realising the synergies from the merger, as well as by taking advantage of the banking penetration opportunities that exist in Mexico and by cross selling retail products to the increasing client base. The bank will continue to develop innovative products that best suit the needs of the Mexican population and SME’s, increase its service standards, modernize its operations and IT platforms, grow organically and through strategic acquisitions, enhance its human capital, proactively manage its balance sheet while integrating social and environmental best practices, hoping to make Mexico stronger.   

David Ricardo Suarez is Head of Investor Relations at Banorte

For more information tel: (52 55) 52 68 16 80; email: investor@banorte.com