China to sell SGR debt at interest to Hongkong capitalist banks after Ethiopia and Kenya fail to pay!

Geza Ulole

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China plans to sell off its African infrastructure debt to investors
MONDAY NOVEMBER 5 2018


The Addis Ababa- Djibouti freight train was inaugurated this year but underuse due to power shortages has seen it run into losses. PHOTO | ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER | AFP

In Summary
  • The new proposal could prove to be a poisoned chalice as it could mire African countries in more debt.
  • The plan will see more than 90 firms including project developers or operators, commercial and investment banks, multilateral development financial institutions, asset owners and managers and professional service firms from Hong Kong, mainland China and overseas joining as partners.
  • The move will be a boon for infrastructure financiers as it will release illiquid assets back into the market, offering fresh capital injections for newer projects, which could allow for more funding opportunities for regional countries.


By ALLAN OLINGO
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Regional governments could soon get access to more Chinese debt if a plan by a leading Chinese banking conglomerate to buy African infrastructure debts from the government starting next year, repackage them into securities and then sell them to investors, comes to fruition.

However, the new proposal could prove to be a poisoned chalice as it could mire African countries in more debt.
However, for Chinese financiers, developers and multilateral development financial institutions, this will offer further opportunities to make money from the continent.

The plan will see Hong Kong mortgage insurer Hong Kong Mortgage Corporation (HKMC) buy a diverse basket of infrastructure loans next year and explore the idea of β€œsecuritising” or repackaging them into securities for sale to investors, allowing it extra liquidity that it can loan out to finance more infrastructure projects.

β€œThis initiative we believe will help β€˜recycle’ commercial banks’ capital to be redeployed into other greenfield infrastructure projects, besides enabling wider capital markets participation in infrastructure development under the Road and Belt initiative,” said HKMC Greater China chief executive Helen Wong.

Financing flows
The thinking behind this, according to the country’s Monetary Authority, is to use Hong Kong’s recently set up Infrastructure Financing Facilitation Office to enhance the capacity of the investing and recipient countries in infrastructure financing and facilitate infrastructure investment and financing flows.

β€œI am happy that the HKMC is now considering a new line of business of buying infrastructure loans for the purpose of securitisation. This is because new capital standards for banks do not make it attractive for them to hold on to these loans on a long-term basis, even though the projects at the brownfield stage are operating smoothly.

β€œI can see a good opportunity for banks to offload their loans to these long-term investors,” Norman Chan, chief executive of the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, said last week, adding that there are currently many investors, including insurance and pension funds, looking for less risky investments that can produce steady long-term cash flows.

The plan, which is still being developed, will see more than 90 firms including project developers or operators, commercial and investment banks, multilateral development financial institutions, asset owners and managers and professional service firms from Hong Kong, mainland China and overseas joining as partners.

Some of these firms already have current projects and infrastructure loans in the region, which puts the region’s debts into the basket set for β€œsecuritisation.”

The move will be a boon for infrastructure financiers as it will release illiquid assets back into the market, offering fresh capital injections for newer projects, which could allow for more funding opportunities for regional countries.

Latest data from the China-Africa Research Initiative at Johns Hopkins University shows regional economies owed China and its institutions more than $29.42 billion as at April this year in infrastructure loans, which have been tapped over the past 10 years to build transport, communication, manufacturing and energy sectors.

The data shows that Ethiopia leads the region with a $13.73 billion debt to Beijing, followed by Kenya at $9.8 billion.

Uganda owes $2.96 billion; Tanzania owes $2.34 billion. Rwanda, Burundi and South Sudan owe $289 million, $99 million and $182 million respectively.

This new development comes at a time when China’s main project insurer, China Export and Credit Insurance Corporation, known as Sinosure, cast doubt on the viability of some infrastructure projects.

The firm has already incurred losses of more than $1 billion on the Ethiopian-Djibouti railway alone.

Last week, Wang Wen, the chief economist for Sinosure, said that the planning behind many of China’s major infrastructure projects abroad has been β€œdownright inadequate,” leading to huge financial losses.

β€œChinese developers and financiers of projects in developing nations need to step up their risk management to avoid disaster. We can see the mistakes of the Addis-Djibouti Railway line, which has cost Sinosure a $1 billion loss,” said Mr Wang.

Repayment terms
The $4 billion Addis Ababa-Djibouti freight railway, which was inaugurated at the start of this year, saw Ethiopia seek to restructure its debt in September by extending the repayment terms, following its underuse as a result of power shortages.

β€œEthiopia’s planning capabilities are lacking, but even with the help of Sinosure and the lending Chinese bank, it was still insufficient,” Mr Wang said at a Belt-and-Road infrastructure financing forum in Hong Kong.

The plan to securitise and sell the Chinese debt to investors comes at a time when many African nations are seeking to either restructure their debts with Beijing or get friendlier terms, with more grant packages as they face a rising debt dilemma.

In September, Addis announced that China had agreed to restructure some of its loans, including a loan for a $4 billion railway linking its capital Addis to neighbouring Djibouti.

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said their loans will be restructured, with a further 20-year extension, which will see its annual repayments reduced to an affordable level.

β€œIn our conversation with our Chinese partners, we had the opportunity to enact limited restructuring of some of our loans. In particular, the loan for the Addis Ababa-Djibouti railway, which was meant to be paid over 10 years, has now been extended to 30 years. Its maturity period has also been extended,” PM Abiy said.

Nairobi, which has been ramping up the freight numbers for its SGR line between Nairobi and Mombasa, was also on record as asking for a 50 per cent grant on its $3.8 billion third phase of railway construction between Naivasha and Kisumu.

The first phase of the project, which cost $3.2 billion, was financed by the China Exim Bank, with a concessional loan of $1.6 billion with a 20-year life, a grace period of seven years and an annual interest rate of two per cent.

The concessional loan, on the other hand, was for 10 years, with a grace period of five years; an insurance cover of 6.93 per cent and an interest of a six-month average of the London Inter-bank Offered Rate plus 3.86 per cent.

This loan also had a grant element of 35 per cent and the first repayments are due next year. If the railway doesn’t break even by then, Kenyan taxpayers will have to foot that bill, realising Sinosure’s fears, given that it offered insurance for this loan.

In July, Kenya’s Transport Cabinet Secretary James Macharia told a parliamentary committee that the SGR operator had made a loss of $110 million in its first year of operations.

β€œOn average, the line made a monthly loss of $7.5 million in the 2017/2018 financial year largely as a result of low cargo business. However, we now project that it will turn around and make a profit of $50 million by June next year, averaging $4.2 million profit monthly as we ramp up cargo volumes,” Mr Macharia said.

However, according to the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA), the SGR cargo haulage has raked in more than $16.2 million in the past nine months, at $1.8 million a month, as the train’s daily tonnage capacity moved above 800 containers, out of the 1,700 containers that arrive at the Port of Mombasa.

β€œSince the start of SGR cargo freight operations in January, a total of $16.2 million has been billed, collected and remitted to the SGR escrow account, which is under the custody of Kenya Railways,” KPA managing director Daniel Manduku said.

China plans to sell off its African infrastructure debt

MY TAKE
Everyone knows which Western banks r in Hong Kong! After bad mouthing China on loans extended to Africa, their banks r read to acquire the loans with interest to be paid by the recipient of those loans. πŸ˜…
 
Kuna mtu hapa haelewi kiingereza, ni wapi waliposema kwamba Kenya imeshindwa kulipa deni lake? Hata muda uliowekwa wa kuanza kulipa deni lenyewe bado hujawadia. Tanzania nayo pia imetajwa hapo na inadaiwa hela ndefu na mchina, na deni lake pia litauzwa Hong Kong, ila hilo wewe ambaye sio mtanzania mzalendo huwezi kuliona. Kazi ni copy and paste, wivu na majungu tu dhidi ya Kenya.
 
Geza Ulole uwe unasoma hizi taarifa kwanza kabla ya kupost. Itakuwa kibarua kigumu sana kutuhadaa na vichwa kama hivi vya mada zako, vilivyojaa mafeelings. Mwanahabari huyu amedadavua zaidi kuhusu Kenya, ila hapo alipotaja nchi za Afrika ambazo zina madeni ya mchina karibia zote za EAC zipo. Ingependeza zaidi kama ungekuwa unafatilia taarifa kama hizi ukijaribu kujielimisha mengi zaidi kuhusu masuala ya nchi yako Tz. Pole yako, Kenya inatawala maisha yako bila ya hata wewe kustukia.
 
Tanzania ama other EA countries r not the reason for this change as haven't defaulted terms! Ethiopia n Kenya r since Ethiopia asked for restructuring of loan terms n repayment time to be extended occassioning $1bn loss to an insurance company that guaranteed the loan i.e. Sinosure while months after Kenya started to pay half of $3.8bln SGR debt, Uhuru asked half of the debt to be given as grant. I don't think section 2B will be financed!
 
Trying to save face with even more nonsense. Wewe ni mchina na kama wewe ni mchina unaiwakilisha serikali ya China kama nani? Soma kichwa original cha habari na taarifa yenyewe kwa umakini. Sio unaingingiza tu pumba zako ovyo ovyo kwa minajili ya kuendeleza agenda zako za kitoto.
 
That title is appropriate unless u name one more country in Africa that has had issues with loan repayment!
 
That title is appropriate unless u name one more country in Africa that has had issues with loan repayment!
That title doesn't match the content. Kenya hadi sasa hivi haijakuwa na shida zozote ikifika kwenye masuala ya kulipa madeni yake. Ina maana kwamba hadi sasa hivi hujasoma taarifa ambayo umeiweka wewe? Tafuta tafsiri basi upunguze aibu. Kila unachobishana kuhusu kimeandikwa wazi hapo kwenye taarifa yenyewe. Yaani na bado unajiita great thinker??? [emoji15]
 
Na mbona kaomba half of SGR Mombasa-Nairobi debt to be a grant? A request that resulted into a suspension of issuance of finances for Naivasha-Kisumu n a new feasibility study be called in!
 
Yeye Geza anaeleza vile alivyoelewa, wewe unapaswa useme vile ulivyoelewa wewe badala ya kumkashifu na kumuambia arudie kusoma, kama yeye unadhani unalosema sio sawa, njoo na hoja tofauti, bahati nzuri article wenyewe wote tunaiona, hakuna kutafsiri vinginevyo.
 
Hapo imeandikwa wazi kwamba Kenya imeomba 50% ya mkopo wa Naivasha to Kisumu uwe ni grant, wakati Ethiopia imeomba deni lake liwe structured in terms of duration and interests, zote Kenya na Ethiopia zinaomba kupunguziwa mzigo wa deni, sasa unachobisha ni kipi?
 
Elimu, elimu, elimu. Nani ana huo muda wakufanya kazi ya ziada ya kuendeleza shughuli ambayo walimu walishindwa kuihitimisha?
 
That title is appropriate unless u name one more country in Africa that has had issues with loan repayment!
Tanzania is one of the culprits in defaulting loans inabidi wasamehewe ama hilo hukumbuki unapotumia mk**** kufikiria?
 
πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€hata Mimi sipendi maneno mengi. Huwezi kushindana na mwanadamu mwenye kinywaπŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€πŸ˜€
Huwezi kabisaaa! Mtu anategemea nibishe anaposema kwamba ku'negotiate' terms za deni ambalo unataka kupewa wewe inamaanisha kwamba huna mpango wowote ule wa kulipa deni lenyewe. Wakati hata muda(wa kuanza kulipa deni) mliokubaliana na aliyekupa deni lenyewe haujawadia. [emoji15][emoji15][emoji15] Hawa hawa ndio wale wale ambao huwa wana'bargain' hadi na school fees za watoto wao mashuleni. πŸ˜€
 
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