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The brazilian economy and financing its infrastructure projects - Luciano Coutinho
1. // 1
The Brazilian Economy and Financing its
Infrastructure Projects
President
Luciano Coutinho
BNP Paribas
Paris – May. 2013
2. 2
Brazil has solid foundations for sustaining
economic growth
Stable legal and institutional framework;
Social inclusion has spurred the domestic market;
Healthy banking sector not exposed to troubled assets;
Robustness of the foreign exchange sector;
Strengthening of long‐term planning;
Government is able to foster growth:
Fiscal and monetary instruments;
Improvement of regulatory framework;
Partnership with the private sector.
3. 3
Macroeconomic framework
• Lower interest rates
• Inflation under control
• Maintaining
competitiveness
• Floating exchange
rate with reduced
volatility
• Payroll tax reduction (40 sectors)
• Reform of VAT (ICMS)
• Reduction of the Tax on Industrial Producs (IPI)
• Reform of Social Contributions (PIS/COFINS)
4. 4
Since 2003 middle and upper middle classes
increased by more than 42 million people
Population by income class strata (millions of people)*
* Source: IPEA. based on PNAD/IBGE data. Prepared by Ministry of Finance
6. 2013‐2016: BNDES Investment Survey at highest level
550
530
510
490
470
450
430
410
390
370
350
391.1
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
Source: BNDES Investment Survey
441.1 439.1
419.8
512.3
475.4
535.9
Investment Outlook for 4 years ahead
(Comparable Sectors ‐ US$ billion ‐ 2012)
Base year
2007‐2010
2008‐2011 2009‐2012
2010‐2013
2011‐2014
2012‐2015
2013‐2016
7. Investments will reach at least US$ 1.9 trillion in
the coming 4 years
Investment Outlook for Brazil (2013‐16)
(U$ billion ‐ Constant prices)
(*) Note: The BNDES research on the investment outlook for 2013‐2016 covers 66% of the total industrial investments. and 100% of investments in
infrastructure. totalizing about 58% of the investments in the economy (excluding residential construction). Agriculture and Services investments are
based on queries to Sectorial entities and/or econometric forecast.
Source: BNDES
7
Sectors 2008‐2011 2013‐2016
Accumulated Variation Growth Rate
In 2012 US$ billion
(in %) Linear Average (in % per year)
Industry 434.4 529.7 21.9 4.0
Infrastructure 184.1 250.8 36.2 6.4
Services 81.5 111.5 36.7 6.5
Housing 305.6 394.9 29.2 5.2
Other Sectors 507.7 664.6 30.9 5.5
Total 1,513.3 1,951.5 29.0 5.2
8. Investments in logistics will increase 123%
in the coming 4 years
Sectors 2008‐2011 2013‐2016
Source: BNDES
(US$ Billion)
Logística 80.4 179.2 123.0 * It represents an expansion 44.5 GW of power capacity and 23.600 Km Transmission Lines
Δ(%)
Infrastructure 184.3 251.0 36.2
Electricity* 82.2 85.1 3.6
Power Generation 52.5 57.2 9.0
Transmission 6.9 13.6 97.1
Distribution 22.8 14.4 -36.8
Telecommuications 43.5 52.2 20.1
Sanitation 17.4 21.7 24.9
Highways 20.5 35.2 71.8
Railways 14.0 39.4 182.6
Ports 5.0 12.5 150.1
Airports 1.7 4.7 170.9
Logistics 41.2 91.9 123.0
9. 9
Increasing demand for infraestructure
Sources: National Agency for Civil Aviation (ANAC), National Agency for Aquatic Transportation (ANTAQ), Brazilian Association of Highway
Concessionaires (ABCR) and Brasilian Associationof Automative Vehicle Manufactures (ANFAVEA).
10. 10
The relevance of efficient eletricity, logistics and
other infrastructure
Induces economic integration of production clusters and
increases efficiency of supply chains
Increases competitiveness by reducing production costs...
Therefore: generates systemic productivity gains...
... and contributes to improve life standards
Each 1% increase in the supply of infrastructure can add
up to 0.5 percentage points to Potential GDP
10
18. 18
Credit Lines for electricity and PIL
government guidelines
Sectors
Amortization
Schedule
(up to – in yrs)
Grace Period
(up to – in yrs)
BNDES
Credit
(% - up to)
Financial
Cost
Spread
(%
p.a.)
Railways 25 5 80
5 % *
Up to
1.5
Toll roads 20 5 70 Up to
2.0
Airports 20 3 70 1.4 +
Risk rate
Ports 20 3 65 Up to
3.0
Power Generation
Hydropower 20 5 70
5 % *
0.9 +
Alternative Energy 16 5 80 Risk rate
Thermal (Coal &1 Oil) 14 4 50 1.8 +
Risk rate
Transmission 14 3 70 1.3 +
Risk rate
Source: BNDES * TJLP ‐ Long Term Interest Rate
19. 19
Project Finance – typical toll road model
Auction
Contracts Signed
/Bridge Loan
Approved
3 Months
LT Loan
Approved
Completion
6 Months 30 Months to
60 Months
End of
Concession
... 30 years total
Equity (20-35%)
Bridge Loan Long Term Loan (65-80%)
Infrastructure Bonds (10-15%)
Timeline
Strategic & Financial
Investors, Local & Foreign
Banks &
Financial Investors
Local & Foreign
Source: BNDES
20. 20
Infrastructure Financing
Holdings and SPCs
Holding
SPC 1 SPC 2 SPC N
Bond
Equity
Government Banks/Funds may co‐invest with strategic and financial investors, either
directly in the SPCs or through the holding company’s equity, taking minority equity
stake
Bond
Equity
Source: BNDES
Brazilian Infrastructure Bonds and infrastructure investment funds –
benefits for non-resident investors:
(i)zero Income Tax rate
(ii)zero IOF (Financial Operation Tax)
21. 21
Expected increase in the participation of
corporate debt in investment funding
Pattern of financing for Investments in Industry and
Infrastructure in Brazil (2012‐2015)
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
Source: Estimate by APE/BNDES based on date from AMBIMA, CVM and Economática
Forecast
47%
39%
60%
49%
57% 58%
42%
49% 45%
31%
38% 39% 40% 39% 37% 36%
25%
16%
22%
16%
19% 20%
21%
28%
31% 53%
28%
35% 28% 26% 24% 23%
15%
30%
6%
30% 13% 10%
17%
9%
6%
9%
15%
7%
12% 13% 14% 13%
5%
1%
2%
0%
2% 2%
5%
7% 16%
4%
10%
1% 2% 2% 3%
3%
9% 14% 10% 5% 9% 10% 15%
7% 3% 4% 10%
17% 18% 20% 22% 25%
0%
Private Corporate Bonds Equities Foreign Financing BNDES Retained Earnings
22. 22
Concluding remarks
• Brazilian growth will be led mainly by infrastructure investments
• Infrastructure pipeline: many low‐risk and high‐return
opportunities
• Government financial institutions, such as the BNDES, will retain
a role in financing Brazilian development, but…
• Large scale investment financing requires new private players
and investors,
• Making use of project finance and capital market instruments,
led by private financial institutions