1 / 20

Growth Capital for Off-grid Lighting Companies: Framework for Developing the IFC Lighting Africa Access to Finance (A2

Growth Capital for Off-grid Lighting Companies: Framework for Developing the IFC Lighting Africa Access to Finance (A2F) Program. Presentation by: John MacLean, Energy Efficiency Finance Corporation, USA Financial Advisor to IFC jmaclean@eefinance.net.

Download Presentation

Growth Capital for Off-grid Lighting Companies: Framework for Developing the IFC Lighting Africa Access to Finance (A2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Growth Capital for Off-grid Lighting Companies:Framework for Developing the IFC Lighting Africa Access to Finance (A2F) Program Presentation by: John MacLean, Energy Efficiency Finance Corporation, USA Financial Advisor to IFC jmaclean@eefinance.net

  2. IFC Lighting Africa Access to Finance Program • Being designed, new phase of Lighting Africa services • Assess financing needs of companies along the value chain • Map & understand interested financial institutions (FIs) • social investors, VC investors, commercial FIs & banks, MFIs & others • Facilitate financing to meet needs of industry: main goal • Design & organize new financial products & facilities to fill financing gaps; support commercial FIs to offer them • Develop investments for IFC, range of possible structures • Mobilize & make strategic use of concessional finance • Leverage, commercial structures, pathway to commercialization • Provide advisory services, pre- & post-investment • Goal today: present “strawman” concepts for consultation

  3. Off-Grid Lighting Value Chain Up Stream • International Manufacturers • International Lighting Firms & Product Designers • Multi-Country Wholesalers Down Stream Country Based Distributors • Country based mfgs, assemblers, system integrators • Multi-Country • Distributors • Dealers, franchisees & sales agents • End-user finance partners End-Users

  4. Financing Needs of Off-grid Lighting Companies • Corporate equity, several uses of proceeds , including : • Expansion, e.g., new country operations & staffing • Manufacturing working capital • New own manufacturing facilities • Working capital loans • Trade finance • Inventory/stocking finance • Dealer/distributor finance • Plant & equipment finance • End-user Finance, to offer to or arrange for customers

  5. Typical Profile of “Upstream” Investees A. International Off-grid Lighting Manufacturing Firms: • Own product designs with outsourced & some own manufacturing • Multi-country distribution operations, through own distributors & partners • Examples: D-Light, SunTransfer, Greenlight Planet, Barefoot , Thrive B. Multi-country Distributors: • Various distribution strategies & channels; own distribution channels common • Examples: Great Lakes Energy, Sunlabob

  6. Due Diligence Issues & Investment Challenges • Investment size requirements often very low • No IP or lack of strong IP; low barriers to entry; branding • Distribution strategies & costs • Sustainable competitive advantages; competition from large lighting companies • Working capital cycle; sizing of working capital needs • Margin analysis • Valuation analysis challenges • Pathway to scale up; investor exists • Investee dilution concerns; balance debt & equity ----------------------------------------- • Technology, product quality, multi-functionality • Affordability and end-user ability to pay; addressable markets • Management

  7. International Funds Addressing Off-Grid Lighting • Donor-based investment funds: REACT (UK DfID), Global Nature Fund • Social Investment Funds: Acumen, responsAbility, E+Co, GroFin, Shell Foundation Fund, UNEP AREED Fund, Grassroots Business Fund, d.o.b. foundation • Social Lenders: Tridos, Oikocredit

  8. International Funds, Threshold Terms • Donor-based investment funds • grants of equity & 0% loans; $250,000 minimum common • co-finance up to 50% • seeking leverage & development impact • commercial type due diligence; will consider earlier stage firms • Social Investment Funds: • preferred equity; convertible debt ; debt with equity kickers • Significant minority shares; co-finance up to 25-50% • Yield targets, 10-15% typical, can be lower • Investment minimums $250-500,000 • Development (not seed) stage companies; proven technology, management & addressable markets; pathway to scale up defined

  9. A2F Concept 1: Finance Facilitation • Information base of lighting companies: select for assessment • Information base of interested, qualified investor & finance sources, equity and debt • Appetites, capacities, criteria & profile, terms • Recruit commercial FIs to this market • Pre-investment advisory services • Business planning, financial projections, due diligence assessments • Investment structuring, origination, negotiation • Product quality certification • Present qualified company information to investors & FIs • Opportunities for IFC finance • Potential to blend concessional co-finance • One-off, via a facility, commit to FI and/or to lighting company

  10. A2F Concept 2: Multi-Investor Corporate Finance Facility • Organize interested investors into new Facility or Fund • Opportunity for diversification • Opportunity for deal flow • Can use range of investment structures: preferred equity, convertible debt, subordinated debt • Could consider multi-investor loan facility • Blend concessional co-finance, mobilized by IFC • e.g., subordinated low to 0% financing • Investors can invest via a new fund/facility or in parallel • IFC L.A. focuses on identification, due diligence & origination • Management, governance & organization issues associated with new fund

  11. A2F Concept 3: Import, Stocking & Inventory Working Capital Loan Facility • Needs amongst many companies: bottleneck for growth • Immediate opportunity to increase sales & margins • Sizing, 60-90 days turnover; map working capital cycle • Security: inventory product, assignment of receivables • Work with lighting companies’ existing lenders or new lender • Organize single multi-country loan facility or multiple facilities • Offer risk sharing to lenders; concessional $ in 1st loss position • Loan loss reserves, easiest to implement • Partial credit guarantee; IFC as guarantor • Guarantee reserves, working with another guarantor • Structure, risk sharing formula, event of loss, pricing • Leverage ratios & financial performance metrics to increase them • Could provide RSF to lighting companies, who then shop for lender

  12. A2F Concept 3a: Loan Guarantee Program • Work with local commercial bank lenders • Single lender, multi-national; choose a Pan African bank • Single lender per country • Let lighting companies promote their lenders • Focus on working capital loans; term loans possible, too • Offer risk sharing • Partial credit guarantees; first loss guarantees possible • Define pathway to commercialization; financial performance metrics • IFC as guarantor; plenty of precedents • Use donor/concessional funds as guarantee reserves • OR, consider other/existing guarantee agencies • Offer advisory services: Qualify lighting companies as borrowers

  13. A2F Concept 4: End-user Finance via MFIs, channeled via Upstream Companies • Set up Wholesale loan facilities to MFIs • Asset/Liability matching for MFI • Create wholesale loan facility with Pan-African bank or arrange wholesale loans with individual Fis country-by-country • Provide risk sharing facilities • Loan loss reserves well suited, covering both retail & wholesale lending risks; can represent good leverage of concessional funds • Portfolio approach to credit structure • Could provide these resources to international & country-based wholesale lenders OR to lighting companies who then shop for FI/MFI partners • Advisory services to structure & set up facilities

  14. Discussion Topics • What are the priority finance needs of lighting companies? • Which program methods are easiest, quickest to implement? • What’s missing from this framework? • Response to A2F program concepts • Which are most interesting for lighting companies? • Which are most interesting for investors and FIs? • Other ideas & hybrids • Structure of risk sharing facilities • Advisory service needs • Role of carbon finance

  15. IFC/GEF E.E. Finance Guarantee Program • Key Features: • $15 million in GEF reserves, up to $75 million IFC investment; • total guarantee capacity = $90M • Partial 50% guarantee; subordinated recovery, pari passu, first loss & portfolio guarantees used • Operating in 6 E. Europe countries • TA provided to all parties to prepare projects & build capacities • Financial products w/guarantee developed for industry, SMEs, municipalities, hospitals, district heating, cogen & thermal plants, lending to ESCOs, multi-family & single family housing; small scale bio-mass & wind I.F.C. Grant $ GEF GEF $ Guarantee Facility Agreement Transaction Guarantee LOCAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONs EE Project Loans Leasing Co. ESCO End-user Lease Energy Services Agreement End-user End-user

  16. WB/GEF China REDP

  17. UNDP/GEF SHS Direct Sales Finance Scheme, Palawan CRREE/UNDP GEF Development Bank of Philippines Loss Reserve Fund Wholesale Lender (potential) Escrow Agent Co-fund LRF T.A. to all parties/program start-up Assignment of Loss coverage co-fund LRF Loss coverage Vendor Finance Agreement SSPC: SHS Vendor Wholesale Lending & Re-financing Cooperative Bank of Palawan Sell & Install SHS Training SHS loans & collections Loan pmts Local SHS Technicians … SHS Maintenance Households

  18. Diagram 1: Ghana, Energy Equipment End-user Finance Program Concept UNEP LRF Escrow Agreement Int’l Dvl. Wholesale lender Escrow Agent* LRF funding AREED II Implementation Agrmnt & funding Recourse loan LRF Escrow Agreement KITE Wholesale Lender: UBA TA to all parties Wholesale Loan MFIs: FASL, GSCSA**… Enterprises/Vendors … … Vendor Finance Program Agrmnt Loans Equipment & services End-Users/Borrowers NOTES: * Current candidate is Ghana Commercial Bank. **Multiple susu collectors, organized by GSCSA

  19. Payroll Deduction or Ag Crop Payment Equipment Finance Scheme Equipment/appliance providers energy equipment sales Equipment promotion program agreement Labor or crops End-users/ Employees Payroll or crop payment Employer authorization for payroll/payment deduction Payroll deduction program agreement equipment or appliance loans Financial institution Loss reserve fund & TA, as needed SSRE Program Donor

  20. IFC Investment Tools & Instruments • Specialized IFC Funds for corporate equity investment • Clean Tech Fund • Other VC & private equity fund investments • Follow on loans; direct & syndicated • Investments via Financial institutions • Credit lines for FIs, leasing companies, MFIs • Partial credit guarantees, subordinated recovery guarantees, first loss & portfolio guarantees, other risk sharing facilities • Trade finance facilities • Concessional & donor funds • Blend with IFC investments & other co-finance partners in commercial finance structures • first loss reserves for guarantees & loan loss reserves for risk sharing • Subordinated debt co-finance • Advisory services: in-kind & co-fund

More Related