Moody’s Investors Service says that funding for infrastructure projects in Asia will demonstrate increasing diversity.

“The large infrastructure investment needs in Asia will drive innovation in financing structures and lead to the increased use of different forms of credit enhancement,” says Terry Fanous, a Moody’s Managing Director.

“In fact, funding diversity is key to delivering infrastructure investment in Asia,” adds Fanous.

Moody’s analysis is contained in its report titled “Infrastructure &Project Finance — Asia: Growing funding diversity to bridge infrastructure funding gap”.

Moody’s report explains that infrastructure needs in Asia are large when compared to historical volumes of debt raised by state-owned and privately-owned infrastructure companies.

asiainfrastrcuture

$1.7 trillion per year needed between 2016 and 2030

According to estimates from the Asian Development Bank, Asia will need to invest $1.7 trillion per year in infrastructure between 2016 and 2030.

Meeting those investment needs will require the mobilization of diverse sources of private sector capital to supplement public sector expenditure.

“Recent precedent transactions for Asian infrastructure projects indicate that institutional investors are strongly attracted to Asian infrastructure and project bond issuance, even those with long-term amortizing debt features,” says Ray Tay, a Moody’s Vice President and
Senior Credit Officer.

“Favorable investor appetite and constraints on bank lending are likely to lead to more corporate infrastructure and project bond issuance,” adds Tay.

“Increased deal flow will enhance institutional investor familiarity with the infrastructure sector in Asia, and diversity by sector, geography and credit quality will result in a more robust market.”

And, the involvement of multilateral development banks — including the provision of credit enhancements — can mitigate credit challenges such as political risks that constrain investor appetite.

Moody’s points that the infrastructure sector has attributes that are suited to institutional investors’ strategic objectives, such as long tenors that facilitate asset/liability matching, portfolio diversification and credit characteristics that are attractive to long-term investors.

About the author

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Get notified of our weekly selection of news

You May Also Like

BoT to explore yuan-baht settlement for Thai-Chinese trade

According to an ADB report, the majority of the significant Southeast Asian emerging markets’ outstanding foreign debt securities have been denominated in dollars for the past few years.

High level of household debt could disrupt economic recovery

Thailand’s household debt to gross domestic product ratio dropped to 86.8% in the third quarter from 88.1% in the previous quarter, as the economy continued to recover.

Bank of Thailand raises key rate from 1.50 to 1.75%

In an effort to lower inflation to its target range, Thailand’s central bank increased its key policy rate by 25 basis points (0.25%), to 1.75%, the highest level since August 2019