Dual currency funding absorbs liquidity shocks in African Real Estate Market
NAIROBI:
Funding
commercial property developments with a mix of hard and local currency provides
an innovative mechanism for Africa’s commercial real estate sector, to mitigate
currency volatility and liquidity risk says Standard Bank.
Operating
across 20 markets in Africa means that Standard Bank is acutely aware of how
endemic, persistent and volatile local currencies are - as well as, “just how
high the risk is of markets running out of hard currency,” says Gerhard Zeelie,
Head, Real Estate Finance, Africa regions for Standard Bank.
This
is no more apparent than in Africa’s rapidly growing real estate sector where
shortages of hard currency remain a real and persistent operational challenge.
Whether
operating in volatile commodity-tacked markets, unpredictable interest rate
environments, or economies with high legislative, regulatory or political risk,
“Africa’s real estate sector needs a buffer to absorb or delay the impact of
often unforeseen volatility, or the drying up of hard currency,” says Mr
Zeelie.
Traditionally
most property development projects in sub-Saharan Africa have been financed in
hard currency, ensuring a predictable funding environment for the assets.
More recently, the US dollar’s sustained appreciation against African
currencies, for example, means that US dollar-denominated leases are placing
tenants under pressure.
“In
a number of countries across the continent, local currency rentals are
spiralling upwards as tenants feel the pinch of funding the growing gap between
local and hard currencies. This is alongside the added stress of Africa’s
endemic liquidity shortages,” says Mr Zeelie.
In
response, Standard Bank advises Africa’s real estate developers to consider
denominating commercial property loans in a mix of both hard and local
currency.
Denominating
a portion of the debt in, say, US dollars, and the rest in local currency acts
as a buffer against liquidity risk. When local markets run out of US
dollars, for example, landlords can continue to service - at least the local
currency portion - of the debt. While the US dollar portion of the debt may
grow, the local currency portion of the debt will continue to shrink,
“achieving a net reduction in debt despite the absence of US dollars in the
local market,” says Mr Zeelie.
Being
able to reduce at least the local currency portion of the debt when hard
currency is unavailable means that debt is still being serviced, and reduced -
buying time for investors to sit out liquidity shortages until hard currency
becomes available again.
“As
local currencies in Africa continue to depreciate against most hard currencies,
some tenants are increasingly insisting on signing local currency leases,” says
Mr Zeelie. “This provides an opportunity for banks to denominate significant
portions of debt funding in local currency -offering clients a mechanism to
match rental cash flow in local currency with local currency debt,” he
says.
As
African capital markets continue to deepen, tracking the growth of local
pension, asset management and insurance funds, there is also, today, much more
local currency available - seeking investment in local projects at increasingly
competitive rates.
While
Mr Zeelie would strongly recommend that Africa’s real estate developers and
operators consider the advantages of denominating their debt in dual
currencies, he cautions that, “this is not an option that can be applied
retrospectively to existing hard currency denominated commercial real estate
debt where illiquidity is already a problem.”
Commercial
property developers in Nigeria, for example, long used to an oil-based economy
delivering consistent US dollar liquidity were not able to convert their US
dollar debt into local currency debt when the oil price collapsed and US
dollars dried up.
“Debt
needs to be denominated in dual currencies upfront when the financing is
structured,” cautions Mr Zeelie.
Standard
Bank’s long history in Africa and deep familiarity with the continent’s
currency volatility and liquidity challenges, “combines multi-market insight
backed by strong local market balance sheets, with global know how and capital
- informing and delivering innovative commercial real estate funding solutions
across sub-Saharan Africa,” says Mr Zeelie.
Maoni
Chapisha Maoni