Evergreen Trading is in strategic alliances with some of America’s best managed and wealthiest Trust Funds and Hedge Funds. These Trusts and Funds operate and support various industries, which are included but not limited to, asset management, urban redevelopment, philanthropy and international diversification. One of these Trusts was established around 1903 and it has further been conclusively established, that this particular organization was operating as early as the 1890s.
The vast financial growth of these Trusts and Funds over the past several decades has covered the Trust/Fund owners with a network of shipping vessels, minerals, real estate, oil & Natural Gas deposits, technological advancements and financial service companies, the smooth functioning of which is vital to the welfare of the various stake holders of these organizations. They vary from huge corporate structures such as Public Private Partnerships with Government of Bahamas, Government of Mexico, producers of commodities and merchandise of all kinds, oil & Natural Gas Exploration and Production, airlines, private utility companies, casinos, down to comparatively small manufacturing plants and stores.
The variety and usefulness of these myriad enterprises defy description. But adequate financing for their needs is the life blood without which many of these parts of the great machine of business would be prevented from functioning in a healthy, normal manner.
Evergreen Trading, through a string of multiple other strategic business alliances with private equity companies, investment banks, asset management companies, family offices, UHNWIs, banks, NBFCs, etc., has developed partnerships throughout North America, S America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Oceania, and the Caribbean (the targeted areas) and has focused hard on developing infrastructure, energy, mining, commercial, residential, industrial, agriculture, real estate, manufacturing, supply chain, logistics, mobility, healthcare, hospitality, and IT projects and transplanting viable international businesses into the targeted areas. In addition to those partnerships, Evergreen Trading also has helped and continues to help its clients develop Public / Private Partnerships with the multiple governments, focused on developing projects across several economic sectors and transplanting viable international businesses into the targeted areas.
Once you have contacted us and shared your requirement for raising project finance, we will send you our FINANCIAL ADVISORY SERVICES TERMS AND CONDITIONS (FASTC) to review carefully. If and when you agree to our FASTC, you will receive the Client Agreement draft which you will have to fill, sign, and return to us. Subsequently, you will need to submit relevant information about your project through our online Project Finance Application Form.
Our services do not come for free and hence be prepared to pay our service charges when you decide to use them. Also, we are rather choosy about who we serve. We encourage only serious clients who understand what it takes to arrange finances for projects. Our seamless services start with our client sending us a formal Letter of Intent expressing his/her desire to hire our services and then following this up by entering into a formal service agreement with us and depositing the token Engagement Fee online before submitting the Project Finance Application Form which is non-refundable. That is not all. You would be further liable to pay a Success Fee (case specific) post-successful closure of funding.
Our analysts evaluate projects individually, so if you have more than one project, you should complete one copy of the form for each project for which you are seeking funding. Once your Project Finance Application Form is received by us, our analysts will review the submitted Business Plan in detail and quickly evaluate whether it is good enough to move to the next stage.
If our analysts determine that your project is unlikely to meet our criteria, we will quickly contact you, usually within a day or two, to inform you of the areas of the Business Plan that need further work.
However, if our analysts determine that your project Business Plan is bankable, we will immediately get in touch with you for further discussions to finalize the project financing strategy. We realize forecasting a company’s operations into the future can be very complex since each business is unique and requires a very specific set of assumptions and calculations. We will then focus on the following:
Historical data – input at least 3 years of historical financial information for the business.
Ratios & metrics – calculate the historical ratios/metrics for the business, such as margins, growth rates, asset turnover ratio, inventory changes, etc.
Assumptions – continue building the ratios and metrics into the future by making assumptions about what future margins, growth rates, asset turnover, and inventory changes will be going forward.
Forecast – forecast the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement into the future by reversing all the calculations you used to calculate historical ratios & metrics. In other words, use the assumptions that you made to fill in the financial statements.
Valuation – after the forecast is built, the company can be valued using the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) analysis method.
Once the above have been taken care of, we move forward and present your Business Plan to target investors/financiers.
Important To Note:
We quickly respond to all inquiries.
We do not delegate executive time to an inquiry until your project, as expressed in your fully completed Project Finance Application form, has been thoroughly evaluated by our analysts.
To ensure our executives do not waste time on unrealistic inquiries we do not enter discussions in any form until we have a full understanding of your project’s potential and risks. We therefore do not offer meetings, hold telephone discussions, or return telephone calls until we have thoroughly evaluated your project.
Please do not send us additional communications during the application phase as it delays the application process.
We do not finance projects valued at less than $5,000,000.00 (United States Dollars five million), we do not finance acquisitions and we do not finance projects in countries mentioned in this Restricted Nations list
All our official communications are in English. We do not offer a translation service.
A PPP is defined as a contract between a public-sector institution and a private party, where the private party performs a function that is usually provided by the public sector and/or uses state property in terms of the PPP agreement. Most of the project risk (technical, financial, and operational) is transferred to the private party. The public sector pays for a full set of services, including new infrastructure, maintenance, and facilities management, through monthly or annual payments. In a traditional government project, the public sector pays for the capital and operating costs and carries the risks of cost overruns and late delivery.
It is important to understand that the processes and structures used in the financing of projects are dynamic and continue to evolve. PPP projects vary significantly in terms and structure. The objective of using project financing to raise capital is to create a structure that is bankable (of interest to investors) and to limit the stakeholders’ risk by diverting some risks to parties that can better manage them. In project financing, an independent legal vehicle (SPV) is created to raise the funds required for the project. Payment of principal, interest, dividends, and operating expenses is derived from the project’s revenues and assets. The investors, in both debt and equity, require certain basic legal, regulatory, and economic conditions throughout the life of the project.
The PPP project’s revenues are obtained from the government and/or fees (tariffs) charged to the users of the service. In some projects, the private sector provider also pays concession fees to the government or another designated authority, in return for the use of the government’s projects, for example, the concession fee is based on the use of the service or the net income, giving the government a vested interest in the success of the project. In such cases, the government’s interests are comparable to those of an equity investor.
Facing increasingly constrained budgets and an inability to generate additional revenues, many governments have turned to partnerships with the private sector. Such contractual arrangements are typically linked with increased quality, improved service delivery, cost savings, and lower costs of financing. Typically, a PPP is conceptualized as a contractual agreement between one or more governments/public agencies and one or more private sector or nonprofit partners to support the delivery of public services or financing, designing, building, operating, and/or maintaining a certain project for the public good. These types of partnerships are usually developed with the implicit and explicit objectives of leveraging additional financing resources and expertise, which otherwise might not have been available for public purposes through traditional procurement practices.PPP implicitly or explicitly assumes a synergetic and mutually beneficial relationship between partners. In other words, a partnership (based on trust and common interest), as a contractual arrangement, provides greater efficiencies and enhanced outcomes than a mere contractual agreement – as it were, the sum is greater than its parts. This is a strong assumption to make, which may be easily questioned based on suffering from wishful thinking and perhaps being a bit naïve. Yet, this is very much a core assumption, even if it often remains unstated, behind the numerous benefits associated with a PPP. A PPP without mutual long-term commitment beyond its mere contractual terms – is just that – a contract.
A key motivation for governments considering public-private partnerships (PPPs) is the possibility of bringing in new sources of financing for funding public infrastructure and service needs. Several financing mechanisms are available for infrastructure projects and for public-private partnership (PPP) projects in particular.
Government Funding
Corporate or On-Balance Sheet Finance
Project Finance
Government Funding
The Government may choose to fund some or all of the capital investment in a project and look to the private sector to bring in expertise and efficiency. This is generally the case in a so-called Design-Build-Operate project where the operator is paid a lump sum for completed stages of construction and will then receive an operating fee to cover the operation and maintenance of the project. Another example would be where the Government chooses to source out the civil works for the project through traditional procurement and then brings in a private operator to operate and maintain the facilities or provide the service.
Even where Governments prefer that financing is raised by the private sector, increasingly Governments are recognizing that there are some aspects of the project or some risks in a project that may be easier or more sensible for the Government to take. This is discussed in Government Support in Financing PPPs.
Corporate or On-Balance Sheet Finance
The private operator may accept to finance some of the capital investment for the project and decide to fund the project through corporate financing – which would involve getting finance for the project based on the balance sheet of the private operator rather than the project itself. This is typically the mechanism used in lower-value projects where the cost of the financing is not significant enough to warrant a project financing mechanism or where the operator is so large that it chooses to fund the project from its balance sheet.
The benefit of corporate finance is that the cost of funding will be the cost of funding of the private operator itself and so it is typically lower than the cost of funding of project finance. It is also less complicated than project finance. However, there is an opportunity cost attached to corporate financing because the company will only be able to raise a limited level of finance against its equity (debt to equity ratio) and the more it invests in one project the less it will be available to fund or invest in other projects.
Project Finance
One of the most common – and often most efficient – financing arrangements for PPP projects is “project financing”, also known as “limited recourse” or “non-recourse” financing. Project financing normally takes the form of limited recourse lending to a specially created project vehicle (special purpose vehicle or “SPV”) which has the right to carry out the construction and operation of the project. It is typically used in a new build or extensive refurbishment situation and so the SPV has no existing business. The SPV will be dependent on revenue streams from the contractual arrangements and/or from tariffs from end users which will only commence once construction has been completed and the project is in operation. It is therefore a risky enterprise and before they agree to provide financing to the project the lenders will want to carry out extensive due diligence on the potential viability of the project and a detailed review of whether the project risk allocation protects the project company sufficiently. This is known commonly as verifying the project’s “bankability”.
The complexity of PPP projects leads to the need for appropriate legal frameworks and institutions to support successful PPP programs. As a result in recent years, governments have considered various changes in the legal and regulatory environment, as well as better administrative procedures, to reduce uncertainties for private investors. In particular, dedicated PPP Units have been created in some governments. What are the most important considerations in this respect?
In most countries, the provision of infrastructure services is the responsibility of the public sector. Depending on the political and administrative structure of the country, legislation may govern the infrastructure sectors at different levels of government (local, provincial, and national). Generally, some form of government authority is required to permit private involvement in infrastructure development. Legal provisions may also be required to process, promote, and facilitate private involvement.
The administrative mechanism of PPP project implementation depends on the system of government the overall administrative structure, and the legal regime concerning PPPs. As these elements vary from one country to another, the administrative mechanism also varies from one country to another. Generally, the sectoral agencies at the national and provincial levels (in a federal structure) initiate and implement most of the PPP projects. However, in many countries, the Philippines for example, local-level governments such as city governments are also allowed to undertake PPP projects.
Depending on the system in a country, the implementation of PPP projects may require the involvement of several public authorities at various levels of government. The authority to award PPP contracts and approve contract agreements is generally centralized in a separate public authority. This may be a special body for this purpose and is usually at the ministerial or council of ministers level.
The legal instruments and/or government rules and guidelines define how the sectoral agencies and local governments may initiate, develop, submit for approval of the national/provincial government, procure, negotiate, and make deals with the private sector, and finally implement a project. These legal instruments may also define the authority and responsibilities concerning PPPs at different levels or tiers of government.
The figure below shows the steps that are generally considered in a PPP project implementation process. Clear definitions and procedures of various tasks and administrative approval from competent authorities at different stages of the project implementation process are necessary for running a successful PPP program. Streamlined administrative procedures reduce uncertainties at different stages of project development and approval and help to reduce the transaction cost of a PPP project.
Risks can be hard to define, manage, and mitigate. In infrastructure projects that cross regional or national borders and involve multiple parties from both the public and private sectors, these risks may be amplified. Risks are evaluated on the magnitude and likelihood of their impact on project cash flows.
Lenders focus on certain risks more critically because they play a large role in the certainty of project cash flow. Investors often require certainty that market instruments and regulatory support are available to better align the risk profile of investment with their risk tolerance before investing in a cross-border project.
Multiple currencies can further complicate a cross-border project, with multiple currency fluctuations to manage, as well as risks associated with currency convertibility and transferability. Some governments impose restrictions and/or limits on investors that receive their revenue in a local currency on converting that revenue to a foreign currency or transferring it abroad.
Even when a project receives revenue in a foreign currency, there may still be restrictions on transferring it abroad. Political risk insurance cover may be available to mitigate currency convertibility and/or transferability risk, although this can be expensive.
Currency fluctuation risks will depend on asset type, project costs, and the project revenues available. As an example, if project revenues are available in foreign currencies and debt finance is available in that same foreign currency, this provides a natural hedge against the currency exchange rate and convertibility risks depending on the volatility of the foreign currency revenue. However, where project revenues are only available in a local currency and the only debt finance available is in a foreign currency, this currency mismatch creates an exchange rate risk.
Hedging instruments may be a solution to currency risk in these circumstances, but they rarely offer a cost-effective solution in many markets due to the costs involved and the lack of long-term hedging options for many local currencies. In this case, lenders will have to settle for the maximum tenor the local market will offer and then renew the maturity of the hedge in due course.
Commercial banks (local/ international)
Commercial banks are important investors in infrastructure projects, particularly through senior loans and guarantee products such as performance guarantees and letters of credit. The complexity and duration of project-financed projects often mean that local banks in many developing countries lack the technical capacity or willingness to enter into these projects, and where they do they tend to be junior members of a syndication.
Capital markets/ bondholders (local/ international)
Bond financing is suited to project finance as it tends to have longer tenure than commercial loans. However, there is less flexibility in the lending. It may be easier for an infrastructure fund to raise finance through the capital markets rather than an individual project, given that many institutional investors can only invest in investment-grade products.
Equity funds
Private equity funds (often called “infrastructure funds”) can play an important role in providing mezzanine financing to a project, taking more risk than traditional lenders, but less than the sponsors.
An equity fund is a collective investment scheme investing in equities. Collective investment schemes are a way for investors to invest with other investors to benefit from the inherent advantages of working as part of a group. These advantages include the ability to:
hire a professional investment manager, which theoretically offers the prospects of better returns and/or risk management
benefit from economies of scale – cost sharing among others
diversify more than would be feasible for most individual investors which, theoretically, reduces risk.
Around the world large markets have developed around collective investment and these account for a substantial portion of all trading on major stock exchanges.
The nature of intervention by a private equity fund will depend largely on the nature of that fund. Some bring significant infrastructure finance experience and can help improve project management and cost effectiveness. Others are focused on financial investment with only limited infrastructure experience.
For more on private equity in emerging markets, one source is the Emerging Markets Private Equity Association (EMPEA)
Export credit agencies
An export credit agency (ECA) is a private or quasi-governmental institution that acts as an intermediary between national governments and exporters to issue export financing. The financing can take the form of credits (financial support) or credit insurance and guarantees (pure cover) or both.
ECAs are active in several developing countries and are increasingly investing in infrastructure. ECAs provide three main forms of support to an importing entity:
Direct lending – This is the simplest structure – the loan is conditional on the purchase of goods or services from businesses in the ECA country.
Financial intermediary loans – the ECA lends funds to a financial intermediary, such as a commercial bank, that in turn lends to the importing entity.
Interest rate equalization – a commercial lender provides a loan to the importing entity at below-market interest rates, and in turn receives compensation from the ECA for the difference between the below-market rate and the commercial rate.
Development finance institutions
Development Finance Institutions (DFIs) are bilateral, regional, or multilateral institutions that are supported by states with developed economies. DFIs generally have a mandate to provide finance to the private sector for investments that promote development. The purpose of DFIs is to ensure investments where otherwise the commercial markets would not invest. DFIs aim to be catalysts, helping companies get funding in countries where there is restricted access to domestic and foreign capital markets and providing risk mitigation products that enable investors to proceed with plans they might otherwise abandon. DFIs provide loans with longer maturities and other financial products. Examples of DFIs are International Finance Corporation (IFC), European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), CDC Group (UK’s development finance institution), DEG (the German development finance institution), Proparco (the French DFI) and European Investment Bank (EIB).
Some of these DFIs also have specialist products and facilities that support project development and seed equity to projects, such as IFC’s Infraventures initiative. For more, go to IFC.
See Risk Mitigation Products for more information on some specific products developed by DFIs and MDBs that can be used in projects.
Bilateral agencies
Bilateral aid agencies are the aid arm of countries that provide aid to the developed world. They provide funding through grants directly or through multilateral and regional agencies and trust funds.
Multilateral Development Banks
Multilateral Development Banks are institutions that provide financial support and professional advice for economic and social development activities in developing countries. The term Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) typically refers to:
The World Bank
The African Development Bank
The Asian Development Bank
The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
The Inter-American Development Bank Group
MDBs provide support to governments in the development of projects, through Risk Mitigation Products and by providing funds that the governments can use to provide Government Support in Financing PPPs. For more on how the World Bank Group assists in PPPs, go to World Bank Group’s Role.
Sovereign wealth funds
Sovereign wealth funds allow countries with superior savings rates to export that capital to other parts of the world and represent significant sources of funding for infrastructure projects. They often come into projects with some sort of mezzanine financing.
Sovereign wealth funds are state-owned investment funds composed of financial assets such as stocks, bonds, property, precious metals, or other financial instruments. They are typically created when governments have budgetary surpluses and have little or no international debt. There are two types of funds: saving funds and stabilization funds. Stabilization SWFs are created to reduce the volatility of government revenues and to counter the boom-bust cycles’ adverse effect on government spending and the national economy. Savings SWFs build up savings for future generations. Sovereign wealth funds invest globally and many like to invest in infrastructure as a long-term investment. Sovereign wealth funds have been around for decades but since 2000, the number of sovereign wealth funds has increased dramatically. The first SWF was the Kuwait Investment Authority.