Friday, February 22, 2008

Going with the flow


Underlying Kadle's revelation is a broad shift in the forces bearing on trade in Asia - and a new company response to the pressures of demands for faster, smoother trade. It's no secret that intra-Asian trade flows have grown very quickly in the last three years, completely altering the traditional scenarios of Asia in its time-honored role as an exporter to the West. In the most obvious example of the shift, trade flows between the rest of Asia and China were at a surplus of US$21 billion in 1997 and clocked in at a deficit of seven times that much in the period between January and June 2004.

In the past three years, China's trade deficit with Asia has grown from US$6 billion in 2001, to US$50 billion last year, and then leapt to US$147 billion in the first six months of this year. To be sure, this widening deficit reflects a shift in manufacturing priorities, as a search for low-cost labor has meant that Western companies have selected China as hub with supply chains radiating throughout China's neighbors, near and far-flung. Ultimately, most of the goods produced are destined for the US and Europe. But the rise in intra-Asian trade isn't exclusively a matter of China acting as Asia's conduit to the West. Citibank reckons that in three years, intra-Asian trade has moved from 38 percent of total world trade to more than 47 percent.

The overarching pattern, says Andrew Au, regional trade head for Asia at Citigroup, "is that north Asia has established itself as the engine. China is becoming the gateway for manufacturing and onward sale to Europe and the US. Trade between Korea and Japan is huge." But he adds: "India has been growing rapidly, too, fueled by its domestic expansion."

Amita Jhangiani, Asia Pacific head of global trade finance for Deutsche Bank, reports a growth in non-traditional trade flows within Asia, and from Asia to the developing world. "These so-called 'south-to-south' trading patterns have developed quickly over the past three years. We've even seen a growth in trade between India and China." Trades that the bank facilitated with letters of credit (L/Cs) include an oil deal between India and Libya, and an immense shipment of cars, destined to be taxi-cabs, between a South Korean manufacturer and a purchaser in Kazakhstan.

Moreover, China can hardly be characterized as 'South' anymore. "China is moving beyond the exporter of simple products to exporting more complex types of products," says Bruce Alter, head of trade finance in Asia Pacific for JPMorgan, "often related to technology. And on the other hand, because of surging economic growth, companies in China have a voracious need to build up capital equipment, which brings in trade flows from the outside."

With this shift within Asia trading habits have changed. Says Au: "Major buyers are reducing the numbers of vendors in the emerging markets. The buyers are more experienced with the vendors and have more leverage on them." Au adds that along with this process, vendors see themselves as having to shoulder more risk. Many Western companies sourcing in Asia have made strong efforts to reduce the number of letters of credit in trade deals, concentrating on open-account transactions with vendors they know. JC Penny, the US retailer, announced three years ago, for example, that it wanted to dispense with L/Cs altogether in favor of open account deals supported by internet-based trading platforms such as TradeCard, which JC Penny now uses.

The move to open account was widely seen as the lower-cost option, and is being followed by many major companies that source their products in Asia. But to vendors accepting open account without the guarantees associated with an L/C, the danger of non-payment carries a palpable sting. The 2002 bankruptcy of Kmart, the US retailer that sourced most of its goods in Asia brought a worst-case scenario to within easy grasp. "The buyer has a lot more power and the order flow is bigger," says Au. "With the trend toward open-account trading, the demand on the vendor for risk management has grown."

Ken Stratton, the head of trade and supply chain services for Standard Chartered Bank, notes that the transfer to open account has, in some cases, relayed cost back to the buyers. "It's not just a simple case of removing the cost of L/Cs - and it ends there," Stratton argues. "Some vendors have a high cost of funds, and when they're forced to borrow to finance a shipment, that cost eventually translates into the cost of goods sold, and that is passed on."

For sellers on the sourcing end of the supply chain, says Alistair Currie, HSBC's head of trade services for the Asia Pacific, "the problem becomes risk mitigation." He adds: "When the receivables concentrate on the balance sheet, the companies run into caps, which constrain sales." Increasingly, he says, "they come to us to look for the proper structure to take advantage of what they could be doing.".

A WHOLE NEW TRADE


Trade finance is morphing into new business that holds promise for better working capital management.

When Praveen Kadle, CFO of Tata Motors in Mumbai, talks about trade finance, he doesn't mention the words trade finance at all. For him, the words are synonymous with an overarching discipline: management of working capital. His company is the nation's leader in auto sales, with a 59 percent market in India, where Tata Sumos and Safaris contend in turbulent pageantry on India's highways. Its sales were up 123 percent year-on-year in its latest reported quarter, ending in June. With profits motored by a consumer boom among India's rising middle class, the US$4 billion company is going multinational, with an accent on Asian expansion.

A joint venture with Daewoo will start producing vehicles in South Korea next year. A deal with Iran Khodro, the Iranian state-owned carmaker, to outsource production is in the works. So with cars going like chapatis at home, and new relationships emerging around Asia, Kadle's main concern is that his company's increasingly complex supply chains will become a logjam for working capital.

But here's where he's experienced a pleasant surprise. "In fact, our working cap performance has greatly improved since our business turned around in the last three years," he says as if recounting a revelation. "A lot of it has to [do with] the changes in how we manage our supply chain - and how the banks have bought into what we're doing."

He says: "Our revenues have grown from US$2 billion to about US$4 billion in three years, and yet our performance on working capital has increased substantially," he says. "Receivables - except for government customers, are down to nine days on our books. That figure was 89 days three years ago. Inventories have come down from 75 to 34. We now have negative days working capital."

The reason behind this sea change? "We don't really need to borrow on account of working capital," says Kadle, "because the banks have looked at non-traditional sources to help us manage it better."

In one indicator that Tata was borrowing less, its interest cost was reduced 23 percent in the last reported quarter ending June, from one year ago. .

Housing Finance







Mortgage Finance – Estimates suggest that pent-up demand for housing in Asia can be measured in trillions of dollars. Yet the region offers shockingly low levels of mortgage finance for lower- and middle-income groups. Weak regulatory and legal frameworks, as well as a shortage of long-term funding has hampered the development of mortgage markets. Providing access to affordable housing is an important component of our poverty reduction strategy; indeed, helping people find a decent place to live and raise their families can be said to be the very definition of development*.

ADB’s strategy focuses on developing broad housing finance markets in our developing member countries by providing:

  1. long-term loans to banks for onlending to lower- and middle-income families
  2. loans or equity to specialized housing finance companies
  3. financial support for mortgage insurance, servicing, and securitization companies
  4. guaranties on mortgage-backed securities

Our mortgage finance activities not only help families obtain housing, but they also enable a country to generate multiple sources of employment in many industries, including construction and real estate. Additionally, through access to mortgage lending, one of the most important sources of capital for an individual or family can be created. Access to capital through mortgages is often used by individuals to start small and medium-sized enterprises. The introduction or expansion of private sector mortgage lending strengthens a country’s financial sector through the addition of new banking products and services and the diversification of risks across a broadened portfolio. Finally, support for the development of strong primary mortgage markets provide the basis for establishing secondary mortgage markets.

For more information on housing financing, contact





Housing Finance

Mortgage Finance – Estimates suggest that pent-up demand for housing in Asia can be measured in trillions of dollars. Yet the region offers shockingly low levels of mortgage finance for lower- and middle-income groups. Weak regulatory and legal frameworks, as well as a shortage of long-term funding has hampered the development of mortgage markets. Providing access to affordable housing is an important component of our poverty reduction strategy; indeed, helping people find a decent place to live and raise their families can be said to be the very definition of development*.

ADB’s strategy focuses on developing broad housing finance markets in our developing member countries by providing:

  1. long-term loans to banks for onlending to lower- and middle-income families
  2. loans or equity to specialized housing finance companies
  3. financial support for mortgage insurance, servicing, and securitization companies
  4. guaranties on mortgage-backed securities

Our mortgage finance activities not only help families obtain housing, but they also enable a country to generate multiple sources of employment in many industries, including construction and real estate. Additionally, through access to mortgage lending, one of the most important sources of capital for an individual or family can be created. Access to capital through mortgages is often used by individuals to start small and medium-sized enterprises. The introduction or expansion of private sector mortgage lending strengthens a country’s financial sector through the addition of new banking products and services and the diversification of risks across a broadened portfolio. Finally, support for the development of strong primary mortgage markets provide the basis for establishing secondary mortgage markets.

For more information on housing financing, contact

Trade Finance Facilitation Program



Trade Finance Facilitation Program – Our Trade Finance Facilitation Program (TFFP) aims to help DMC banks provide trade finance products to private sector importers and exporters. This is a means to facilitate international trade to, from, and between DMCs. The TFFP develops the capabilities of local issuing banks through

  • providing partial credit guarantees and revolving credits
  • enhancing their ability to offer importers and exporters access to financial services in support of their business
  • working in partnership with the private sector to provide capacity, liquidity and stability to the trade finance system.

The TFFP has two main components:

  • A revolving guarantee facility, without sovereign counter-guarantee, under which ADB guarantees payment to participating regional and international confirming banks, covering commercial and political risks under a letter of credit or other trade finance instrument; and
  • A revolving credit facility, without sovereign guarantee, under which ADB provides short-term loans to each issuing bank that receives guarantee support under the guarantee facility for on-lending to private sector exporters and importers for trade-related purposes.

The TFFP will assist not only local banks in Asian countries that have been slow to integrate with the global trading system, but can also help maintain, reestablish and enhance trade finance lines for local banks hurt by political or systemic crises.

A new product called the Risk Participation Agreement was launched under the TFFP in 2007 and will be implemented through 2008. This product is similar to the abovementioned revolving partial credit guarantee facility in that it shares risks with the private sector in support of trade. It differs from the partial credit guarantee facility in its structure, which is designed to facilitate the rapid expansion of the TFFP into new markets through a closer partnership with international banks. The Risk Participation Agreement will provide its partners with a new and efficient vehicle for trade portfolio management in less-developed markets.