maritime saudi arabia 2010 30th may – 1st june finance & investment in shipping marcus machin...

10
Maritime Saudi Arabia 2010 30th May – 1st June Finance & Investment in Shipping Marcus Machin CEO Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited

Upload: angela-smith

Post on 24-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Maritime Saudi Arabia 201030th May – 1st June

Finance & Investment in Shipping

Marcus Machin CEO Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited

Page 2

Focus: Fund Management within Maritime and Offshore Oil Service and Energy Sectors.

Established: 1980’s by the merger of Oceanic Finance Corporation and International Shipping Investment Company

Offices: London, Isle of Man, Dubai, Hong Kong & Singapore

Staff: 60

No. of Funds: 7

AUM: USD 2.6 billion

Experience: Over 25 years of value added and award winning transactions in private equity, debt raising, public investments and advisory services

Ownership: Privately owned, majority ownership held by management while key employees hold significant interest in business unit subsidiaries

Value Creation

Regulated:

• Transaction Sourcing through our unique industry network and research base• Financial structuring and restructuring• Operational restructuring through leveraging our industry experience and networks• Selection of target marine and oil services industry sub-sectors• Active management of fund portfolios • Industry leader in establishment of Islamic investment funds

Tufton Oceanic Limited is authorised and regulated in the UK by the Financial Services Authority. Oceanic Asset Backed Finance Limited is licensed by the Isle of Man Financial Supervision Commission to conduct Investment Business. Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited is authorised and regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority.

Tufton Oceanic Finance Group

Page 3

Fund Management

Advisory Services

Corporate Finance; Debt and Lease Finance arrangements; Advisory

* The ”Operating Lease Fund” is a combination of 2 managed accounts and other private investments. 8 investments were realised producing an IRR of 174%. The portfolio IRR including 4 unrealised investments is 115% since inception

Tufton Oceanic Product Range

Equity Funds Inception Activities AUM(Mar-10)

Oceanic Hedge Fund 2002 Long / Short equity fund USD 1,800 mil

Oceanic Small Cap Fund 2007 Pre IPO equity fund USD 100 mil

Transport Investment Fund 2010 Long / short equity fund USD 13 mil

Asset Backed Funds / Acquisitions

Oceanic Operating Lease* 2007 Vessel leases with residual value risk focus USD 82 mil

Oceanic Finance Lease

ACS

Oceanic Distressed Fund

2004

2009

Q2 2010

Vessel leases with credit risk focus

Acquisition of distressed shipping company

Distressed shipping and offshore investments

USD 307 mil

USD 273 mil

Page 4

Shipping Market – Market Segments and Sub-segments

• Cape Size/ Panamax/ Handy • Crude/ Product/ Chemical Tankers• LNG/LPG/Ethylene Carriers

• Container Ships

• RoRos• Reefers• Car Carriers

• Platform Supply Vessels/ AHTS• Construction Vessels / MSV• Maintenance Rigs• Heavy Lift Ships

• Semi-Submersible Rigs• Jack Up Rigs• FPSO / FSO• Drilling Ships

Dry Bulk Wet Bulk Container

General Cargo Offshore Support Offshore Production

Page 5

Sources of Finance for Shipping

Bank Market Cap as of March 2010, US$ bn Bank Market Cap as of Q2 2007, US$ bn

116 93106

9180

67 76

120

49

75100 116

255215

46 53 81 5042 35 39 37

51 81 9129

179

UBS Unicredit BNP Paribas Barclays SocieteGenerale

Credit Agricole

Deutsche Bank

Morgan Stanley

Credit Suisse

Goldman Sachs

Santander

Citigroup

RBS

HSBC

113

116 93106

9180

67 76

120

49

75100 116

255215

46 53 81 5042 35 39 37

51 81 9129

179

UBS Unicredit BNP Paribas Barclays SocieteGenerale

Credit Agricole

Deutsche Bank

Morgan Stanley

Credit Suisse

Goldman Sachs

Santander

Citigroup

RBS

HSBC

113

Bank DebtUS$437bn

Public EquityUS$252bn

Private EquityUS$81bn

Gov’t FleetUS$116bn Bond

US$42bn

Estimated UnfundedUS$175bn

Sources of Funding of the World Fleet

Source BloombergSelected Shipping Banks - CDS Spreads on 5 Year Senior

Corporate Bonds

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

BNP Paribas Fortisbank Nederlands Credit Agricole ING RBS Nordea DnB

Source: Bloomberg

bps

• International Banks have traditionally been the source of the single largest component of financing of the world shipping fleet

• The developments in the banks’ own businesses post financial crises means that this source of finance is less able to fund rapid future developments in both shipping and shipping infrastructure

• Alternative capital structures are increasingly a viable source of funding for shipping and shipping infrastructure projects internationally and within the GCC

Page 6

Kingdom of Saudi Arabia – Macro Economic Context

Chart: GDP growth to accelerate this year

-8.0

-6.0

-4.0

-2.0

0.0

2.0

4.0

6.0

2006 2007 2008 2009e 2010f 2011f

% Y

oY hydrocarbon growth

non-hydrocarbon growth

Real GDP growth

Hydrocarbons account for almost 30% of real GDP (2009 estimates)

18%

28%

7%7%

13%

8%

9%

10%

Hydrocarbon sector*

Government services

Financial services

Non oil manufacturing

Other

Wholesale & retail trade,restaurants & hotel

Construction

Transport, storage andcommunication

GDP breakdown by sector (2009 estimates)

24%28%

48%

Non-oil government sector

Non-oil private sector

Oil sector

Source: National sources, SHUAA Capital

*Includes oil-related manufacturing such as the petrochemical industry

Source: National estimates, SHUAA Capital

Source: National estimates, SHUAA Capital

• Saudi Arabia GDP growth reported to have remained positive during 2009 despite negative hydrocarbon sector growth

• 2010 – 2011 projections of Saudi Arabian GDP growth exceed 4.0% led by the non-hydrocarbon sector with consequent positive effect on imports of bulk and finished goods

• Continued expansion and diversification of the petrochemical sector in Saudi Arabia will serve to increase exports of Olefins and Aromatics – Saudi Arabia projected to increase share in global Ethylene market form 7.1% in 2009 to 10.5% in 2014

Page 7

Current Reported GCC Regional Vessel Orderbook

• In total 184 deep sea vessels are on order by the major GCC companies with, in aggregate, over 17 mil dwt delivering over the next two years

• Of these, 89 vessels have been ordered by the top 10 companies in the region, of which a significant proportion remain to be financed

• International banks, previously extremely supportive of regional owners have not been reported to have advanced new funding outside the government sector companies during 2010

Source: Clarksons 14/02/10

Rank Name Sector CountryDwt No Vessels Dwt No Vessels

1 Vela International 6,482,175 25 1,272,000 4 Tanker Saudi Arabia2 Nat.Shpg.Of S.Arabia 5,998,176 34 720,000 16 Tanker Saudi Arabia3 Kuwait Oil Tanker 3,321,969 25 1,272,000 4 Tanker Kuwait4 Qatar Gas (Nakilat) 2,858,925 22 390,894 3 LNG Qatar5 Emirates Trading 2,151,372 32 1,305,100 14 Bulker/ Tanker U.A.E.6 United Arab Shpg. 2,017,386 37 1,755,000 19 Container/ Tanker Kuwait7 Saudi Maritime Hldg. 1,586,680 5 640,000 2 Tanker Saudi Arabia8 Fal Shipping Co. 1,202,997 26 97,139 1 Tanker U.A.E.9 Emarat Maritime LLC 1,141,400 14 3,295,245 24 Bulker/ Tanker U.A.E.10 Gulf Energy Maritime 991,082 17 229,400 2 Tanker U.A.E.

Total 27,752,162 237 10,976,778 89

Current Fleet Orderbook

TOP 10 OWNERS BY DWT IN GCC

Page 8

Islamic Finance – Increasing importance but not immune to market forces

2008 Headlines

• “In 2008 Islamic Banking represented 22% market share in GCC against 10% in 2003.”

• “Islamic Assets in GCC reached $285bn in 2008 – 35% of global Islamic Finance assets exclusive of those held by major international banking groups that are also active in Islamic banking in the region incl Standard Chartered HSBC, Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas”

• “29% of Islamic Finance in GCC in 2008 stemmed from Islamic windows of conventional banks”

• “Worldwide, cumulative Sukuk issuance outstanding topped $100 billion, with local currencies remaining the denomination of choice. New players such as General Electric Capital Corp and International Finance Corp also saw fit to tap the Sukuk market”.

2010 Headlines

• “Nakheel, developer of Dubai's palm-shaped islands, in December narrowly met a $4.1 billion maturity on an Islamic bond, or Sukuk, after neighbouring emirate Abu Dhabi provided it with $10 billion in funds.”

• “Gulf Finance House EC is negotiating with banks to roll over $100 million in an Islamic loan into a new two-year facility as it prepares to sell assets to improve liquidity”.

• “Kuwaiti Islamic lender Boubyan Bank reported a net loss for 2009 on Wednesday, after booking provisions against bad loans. Boubyan - which is 40 percent owned by the country's largest bank, National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) - made a net loss of $179.1 million in 2009”.

• “In 2007, the Sukuk market accounted for almost 50 per cent of the total GCC capital market issuance. In 2009, decreased to a meager 13 per cent. In 2010, so far, only one sukuk has been issued out of the GCC (5 year $450m Sukuk for Saudi based Dar Al Arkan rated AA3 / BB- / Ba2).

Sources: S&P, Arabian Business, Gulf News Rothschilds

Page 9

Islamic Ship Finance Examples and Structures

Charter Guarantor

Mortgage BankSPC and Ship Owning Co

accounts

Islamic Fund Company

Sponsor and Other Investors

Bareboat Charterer

100%

Sub-Lease Agreement

Islamic Fund Trust

Ship Owning Co

Advance Rental

Head LeaseIjara Lease

Islamic SPC Co

Ltd

100%

Lease Rentals

100%

Loan

Debt Service Payments

Shariah Compliant

Generic Investment Fund Vessel Ijarah Lease Structure

1. No ships financed in these facilities2. Convertible into equity on a listing

Year USD m Tenor Structure

2002Brunei Gas Carriers 129 5 yrs Ijara lease

2004Alislami Oceanic 76 5 yrs Ijara lease

Alislami Oceanic 141 7 yrs Musharaka (3)

Al Safeena 26 5 yrs Sukuk al ijara

Al Rubban 100 (est) <10 yrs Ijara (>3)

2006Alislami Oceanic 114 <9 yrs Musharaka (3)

NSCSA 160 (est) ? Murabaha (2)

DP World 1 3,500 2 yrs Sukuk 2

QatarGas II 1 500 15 yrs

2007NSCSA 1,320 Murabaha

MISC 742 Murabaha

Topaz Energy 50 Ijara

2009 KFH Oceanic 170 <5 yrs Ijara (3)

Page 10

Tufton Oceanic – Contact Details

Tufton Oceanic - London1 Albemarle StreetLondon W1S 4HAUK

Phone: +44 (0) 20 7518 6700Fax: +44 (0) 20 7518 6701Web: www.tuftonoceanic.com

Erik A. LindEmail: [email protected]: +44 (0) 20 7518 6751

Andrew HampsonEmail: [email protected]: +44 (0) 20 7518 6718

Tufton Oceanic - Middle East

Jonathan Hill

Email: [email protected]

Tel: +971 (0) 4 702 6504

Marcus Machin

Email: [email protected]

Tel: +971 (0)4 702 6503

Tufton Oceanic - Singapore (Representative Office)

Torkell Vold

Email: [email protected]

Tel: +65 6884 7875

Important Notice

Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited is regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority. Tufton Oceanic Limited is regulated by the Financial Services Authority in England. Tufton Oceanic (Isle of Man) Limited is licensed by the Isle of Man Financial Supervision Commission to conduct Investment Business. Tufton Oceanic (Far East) Limited is regulated by the Securities and Futures Commission, Hong Kong.

Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited issues this presentation, on a confidential basis for the sole purpose of providing information about the maritime and offshore oil services sectors and possible investment opportunities in those sectors. Recipients are therefore bound by a duty of confidentiality in respect of all the information contained in this presentation.

The views presented are solely those of Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited and other Tufton Oceanic group companies. Whilst this presentation has been prepared in good faith, Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited make no warranty or representation (express or implied) and accept no responsibility or liability for the accuracy of any opinions, forecasts or other material presented which have not been independently verified. Prospective investors should make their own investigations to confirm the accuracy or otherwise of the material presented herein. Any liability is expressly disclaimed.

No information set out or referred to in this presentation shall form the basis of any contract. Any prospective investor shall be required to acknowledge in any subsequent agreement that it has not relied on or been induced to enter into such an agreement by any representation or warranty save as expressly set out in any such agreement.

This document is presented on the express understanding that the recipients shall use it only for the purpose set out above. Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited gives no undertaking to give the recipient’s access to any additional information or update this presentation or any information or to correct any inaccuracies in it which may become apparent.

If you have not received this document directly from Tufton Oceanic (Middle East) Limited your receipt is unauthorised.