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IFC recent experience in FRY Roberto Albisetti – Chief of Mission IFC Belgrade

IFC recent experience in FRY Roberto Albisetti – Chief of Mission IFC Belgrade 4 February, 2003 – European Movement, Belgrade Economic Forum. International Finance Corporation.

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IFC recent experience in FRY Roberto Albisetti – Chief of Mission IFC Belgrade

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  1. IFC recent experience in FRY Roberto Albisetti – Chief of Mission IFC Belgrade 4 February, 2003 – European Movement, Belgrade Economic Forum

  2. International Finance Corporation We promote sustainable private sector investment in developing countries, helping to reduce poverty and improve people’s lives.

  3. IFC: A Member of theWorld Bank Group IFC is owned by its 175 member countries, which collectively determine policies. Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency, 1988 International Finance Corporation, 1956 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, 1945 International Development Association, 1960

  4. World Bank Group Institutional Roles • IBRD lends to governments of middle-income developing countries. • IFC finances a wide range of private sector sustainable projects in developing countries. • IDA provides concessional loans to governments of the poorest developing countries. • MIGA provides guarantees to foreign investors against noncommercial risk. 4

  5. Defining characteristics • Participates only in private sector ventures • Shares same risks as other investors • Invests in equity • Has market pricing policies • Does not accept government guarantees • Is profit oriented 5

  6. Capital Stock Held by our Shareholders175 Member Countries Five largest: 45.8% Other countries: 54.2% United States 24.1% Japan 6.0% Other countries 54.2% Germany 5.5% France 5.1% United Kingdom 5.1% 6

  7. IFC’s Operating IncomeFY 1998–2002 U.S. $millions 380 249 241 212 161 7

  8. Financial strength (As of June 30, 2002) Authorized capital: $2.45 billion Total capital: $6.3 billion Capital strength: IFC’s capital resources currently stand at 49 percent of risk-weighted assets, well above the 30 percent minimum for this ratio required by the capital adequacy policy. 8

  9. Investments by Sector FY02 Total Commitments: $3.61 billion Gross investments, including loan syndications and financing for IFC’s own account. Also includes guarantees and risk management products, which are off-balance-sheet. 9

  10. IFC Financing Includes loan guarantees and risk management products for FY99-02 10

  11. IFC in FRY • FRY’s membership of WB and IFC in May 2001 • IFC opened a field office in September 2001 • IFC’s investment portfolio in former Yugoslavia was among the top country exposures • One of the largest markets in Southern Europe • Substantial interest from foreign strategic investors • FRY is then a priority in IFC’s strategy to support private sector development • IFC as an early investor aims at increasing confidence to attract foreign direct investments 11

  12. What IFC has achieved so far • MicroFinanceBank Yugoslavia, equity investment of US$ 1 million equal to 16.6% of share capital • Raiffeisen Bank Yugoslavia, equity investment of Euro 1 million equal to 10% of share capital • Fresh&Co (agribusiness) Loan of Euro 7.7 million, signed November 2001, disbursed • Tigar Rubber Company (tires) Loan of Euro 16 million and equity investment of Euro 4 million (10% of share capital in new JV with Michelin) signed March 2002 12

  13. IFC’s role in FRY • Invest in modernization: Serbia has largely under-utilized industrial infrastructure, mostly state or socially owned, some traditionally trade oriented • Provide long term capital: during isolation companies have lost market share, are left cash starved, need investments but have no access to international financial markets • Develop the local financial market: financial intermediation is still very low, interest rates are high • Attract and provide confidence to foreign investors: in the early phase of transition, the privatization process is relatively slow and foreign investors are still prudent • Provide technical assistance: skilled workforce is available, but modern managerial resources are limited 13

  14. IFC’s strategy in FRY • Help to fill some of the existing gaps by delivering results on the ground immediately, mobilizing significant resources • Provide technical assistance to support capacity building (market focus, business plans, accounting discipline) • Invest in commercially viable companies both private and partially private/to be privatized • Support privatization and restructuring process • Strong client focus, provide flexible solutions for modernization investments and working capital needs • Provide comfort to foreign investors through a demonstration effect • Focus on the financial sector (banks), develop other financial intermediaries (leasing, funds) • Promote the growth of local entrepreneurship and SMEs 14

  15. Actions being taken • Focus technical assistance on critical segments of the real sector and financial sector, increased attention on infrastructure • New project developments under way in garment-textiles, agribusiness, mechanical industry, pharmaceuticals, distribution, tourism, banking, insurance, leasing • Build a broad pipeline of investment opportunities in order to diversify risks • Intensify cooperation with the Privatization Agency to help increase results on the ground • Mobilize financial resources to local intermediaries for on-lending to SMEs 15

  16. Project Cycle and Timing As Seen by Client Internal to IFC Initial Discussions Initial Review & Authorization to Appraise Mandate Letter Appraisal Financing Negotiations ManagementApproval Info. Memo and Syndication Legal Documentation Disbursement Board Approval Supervision/Evaluation 16

  17. How to contact us • Send us a brief outline of your project: description, sponsors, management, market and sales, industrial background, investment requirements, anticipated financial plan • IFC Belgrade Office, Kneginje Zorke 96 • Tel: (011) 3023760-1; fax: (011)3023733 • Ralbisetti@ifc.org • www.ifc.org 17

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