Course dates
This unique 5-day training course examines the latest structuring, funding and cashflow modelling techniques.
On completion of the course you will be able to:
- Analyse specific case studies, risk profiles and structuring protocols
- Analyse funding sources and credit criteria
- Simulate, arrange and document project financings
- Construct a project finance cashflow model
- Capitalise on the new horizons for projects and funding sources
Course overview:
This course will cover all the critical factors in project financing today, from identifying which projects to finance, to the negotiation tactics employed to achieve the best deals. You will find out how to spot the pitfalls in project finance structures and identify the risks, credit criteria and funding. Through practical exercises you will learn sector specific modelling and structuring protocols and how to build a cashflow model from scratch. The also covers political risk structuring and tailoring the project to suit the funding. The programme will finish by considering the future direction and developments in the sector and how to best take advantage of these.
Methodology:
- You will receive pre-course reading notes and case study material in analysis, negotiation and structuring. Individual project finance cases will be pre-assigned.
- Comprehensive session notes, computer models and resource material will be a key part of the teaching methodology to form an excellent balance between formal lectures and hands-on participation.
Prerequisites:
- This advanced course is suitable for all those who have previous experience in carrying out project financing e.g. project/structured finance executives from banks, multinationals and multilaterals.
- Delegates are likely to have a minimum of 3 years’ hands-on project finance experience and ideally you should know about NPVs, IRRs and cashflow analysis and should also have a basic understanding of business law.
Supported by:

Day 1
Critical factors in project financing today
Why choose project finance?
- Sponsors rationale
- Lenders criteria
- Constructors objectives
- Governments roles
- Institutions/investors
Best sectors and project types
- Difficult sectors to avoid
- Current trends
Stages in project finance
- Time, team, costs
- Information memorandum/project proposal
- Credit/investment committee considerations
Workshop: case study/modelling team assignments
Power project capital markets
Tollway banks/bond
Oil and gas political risk
Power co-financing
Risk definitions/allocations
- The 6 risk systems
- The 5 structuring formats
- The 16 risks to identify
- The 174 structures to apply
Sector-specific risk profiles and structuring protocols
- Oil and gas
- Tollways/bridges/tunnels
- Power/merchant
- Ports/airports power railways
- Water/waste water
- Hospitals/prisons
- Telecoms/satellites
- Mining/metals
- Renewable energy
Workshop: pick the risks; each team will select the top four risks and the structures that are needed in four recent cases.
Risk metrics
- Basel II
- Compliance measures
Day 2
Structuring and trade-offs
Due diligence
- How to scope the 6 independent reviews
- Fit to credit/investment approval
- The bankable feasibility study
- The project development plan
Why do projects go wrong? Lessons to be learnt from:
- Eurotunnel/Eurodisney/Iridium
- OrlyVAL/Dulles Greenway/NCA/Quintette
Key documentation aspects
- The 19 participants
- The 33 contracts
Contractual architecture risk coverage
- Concession agreements vs. BOO
- Special purpose vehicles (the 5 types)
- Operations/management (O&M) contracts
- Turnkey construction contract
- Delayed completion and systems performance insurances
- Offtake/sales contracts
- Indirect/third-party support agreements
- Government guarantees
- Dispute resolution methods
Funding documentation
- Loan agreements
- Joint venture/shareholder agreement
- Security documentation
- Assignment of contracts/insurances
- Direct and common agreements
- Offshore proceeds account
- Swaps
- Securitisation
- Inter-creditor agreement/deed of priority
Funding sources
- Debt
- Equity
- Leasing/leveraged leasing
- Commodity-based
Ratings for project financings
- Moodys/Standard & Poors/Fitch
- Key differences with bank-driven deals
- Covenants
- Pricing
- Default
- Term
- Structure
- Voting
Role of the advisor
- When to involve advisors
- How to keep the costs and timetable down
Political risk structuring definitions
- Terrorism questionnaire
- The classic 3 - war, inconvertibility, expropriation
- The full set of 20 political risks
- Application to equity too
Export credit agencies/bilateral agencies
- US Eximbank/OPIC, US
- EDC, Canada/KfW/Hermes/ECGD, UK/JBIC/NEXI
- Tactics for approaching the ECAs
Multilateral agencies
- World Bank
- Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)
- International Finance Corp (IFC)
- European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
- Inter-American Development Bank (IDB)
- Asian Development Bank (ADB)
- How to approach the multilaterals
Private sources
Day 3
Credit criteria and cashflow modelling
Credit analysis
- The investors/financiers/company treasurers measures
What model is needed for a project finance?
- The model layout
- Establishment of the key cases
- Fit to the project risks/sensitivities
- "Circularity is best"
Model designs
- Design of the input sheet/data validation
- Conventional: operations; capex; loan/tax routines
Project finance model types
- Typical layouts
- Drawdown routines/model periods (%, quarterly, overruns)
- The 8 main repayment styles
- Multi-tranche approaches
- Reserve accounts
- Debt service
- Maintenance
- Capex
- Tax
- Environmental
- FX
- Calculating liquidated damages/overrun/retention requirements
Sensitivity analyses modelling
- How to choose sensitivities
- Key ratio targets
- Contrast to sponsors' IRR, NPV, valuation analyses
- Dynamic what if?
- Scenario manager
- Graphical sensitivity techniques
- Conditional formatting
- Other tricks?
Build the course model
- Design the necessary input sheet
- Determine the loan amount required using different repayment techniques
Model auditing
- 'Straight' Excel techniques
- Advanced add-in styles
Day 4
Modelling project finance cashflows
Key inputs
- Non-modelling assumptions
- Cyclicality
- The 5 breakeven techniques
Modelling key decision/credit criteria
- Leveraged IRR
- Annual debt service cover ratio
- Principal cover
- Loan life/project life PV ratio
- Interest cover
- Cash/equity lock-ups
- Delay algorithms
- Residual cover/cushion/ratios
- Liquidated damages
- Cash sweeps/mandatory prepayments
Modelling workshop
- Modelling tactics
- How to fiddle/finesse the model
Typical modelling errors
- Discounting/escalation
- Available cashflow
- Reserves
- Working capital
- Replacement capital
- EBITDA
- CPI-based LLR/PLR
- The danger of using unescalated models
- Some handy tools to check model imputs
Sector modelling aspects
- Power
- Tollways
- Telecoms
- Satellites
- Prisons/hospitals
- Airport/ports
- Water/waste water
- Theme parks/stadiums
- Railways Resources (oil and gas, mining)
Bidding contest using the course model - leading from the course model and the information memorandum update, decide whether you can improve on the currently offered project finance deal!
Day 5
Outlook for project finance
Case study presentations: each team presents its allocated case with structures and solutions as well as cashflow sensitivities. Expert feedback on the deal architecture and risks.
Project finance as a competitive tool
- How to integrate project financing into the bid
Practical case study: linking the tariff to the project finance structure.
Contract/tender bidding
- Real turnkey construction contracts
Public private projects
- The 7 variations
- Tendering criteria
- Trends/case examples
New horizons for projects and funding sources
- Green funds
- Emerging market funds
- Infrastructure/development funds
- Tax structures
- Capital markets
- Political risk enhancements
- FX cover
- Credit enhancements
- Credit wraps/monolines
- Weather/wind derivatives
- Islamic project finance
- Credit derivatives
- Securitisation
- CDOs/CLOs
- Takeout architectures
Course summary & close
Riyadh Hotel, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
This programme takes place on a non-residential basis at a central Riyadh hotel. Non-residential course fees include training facilities, documentation, lunches and refreshments for the duration of the programme. Delegates are responsible for arranging their own accommodation, however, a list of convenient hotels (many at specially negotiated rates) is available upon registration.
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Richard Tinsley
Richard Tinsley is a banker/engineer/economist with over 30 years experience, mostly as a strategic / financial advisor or as the lead banker on numerous transactions -- totalling US$14.8 billion at last count in 35 countries -- but also as CEO and CFO of a project development and operating company. (He issued one of the first true Project-Finance bonds.) He has worked in five countries: Ireland, Canada, USA, UK, and now Australia. Richard is President of International Advisory & Finance. IAF is a network of firms in the infrastructure, energy, and resources finance sectors in New York, Boston, California, Mumbai, Johannesburg, Melbourne, and London.
In the finance field, Richard has been Project-Finance director at Continental Bank (Chicago); European Banking Company (London); Prudential-Bache Capital Funding (Wall St.), and Indosuez Australia (Sydney, Australia -- now Calyon).
As a professional independent director, he serves as an adviser to infrastructure, energy, resources, telecoms, and water utilities companies worldwide. Richard Tinsley has many world-first Project-Finance applications and particularly relishes the cross-fertilisation of structures from one industry sector to another.
Richard teaches the full range of Project-Finance courses around the world. He is the author of the self-study guide and CD-ROM on Project Finance as well as two books: Advanced Project Financing: Structuring Risk, 1st Edition, and Project Finance in Asia Pacific: Practical Case Studies for Euromoney Books.
Richard is a Visiting Fellow at the Applied Finance Centre for Macquarie University throughout Asia and gives the Project Finance core and Infrastructure Finance elective for the University of Stellenboschs Master in Development Finance in Cape Town, South Africa.
Interested in holding this course in-house? Please fill out your details and a member of our team will be in touch with more information.
Course dates