High Returns Lure Wealthy Investors to Fund Coal as Banks Exit
23 Jul 2024
Wealthy
Australians، in search of attractive investment returns، are emerging as an
important pool of capital for financing coal projects shunned by banks due to
environmental، social and governance concerns.
Income Asset
Management Group Ltd. is one fund manager targeting the well-off in Australia
to provide private loans to coal and other mining companies، offering
investment returns of about of 12% to 13% per year.
“We can go into
non-ESG deals as well like mining if a return on the credit works because our
investors have appetite for good returns،” Varuna Gunatillake، director، debt
capital markets at IAM said in an interview in Melbourne.
The firm has
placed over A$500 million ($335 million) of loans in the last three years in
coal and commodity-related infrastructure projects. Those included a piece of
Whitehaven Coal Ltd.’s recent $1.1 billion private credit loan، and A$170
million in junior debt to Newcastle Coal Infrastructure Group Pty’s coal
terminal in New South Wales. It earns a placement fee for each transaction.
Rising demand for private
credit
For IAM، the
rising demand for private credit globally dovetails with a growing interest
among some individual investors in Australia for coal and other resource bets
that offer strong returns.
Strident
opposition to coal developments in the country has been tempered by a slowdown
in renewable energy project investments. Developers have had to wrestle with
rising costs، lengthy approval processes and capacity constraints in the
transmission grid.
A recent
decision by Origin Energy Ltd. to push back the closure of Australia’s largest
coal-fired power station by two years amid fears of power shortfalls
underscores the dilemma posed by the slower-than-expected transition.
As a result،
the financing pipeline for coal-related projects in Australia is healthy،
notwithstanding opposition from ESG proponents and a pull back by traditional
lenders. Some of Australia’s major banks، including Commonwealth Bank of
Australia and Westpac Banking Corp.، have committed to limit or refrain from
lending to thermal coal miners.
A unit of
India’s Adani Group recently got a A$500 million private credit loan from
non-bank lenders Farallon Capital Management and King Street Capital
Management، people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg News. Meanwhile، a
consortium led by Indonesia’s Widjaja family sounded out private credit funds
to finance its acquisition of a coal mine in Australia from South32 Ltd.
IAM recognized
the growing opportunity to earn strong returns from businesses — particularly
in mining and mining services — that have been shunned by commercial lenders
and institutional investors. IAM has more than A$3 billion in assets under
administration including cash deposits، bonds and treasury management، according
to information on its website.
“We can be the
conduit between these two opportunities and connect the high net worth
customers to these institutional deals that are not accessible easily” for the
wealthy، Gunatillake said.
The potential
pool of liquidity from high-net worth individuals in Australia is enormous.
Capgemini، in a June report، estimated wealthy Australians had investable
assets of more than $1 trillion in 2023. Overall، high-net worth individuals
globally had assets worth $86.8 trillion.