Iran to issue short-term bonds

For the first time, Iran has started to issue sovereign debt to international investors. On September 29, the Islamic Republic began to offer short-term, one-year bonds, under the name Islamic Treasury Bills. The bonds will be issued by Fara Bourse, Iran’s small over-the-counter market.

Around $300m worth of the Sharia-compliant bonds will be issued

Around $300m worth of the Sharia-compliant bonds will be issued, with an attractive interest rate of 20 percent. The offering of Islamic T-Bills comes in the wake of Iran and the P5+1 group reaching an agreement over the country’s nuclear project earlier in the year. As a result of successful negotiations, Iran saw the lifting of sanctions on its financial and economic activities.

Iran sorely needs the money that the bonds will supply, as it struggles under high amounts of debt accumulated by former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the strain of years of sanctions, and more recently, the decline in world oil prices. According to the Financial Times, the Iranian economy is “hampered by large levels of bad debts, punitively high interest rates and double-digit rates of inflation.”

“There is a credit crunch in Iran and the solution is to increase the money supply,” Majid Zamani, chief executive of Kardan Investment Bank, which is acting as market maker on the Iranian bonds, tells the FT. According to the Iranian Financial Tribune“Iran prides itself on not having defaulted once in its 35-year history on its debts. Moreover, the country has one of the most advanced Islamic markets in the region and issues a wide range of sukuks, or non-interest debt securities.”

World Bank-IMF offer guidance on carbon pricing

Working in partnership, the IMF and World Bank have looked at different carbon pricing initiatives from around the world and carried out research of their own in order to help governments and businesses develop successful, cost-effective schemes of their own.

The two international financial organisations contend that well-designed carbon pricing initiatives offer a “flexible tool” for cutting green gas emissions.

The World Bank and IMF recommended that those looking to design and implement carbon pricing follow their six
core principles

“Carbon pricing is effective in reducing emissions that cause climate change, is straightforward to administer, can raise valuable revenues for broader fiscal reforms, and can help address local pollution as well as global climate change,” said Christine Lagarde, managing director of the IMF. “We welcome the opportunity to continue collaborating with the World Bank, OECD, and others on this critical policy tool.”

The World Bank and IMF recommended that those looking to design and implement carbon pricing follow their six core principles, called the FASTER principles:

They contend that all schemes be “fair; aligned with other policies to ensure a level playing field for low carbon alternatives; stable and predictable, transparent, efficient and cost-effective and reliable to achieve a measurable reduction in greenhouse gas emissions”.

“The world needs to find effective ways to reduce carbon pollution,” said World Bank Group President, Jim Yong Kim. “We must design the best ways to price carbon in order to help cut pollution, improve people’s health, and provide governments with a pool of funds to drive investment in a cleaner future and to protect poor people.”

The US and China are looking to implement carbon pricing initiatives, with both countries leading the way in terms of sheer volume of emissions. Currently, the scheme China is developing aims to cover roughly one billion tons CO2, while the US just 0.5 billion.

The international financial organisations argue that more cooperation in this area is required between countries, and that by applying a price on carbon emissions, it will encourage business leaders to make investment decisions that will help stabilise the planet’s climate.

According to the World Bank’s State and Trends of Carbon Pricing 2015 report, increased international cooperation on carbon pricing could raise $2.2tn by 2050 in net annual flows of financial resources. All of which can be used to develop better solutions for tackling climate change.

Asian economies see growth slowdown

The Asian economy faced “strong headwinds” in early 2015, according to the Asian Development Bank’s September Asian Economic Outlook report. Growth figures for the region are predicted to slow from 6.2 percent in 2014, down to 5.8 percent in 2015 before seeing a slight rebound to six percent in 2016.

Southeast Asian economies also saw their
recovery delayed

The estimate for 2015 is a revision downwards of the bank’s March Asian Economic Outlook figures, which forecasts growth at 6.3 percent for the year. The reasons for this slowdown are numerous. A delayed recovery in the major industrial economies such as the US and Japan has played a role, with the former facing a particularly harsh winter at the start of the year along with labour disputes at the ports of the West Coast – while the latter saw an unexpectedly weak recovery of consumption and investment. At the same time the large economies of the region underperformed. China saw export growth falter, while India saw investors defer their decisions pending government action on structural reforms.

In China, “growth is forecast to slow from 7.3 percent in 2014 to 6.8 percent in 2015,” and expected to fall further to 6.7 percent by in 2016. East Asia as a whole is expected to expand by only six percent in both 2015 and 2016, a considerable slowdown from 6.5 percent in 2014

However, while Indian growth has been more moderate than expected, the South Asian region itself is set to see reasonable levels of growth. As the report notes: “Growth in South Asia is now projected at 6.9% in 2015, below the 7.2 percent March forecast but up from 6.7% in 2014. Growth is forecast to rise further to 7.3 percent in 2016.”

Southeast Asian economies also saw their recovery delayed. Although growth in Vietnam has been particularly strong, other Southeast Asian economies has held the regions collective growth back, with export demand dampened by subdued demand in the major industrial economies and China. At the same time, the report notes, “planned infrastructure investment has fallen behind schedule in Indonesia and the Philippines, and Thailand’s recovery to date has been sluggish.” The region’s growth is expected to be 4.4 percent in 2015, the same pace as in 2014.

Despite a moderation in growth figures for much of the Asian economy, the region itself is still one of the main contributors to global economic growth.

Reviving Germany’s banking giant

Since the onset of the 2008 crisis, many banks have come under increasing scrutiny by financial watchdogs. On both sides of the Atlantic, newly beefed-up regulators have launched increasing numbers of investigations into the conduct of financial institutions.

Pieces of legislation such as the Frank-Dodd act have placed banks under tighter regulatory control, while regulators have stepped up action pursuing banks that have transgressed rules. For instance, the UK regulator the Financial Conduct Authority carried out just four dawn raids in 2007, before this number spiked to nearly 40 by 2009 to 2010.

“Since 2008, regulators have devoted more time and energy to ensuring that a) financial institutions pose less of a systemic risk to the financial system and b) financial institutions are more aware that they must not only pay lip service to complying with regulations and ethical expectations but that they will be sanctioned for misdemeanours or lapses”, Dr Michael Flanagan, of the Accounting, Finance and Economics Department at Manchester Metropolitan University Business School told Word Finance.

According to research carried out by Roger McCormick of the CCP Research Foundation, the financial industry’s 10 largest banks racked up fines worth £166.63bn ($260.7bn) between 2009 and 2013. A number of high-profile incidents have also seen institutions slapped with large fines subjected to criminal investigations.

Large fines have been handed out to a number of banks for their role in the Libor scandal in recent years, often very publically so. According to Flanagan, particularly since the crash, “Country regulators who might in the past have preferred to handle ‘situations’ [such as the] Libor scandal in a discrete and private manner are now forced to actively cooperate and intrude more forcefully on how banks govern their businesses and appoint their senior managers.”

Over its long history, Deutsche Bank has seen a number of crises and each time it was able to survive… although not always unscathed

No stranger to scandal
Deutsche Bank in particular has been subject to much criticism from both the press and regulators for its role in rigging Libor rates. As the FT reported at the time, “Deutsche Bank has paid a record $2.5bn to authorities in the US and UK to settle allegations that it manipulated the Libor benchmark rate, a key interbank borrowing rate that underpins as much as $350trn of debt worldwide, from student loans to complex financial instruments.”

A number of employees were also dismissed, as well as DB Group Services, a subsidiary group, admitting to US criminal wire fraud charges. The fines levied on the bank were so high partially as a result of the bank misleading regulators during their investigation. This, according to one journalist at Forbes, “Shows the rottenness of Deutsche Bank’s culture.” Likewise, a confidential BaFin report criticised the bank for “keeping quiet about attempted Libor manipulation”, The Wall Street Journal reported. The bank has also been fined for its practices in US mortgage selling and is to be investigated for violating Iran sanctions as well as for alleged bribery in its Russian operations. As Flanagan noted, while it is “fairly plain that corporate governance and control was also at fault in many other financial institutions ranging from credit rating agencies, to regulators to banks… Deutsche was left standing when the musical chairs game ended”.

However, if the bank itself has a “rotten heart”, so too does it have a long legacy. Being a bank at the heart of Europe – and in Germany no less – it has played a key role in the economic development of the continent at various points in its history. Over its long history, Deutsche Bank has seen a number of crises and each time it was able to survive, often through overhauling its practices, although not always unscathed.

Early pioneer
Created just before its national namesake in the 1870, Deutsche Bank was the last financial institution to be authorised a licence as a joint-stock bank in Prussia, with such license requirements being abolished in the same year.

At a time that can be described as the first round of world economic globalisation, from the outset the bank was tasked with an international mission, with the bank’s statute stating that the “object of the company is to transact banking business of all kinds, in particular to promote and facilitate trade relations between Germany, other European countries and overseas markets”. At the time British finance dominated the financing of German foreign trade. Deutsche Bank hoped to challenge this hegemony of British banks, and between 1871 and 1873 branches were opened in the financially dominant cities of Bremen, Yokohama, Shanghai, Hamburg and London.

Financing international trade, however, soon proved to not be adequate in the long run and the bank looked to expand its operations. During its first year of business, the bank had taken the unusual step of accepting cash deposits. As normal – expected even – as that may be now for a major bank, as a Deutsche Bank outline of its own history reads, “for the German banking world it was little short of revolutionary”. These deposits gave the bank a broad capital base and also pioneered the deposit-taking business in the newly formed German Empire.

According to Deutsche Bank, the financial institution went on to see great success in its first few decades due to an “eye for good commercial prospects [that] was combined with a sound feeling for risk”. Early 20th century economists such as Nikolai Bukharin and JA Hobson saw the last two decades of 19th century capitalism as one where financial institutions and industry became increasingly intertwined; Deutsche Bank was archetypal bank in this regard.

In the 1880s and 1890s it increasingly began issuing to business and, according to the bank itself, “played a major part in the development of Germany’s electrical-engineering industry, but it also gained a strong foothold in iron and steel. A solid base in Germany permitted the financing of business abroad, which in some cases kept the bank occupied for years, the best-known example being the Baghdad Railway.” Other ventures included the in the Shantung Railway Company and Shantung Mining Company in Northern China, as well as the continued opening of new branches as far away as Istanbul. By 1914 one newspaper was able to confidently label it the biggest bank in the world.

Tragedy of the 20th century
From here on, however, the fortunes of the bank declined. In the chaotic, post-First World War era in Germany, the bank was forced to sell many of its holdings, as well as seeing its overseas assets taken over. The 1920s in Germany saw a tendency towards banks merging and consolidating. Being no exception, Deutsche Bank merged with its largest competitor Disconto-Gesellschaft in 1929. This consolidation helped it weather the impending financial crisis that hit Germany especially hard.

Following the Second World War, the bank saw its largest crises to date. In the eastern zones of Germany, controlled by Soviet forces, all banks were nationalised. Some banks under Allied control in Western areas were also nationalised or broken up to operate regionally. Deutsche Bank was subject to the latter policy, being divided in 10 different banks with the name Deutsche Bank forbidden to be used as the name of any banking operation. Deutsche Bank, it seemed, was dead.

However, under the initiative of Hermann Josef Abs, a long-time leader at Deutsche Bank, an agreement was reached in 1952 whereby 10 of the former Deutsche Bank successor institutions gradually merged into three separate new joint-stock banks, and in 1957, all three merged to form Deutsche Bank AG.

The bank slowly rebuilt its operations, creating a strong domestic network. Issuing business also picked up in the 1950s after Germany’s debt was eventually settled, leading the nation to become a creditor rather than a debtor. In 1958 the German bond market reopened when Deutsche Bank floated a “foreign-currency bond for the Anglo American Corporation of South Africa”.

Deutsche Bank once again recovered its international position in the 1970s, opening a number of branches abroad and acquiring other banks across the world in countries such as Italy, Spain, the UK and the US. This regaining of its international position it had held a century earlier continued, with the takeover of the British Morgan Grenfell Group in 1989 and in 1991 all of the bank’s American business was brought under the control of the holding company Deutsche Bank North America Holding.

With the reunification of Germany and the fall of Communism across the Eastern Europe, the bank further expanded its operations, opening up branches in once-closed off markets, with representations in Budapest and Prague starting in 1990 and Deutsche Bank Polska opening in Warsaw in 1995. A number of other international banks were acquired throughout the 1990s, culminating in the investment bank Bankers Trust in the US in 1999 and eventual listing on the New York Stock Exchange in 2001. By the 2000s the bank could boast that it was “the leader in its German home market” and “enjoys an outstanding position in Europe”.

Reorganisation, once again
Deutsche bank has been through a number of troubles and reorganisations and due to its most recent troubles may be facing another, with the new stating that the banks current performance is not good enough. John Cryan, a former UBS banker who took over from Anshu Jain as co-chief executive of Deutsche on July 1 said: “Our challenges are… evident in the unacceptably high level of our costs, our continuing burden of heavy litigation charges, a balance sheet that must be more efficient, and the poor overall returns to our shareholders.”

While many banks were caught up in the Libor scandal, Deutsche Bank’s attempt to mislead regulators perhaps suggests a specific lack of integrity and transparency at some levels of the bank. Acknowledging this, the bank has set up a review panel to ensure more ethical behaviour at the bank. Likewise, as part of its settlement, the bank will also have, according to Transparency International, as “independent monitor on Deutsche Bank to ensure the bank implements changes to prevent similar wrongdoing from occurring in the future”.

The ability to pull the bank back from the troubled place it is in today – and exculpate any alleged rotten core – of course will depend on the how well Cryan and other high-ranking employees carry out the task at hand. “Ultimately these events are a symptom of how top management govern and set objectives for its employees. High ethical standards start at the top and are adopted more or less willingly by employees through (corporate) culture, training and recruitment control mechanisms”, said Flanagan. Deutsche Bank as an institution has many times been able to overcome crises and seems adept at evolving to survive.

Can you put a price on pollution?

In May this year, six of Europe’s leading energy firms, BP and Royal Dutch Shell among them, joined in a bid to bring the UN on board and devise an agreed-upon carbon pricing system. Proposed on the grounds that doing so would discourage high-carbon options and boost investment in low-carbon technologies, the six took a stand that ran contrary to their reputation as thorns in the side of the fight against climate change. Often criticised for their contributions, or lack thereof, to curbing emissions, the agreement has seen the fossil fuels business stand up and be counted as a force for progressive change.

Consumers – for whom inaction on climate change has become an all-too-familiar occurrence – have welcomed joint action on carbon pricing, though American opposition, notably from ExxonMobil and Chevron, doused any hint of positivity and highlighted the biggest obstacle standing in its way. Whereas studies show that greater numbers are warming to the policy, a failure to agree on a solution has inhibited progress, and governments, not to mention fossil fuels companies, are at a loss when it comes to taking a joint stance on the issue.

“Drastically cutting power emissions has proved easier than expected, with the astonishing growth of renewables, and energy use has fallen across the developed world even as economies continue to grow. However, energy-intensive industry has been relatively ignored, and has thus represented the largest block to further emissions reductions”, according to Phil MacDonald of the Sandbag Climate Campaign. “Carbon pricing schemes must recognise this, and must go hand-in-hand with policies to dramatically decarbonise industry.”

$50bn

Estimated value of the carbon pricing market as of April 2015

Growing carbon markets
“In the past few years, the use of markets to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions has grown rapidly; in its 2015 status report, the International Carbon Action Partnership found that jurisdictions with emissions trading in place account for 40 percent of global GDP”, added the IETA’s Director of International Policy Jeff Swartz. “We are in a time now where the conversation is less about whether climate change is real or not but rather what should we do to respond, which is an important step forward in the debate. And with more and more regions introducing carbon pricing policies, the overall risk to competitiveness is decreasing.”

The World Bank’s annual review of carbon markets shows that schemes designed to ensure polluters either pay for or reduce their emissions were at play in 39 nations and 23 subnational jurisdictions, as of April 2015. “There has been a rapid acceleration in both the support for carbon pricing and the adoption of carbon pricing policies in countries and regions around the world”, said Noah Kaufman, a Climate Economist for the World Resources Institute. “It is now far more difficult for countries to delay climate change action by pointing at the inaction of others.”

Looking only at the financial value of carbon pricing, the progress is significant, and, as of April 2015, the market was worth an estimated $50bn. The increase is made to seem even more significant considering that Australia last year repealed its carbon pricing mechanism and made a quite sizeable dent in the market. Buoyed by South Korea’s newly introduced emissions trading system (ETS) and Portugal’s $5 per tonne of CO2 tax, the market enjoyed a modest pick-me-up last year; compounded further by the expansion of schemes such as those in California and Quebec.

Impressive as the numbers are, the coverage extends to only 12 percent of global emissions, and progress on the issue has been wildly inconsistent. Sure, there is cause for optimism insofar as carbon pricing is finding its way onto the frontlines of global policy discussion, but participants are yet to arrive at a workable solution. Introduced or expanded on the basis that carbon pricing raises revenue and reduces budget deficits, while curbing emissions, the system is seen by many as a costly and sometimes-oppressive policy stance.

Finding the right solution
Australia, for example, abolished its carbon tax last year after only two years on the basis that it was inhibiting businesses and exerting undue financial pressures on households. Capping an eight-year stint in which climate policy has featured front and centre in three election campaigns, the government finally succumbed to those-against and, in eliminating the tax, handed businesses a $7bn pick-me-up.

Whereas recently-axed Prime Minister Tony Abbott, for whom eliminating the tax formed a major part of his election campaign, called the move “great news for Australian families”, those with an eye on the country’s emissions were less than convinced. “With the Senate’s vote today, Australia not only lurches to the back of the pack of countries taking action on climate, but sees the responsibility of emission reductions shift from major polluters to the taxpayer”, said John Connor, CEO of The Climate Institute, in a statement. “Today we lose a credible framework of limiting pollution that was a firm foundation for a fair, dinkum Australian contribution to global climate efforts.”

To date, Australia’s change of heart is perhaps the highest profile setback for the cause, though, more than that, the lesson serves as a sobering reminder of the challenges, economic but mostly political, associated with the endeavour. “Politics is the biggest challenge for any climate change policy because, the benefits are distributed throughout the current and future populations of the world, whereas the costs are concentrated on the regions and countries that must pass legislation”, said Kaufman.

“While many governments not only see carbon pricing as a way to combat climate change, but also to improve public finances, the worry of short-term increases in energy prices and goods persists. Businesses are worried about their competitiveness and consumers about their energy bill”, said Long Lam, Consultant on Climate Strategies and Policies at Ecofys. “Many carbon pricing schemes therefore have measures in place to compensate businesses and low-income households for the additional costs they face. It will remain a challenge to strike a balance between the incentive to reduce GHG emissions and mitigating these worries to gain public acceptance.”

As it stands, carbon pricing takes one of two forms, either a carbon tax, as in the case of Australia, or an ETS, popularised by the EU. Speaking on the challenges, Kaufman said: “Carbon taxes and emissions trading systems are the best way to overcome this political hurdle, because they generate government revenues that can accomplish important and popular policy objectives, such as lowering taxes, reducing deficits, and investing in infrastructure and education.” However, the promise of broad-based and sustainable gains has eluded the majority, and the priority for participating nations in the here-and-now has fallen on learning from the mistakes made in days past and on reaching a political consensus.

European struggles
Perhaps no other region exemplifies the failings of carbon pricing better than the EU, and the bloc’s cap-and-trade system has struggled to make good on its promise of reduced emissions for nigh on 10 years now. Active in 28 EU countries, and three EEA-EFTA states in Iceland, Liechstenstein and Norway, the system covers 45 percent of the bloc’s emissions, and the expectation is that by 2020 emissions will be down 21 percent on 2005 and 43 percent by 2030.

Similar to rival ETS systems in that polluters receive a certain number of emissions allowances to trade as they see fit, companies, at the end of each year, must surrender enough allowances to cover their emissions or suffer fines. Currently in its third phase, running through 2013 to 2020, the previous two iterations were heavily criticised for their failure to appropriately penalise offenders.

Dictated by the market rather than by regulation, the price of the allowances has been on the slide now for some time, and the situation is unlikely to right itself without an interjection on the part of policymakers. However, doing so means turning away from the market-based cap-and-trade system of days past and arriving at an alternative whereby policymakers and not polluters dictate the price of industrial emissions. The price in 2008 stood at €30 per ton, which has since plummeted into single digit territory, and without a price floor, such as that proposed by California recently, or some sort of stability mechanism, the EU ETS will fall short of its intended purpose.

“Back when the EU carbon market launched in 2008, it was the only game in town. Now carbon markets have spread across the world, from the US west-coast and east-coast markets, to China’s pilot schemes, which launch as a national system next year. However, in Europe, the stubbornly low carbon price has failed to drive emissions reductions (emissions have fallen for other reasons)”, said MacDonald. “Until the persistent surplus of spare emissions allowances can be cancelled, the European carbon market will fail to do its job.”

One problem, as cited by Naomi Klein in her book This Changes Everything, is that a carbon pricing system similar to that of the EU ETS will see results only with the assistance of mass public support. The policy, at its core, is an inherently complex matter, and one that is not so easily understood by all, and for as long as public support falls short of industry opposition, the EU is unlikely to institute a far higher – and more effective – carbon price.

Better to try than try not
Despite the less-than-savoury situation facing Europe, made worse recently when politicians voted down measures to boost the carbon price artificially, it appears that enthusiasm for a system of much the same type is gaining momentum in China.

“Carbon pricing has gained a lot of traction globally as a key instrument in reducing GHG emissions and combating climate change in the recent years”, said Lam. “With the slow progress in the international negotiations on climate and a limited international mitigation ambition, carbon pricing developments have shifted from an international level to a national or sub-national level.” This is particularly true in Asia and in the US.

Having experimented with provincial carbon market schemes in each of the past four years, it looks that a national market in China will open up at the mid-point of 2016. “China will be a country to follow in the coming years”, said Lam. Buoyed by a desire to shake off its status as the world’s number one polluter, China’s seven pilot schemes are each very different in scope, though together paint a picture of how the country might best go about creating the world’s largest carbon market. With a carbon price that ranges through CNY 20 to CNY 55 ($3-9) per ton, regional variations have been put in place so the country might more easily avert the oversupply issues facing Europe currently.

What’s important now, not just for China but for any nation intent on curbing emissions, is that past failings, such as those in Australia and the EU, are seen not as reasoning against carbon pricing itself, but as food for thought when arriving at a more appropriate solution. Buoyed by widespread public support and a consensus that climate change merits action, the issues standing in the way of carbon pricing are fewer and the pressure to introduce carbon pricing more pronounced. “All of this has happened absent a strong international enabling framework”, said Swartz. “The Paris Agreement set to be reached at the end of this year could play a significant role in encouraging other jurisdictions to act.”

Are megaprojects worth the money?

It is often said that the defining feature of humans – what separates humanity from the animal kingdom – is our manipulation and mastery over nature. Since the Neolithic revolution and the start of history, humans have, to varying degrees of success, attempted to re-craft the environment to their own ends, rather than be subject to the whims of nature. From the Bible designating the earth as man’s dominion, to Enlightenment authors such as Sir Francis Bacon encouraging humans to “put nature on the rack and extract her secrets”, the drive to control nature and gear it towards humanity’s ends has been a constant impulse.

Around the world, this sentiment seems to remain, with governments and businesses engaging in large construction projects altering the Earth and the way we traverse it, from high-speed rail changing how humans travel, to audacious canals and dams harnessing the power of water.

Let the steppes be trampled
With the start of the 19th century and the inauguration of industrial society, reaching its apogee in the 20th century, this impulse reached dizzying heights, in both theory and practice. To support the needs of emerging mass industrial society, and encouraged by constant technological and scientific development, large infrastructure projects were built.

$6trn

The minimum spent on megaprojects per year

Following the Civil War, America criss-crossed itself with rail tracks – at no small human and financial cost – allowing for the movement of people and goods across its vast expanse. This was soon copied by the Russian Empire, which in the late 19th century completed its own rail network from one end of its sixth of the world to the other. In the 20th century, from the deserts of the American West, to Ghana’s Lake Volta and further east to China’s Yangtze River, huge dams were constructed, manipulating the natural flow of water, with an eye on improving humanity’s lot, be it through regulating water supply or providing electricity.

This impulse is perhaps best summed up by the Soviet writer V Zazurbin in 1926, when faith in human’s ability to reforge nature was perhaps at its peak: “Let the fragile green breast of Siberia be dressed in the cement armour of cities, armed with the stone muzzle of factory chimneys, and girded with iron belts of railways. Let the taiga be burned and felled, let the steppes be trampled.” Likewise, Zazurbin’s contemporary, the poet V Mayakovsky, once quipped, “After electricity I lost interest in nature. Too backward!”

The age of megaprojects
While the rhetorical flourish of earlier enthusiasts for such projects may now be absent, government bureaucrats with large plans and larger budgets, however, have not. We are, it seems, living in an age of the megaproject.

First, it is worth outlining what exactly a megaproject is. The word itself seems self-explanatory: some sort of large-scale construction project. The term, however, is a discreet label. The word megaproject first appeared, according to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, in 1976. According to Bent Flyvbjerg in a paper for Oxford University entitled What You Should Know About Megaprojects and Why: An Overview, they can be described as “large-scale, complex ventures that typically cost $1bn or more, take many years to develop and build, involve multiple public and private stakeholders, are transformational, and impact millions of people”.

One of the key characteristics of megaprojects, which the words of Zazurbin seems to have anticipated, is that they are they are transformational. They are ‘trait makers’ of a society or economy. As Flyvbjerg notes, “They are designed to ambitiously change the structure of society, as opposed to smaller and more conventional projects that are ‘trait taking’, that is, they fit into pre-existing structures and do not attempt to modify these.” Such projects are often viewed as infrastructure style projects, but can also include water and energy provision, industrial plants, space exploration, urban regeneration, as well as less material types such as IT systems.

These projects, then, are said to be dominant in our age. Total megaproject spending is assessed at $6trn to $9trn per year, which amounts to eight percent of total world GDP. According to The Economist, we are living through the “biggest investment boom in history”, estimating infrastructure spending in emerging economies at £2.2trn ($3.44trn) annually between 2009 and 2018. Likewise, McKinsey Global Institute claims that global infrastructure spending will be $3.4trn per year between 2013 and 2030, which would amount to roughly four percent of global GDP.

Alongside this, the amount spent is accelerating at break-neck speeds. Despite the rhetoric of industrialisation and modernisation that China’s Communist rulers espoused in the 20th century, “In the five years between 2004 and 2009, China spent more on infrastructure in real terms than during the entire 20th century, which is an increase in spending rate of a factor of 20.” Furthermore, China built as much length of high-speed rail track between 2005 and 2008 as Europe has in the past two decades.

To demonstrate the large scale of megaproject spending, Flyvberg makes a comparison to US debt to China, which is often viewed as an important and potentially destabilising aspect of the world economy. Megaproject spending is “the equivalent of spending five to eight times the accumulated US debt to China, every year”.

Geopolitical influences
Yet despite such a boom in spending for these transformative projects, many look upon them dispiritingly. Opposition to transformational infrastructure projects – what we now call megaprojects – is nothing new. In her Concise History of Germany, Mary Fulbrook notes, in reference to Germany’s massive construction of railways in the 19th century, “The Prussian King’s publicly expressed doubts about whether being able to arrive in Potsdam a couple of hours earlier really constituted a major contribution to human happiness.”

Moreover, according to Nancy Alexander, Director of Economic Governance at the Heinrich Boell Foundation, one major issue with » megaprojects is that the rationale behind these projects is not economic but geopolitical. “These megaprojects are driven largely by geopolitics”, she writes – rather than carefully considered economics. “The United States has begun to worry that its hegemony will be challenged by new players and institutions, such as the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank”, she continues. “In reaction, the Western-led institutions, such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, are aggressively expanding their infrastructure investment operations, and are openly calling for a paradigm shift.”

The criticism, however, seems to miss the point. If certain megaprojects are indeed intended to make certain countries politically more powerful on the world stage, the questions begs how this is intended to do so. Outside of defence projects, the answer seems to be by increasing the economic power of the country, be it through increased manufacturing, transport or trade capacity, through the construction of large scale ports, industrial zones or plants to meet industry energy requirements, or extensive rail and road networks. Whether a country sees these as part of a plan to strengthen their state or simply create economic growth, the result is the same: more jobs, more trade and faster transport for citizens. For most megaprojects to pay geopolitical dividends, they must surely first present economic dividends.

Top 10 megaproject cost overruns

Defining success
One major problem with megaprojects is that they are notorious for their propensity to overrun in both completion and budgets. As Flyvberg notes, “Nine out of 10 such projects have cost overruns; overruns of up to 50 percent in real terms are common, over 50 percent are not uncommon”. Many famous megaprojects have faced serious overruns (see Fig. 1). However, in a table provided by Flyvberg, nearly exclusively, with the exception of four projects out of 32 listed with the highest overrun costs, all are located in economically developed nations. Once reason for this could be that such countries typically face more stringent regulation, both environmental and social. Tough planning laws, greater legal recourse and denser population mean opposition from those living in areas affected by megaproject construction costlier, resulting in the need for high legal costs. Likewise, more stringent environmental regulations can often slow down construction, as well as adding to legal compliance costs.

This suggests that overrun costs are not necessarily inherent to megaprojects, but rather to do with the political environment. European and North American countries have made a political decision – right or wrong – to enact legislation, which gives people legal recourse against megaproject constructions or various pieces of legislation. All of this amounts to extra costs in both direct terms but also in paying for legal experts to ensure all the rules are followed.

One case of such a project encountering overruns is the Channel Tunnel. The underwater tunnel connecting Britain and France was intended – and expected – to be profitable. The project, however, went 80 percent over budget for construction and 140 percent above for financing, while revenues have been 50 percent lower than expected. “The project has proved non-viable, with an internal rate of return on the investment that is negative, at minus 14.5 percent with a total loss to the British economy of $17.8bn; thus the Channel Tunnel detracts from the economy instead of adding to it”, wrote Flyvberg.

Yet despite being a financial failure in terms of generating a profit, the Channel Tunnel can be seen as a success in other ways. As a piece of technological engineering it is impressive, being one of the largest underwater tunnels in the world. Both symbolically and practically, it connects the UK to the rest of Europe, allowing for passengers to quickly and easily cross the English Channel.

Many major projects have been crippling overrun, yet we could not imagine the world economy without them. The Panama Canal overran by 200 percent, while Suez Canal in Egypt did so by an eye watering 1,900 percent – surely a great loss to all involved at time of construction. Yet these projects – as megaprojects are intended to be – were transformational. Panama, without its canal would surely not be home to one of the continent’s most impressive cities, Panama City, not to mention the obvious benefit of opening up a shipping route that cuts through the American continent. Likewise, by opening up shipping from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean, global trade without the Suez Canal seems unimaginable.

Megaprojects are transformative for economies. While they often overrun, this seems to be a trend restricted to areas where regulation is stronger – pushing up costs. And overrunning on costs does not indicate a megaproject itself as a failure; trait-making as they are, they can provide long-run foundations for economic growth. Indeed, while the term megaproject is relatively new, any major industrialisation pursued by an economy – the only sure-fire way to address poverty – has either relied on such projects, for instance railway building, or on the creation of large planned industrial zones. In and of themselves megaprojects are vital to both address present poverty and ensure the world’s continued economic prosperity.

Technology companies consider the possibilities of asset management

Results from a recent State Street survey showed that, of a 400-strong sample of asset managers, the overwhelming majority felt that the industry stood on the threshold of a new era. Sure, assets under management were on the up and firms last year posted healthy returns, but 79 percent of respondents believed that they’d soon be forced to confront competition from non-traditional markets (see Fig. 1) – namely those in the technology sector.

“Technology players like Google, Apple and Alibaba Group could mount a serious challenge”, according to the findings. “Asset managers also find themselves competing with their clients’ own investment talent, as large investors bring more asset management in-house.” Put another way, advances in technology promise to shake-up the industry, and, in order to survive, traditional managers must either shape up or ship out.

Assets under management last year, for the third time in three years, reached a record high, at $74trn, and profits improved also, yet there are concerns that the costs of doing business are marginalising clients at the lower end of the spectrum. Not to take away from a string of positive headlines recently, the biggest threat to the sector’s stability stems from rising costs; and closer regulatory ties, combined with a growing pool of tech-savvy investors, who have asked that firms do more to relieve the pressures weighing on their bottom line.

$74trn

Assets under management globally, 2014

Looking at figures compiled by McKinsey, the industry’s cost base is 44 percent greater today than it was in 2007, and while increased profitability points to an asset management business in good health, persistent cost pressures threaten to outpace this growth in the long-term. Worse is that progress on this front has come slowly, and a growing wealthy client base has perhaps obscured some of the issues plaguing the industry’s long-term health.

High entry costs
The ultra-high-net-worth individual (UHNWI) population, for example, has risen 61 percent over the past decade, going by WealthInsight figures, bringing the grand total as of last year to $29.7trn worth, according to the Wealth-X and UBS World Ultra Wealth Report. Owing both to strong economic and equity market performance, the population is greater now than it ever has been, and, looking at the gathering might of the Asia-Pacific region, promises to expand further in the coming years.

An abundance of multi-millionaires means easy pickings for an industry intent on reaping healthy returns, but the rise also means that business at the lower end of the spectrum has suffered. Compounded by a widening wealth gap at the top, a strong conversion rate of millionaires to multi-millionaires and new additions in developing countries, the growing UHNWI population means that firms need no longer rely on lesser investments from lowly millionaires.

Research conducted by the Financial Times this year showed UK consumers now need, on average, £806,000 ($1.26m) to secure the services of a private client wealth manager, 48 percent greater than the year previous. Furthermore, a third of all wealth managers stated that they’d offer advice only to those fronting at least £1m ($1.56m). Prompted by regulatory changes and increased compliance costs both, firms can afford to be picky in a climate wherein costs are rising and so too is the UHNWI population.

“They wanted me to commit to giving them £1m to look after. Their own fee starts at one per cent so that’s like handing them a cheque for £10,000 on the spot”, said one entrepreneur and consultant Holly Mackay, speaking to the FT. “It was basically ‘Hi, here’s a posh coffee and a PowerPoint presentation, now give us a million quid’.” By no means a rare occurrence, the sad truth of the matter is that firms will more-often-than-not choose not to expend the time and expense it takes to serve those with less than a seven-figure sum, and for as long as the market remains as it is, the opportunities for lower end clients will be less. However, where many firms are scrambling to make good on a thriving UHNWI population, just as many are keeping a watchful eye on the wandering bottom half of the market, as well as the technology companies that could profit as a result.

“It is widely believed that the current generation of asset management models and their advisory channels are simply not up to the task of attracting the new generation of clients – especially at the two ends of the age spectrum: those affluent millennials keen on retirement planning and those baby boomers entering their golden years with significant nest eggs”, reads a recent report entitled Why the Internet Titans Will Not Conquer Asset Management. “The asset industry is ripe for a big makeover.”

Technology takes over
Often criticised for inflated charges and a refusal to embrace new technologies, the asset management industry of today is susceptible to any technology-savvy enterprise looking to muscle in on the market. Speaking on the role of technology in asset management, CEO of CREATE-Research Amin Rajan said, “First, it is enabling digitally savvy investors to bypass intermediaries and buy funds directly from asset managers with digital platforms. Second, it’s providing DIY tools to investors that enable them to make asset allocation decisions and undertake follow-up activities.”

With trust in financial services still lacking and an emerging middle class seeking investment advice, the asset management landscape is ripe for change, and it’s in this climate that tech firms, armed with their superior expertise and influence, could support the neglected lower end and even pose a threat to established fund houses.

“We are on the verge of the biggest shake-up the industry has experienced; and the message to asset managers is clear – adapt to change or your business won’t survive”, wrote Tom Brown, Global Head of Investment Management at KPMG in a recent report. “We could see the Apples, Googles, or large retailers of the world becoming the next big powerhouses in investment management.”

As much has happened already in China, where internet giants Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu and even Xiaomi have taken to asset management in the form of money market funds. A relatively minor player in March 2013 managing only $1.9bn in assets, Tianhong Asset Management Co, after teaming with Alibaba and launching a money market fund, reeled in $81bn in the space of only nine months. Christened Yu’e Bao, the fund’s success means that, as of the end of last year, Tianhong controlled a more than 10 percent share of China’s assets under management, with $93bn in assets and 185 million users.

Offering a four to six percent return, rather than the customary three percent offered by banks, China’s budding middle class has ploughed its savings into these money market funds, and the segment has expanded 15-fold in the past four years as a result, controlling $306bn in assets as of the end of 2014. Dangerous on the one hand insofar that a fair share of investors are ill informed about their exposure to risk, the success of internet companies such as Alibaba shows that there are opportunities for non-traditionals not just in China but in mature markets also.

Opportunities vs threats in asset management

Unlikely conquerors
Where traditional fund managers have largely struggled to reel in retail investors, technology companies such as Google for example, which command far more brand loyalty than most in financial services, might find it easier to do so. Regulatory hurdles may well prove too big a hurdle to stomach at the present time, though these same firms may well make a better fist of keeping up with the latest technological developments and, in doing so, keeping to modest operating costs.

Asked whether he thinks more technology companies might enter the asset management space in the future, Rajan said, “Yes, I do. But their disruption is unlikely to conquer the industry. They do not have the risk management DNA that is at the heart of investing. So, they are more likely to form alliances with the incumbents.”

All things considered, the encroaching technology sector is a net positive for the asset management industry overall, and, aside from stoking fears of survival among some fund houses, the development has forced firms to concede that they must do more to accommodate digital consumers. Utilising technology to make wealth management services both more customisable and more cost-effective, firms can ensure also that reporting and engaging with clients is made more transparent.

Tsipras wins again – narrowly

The left-wing Syriza party, led by Alexis Tsipras, has won Greece’s second general election of 2015. It was a narrow win with a historically low turnout, thereby indicating the current disheartened sentiment of the Greek people.

According to Reuters, with 99.5 percent of the votes counted, Syriza had secured 35.5 percent, followed by right-wingers New Democracy with 28.1 percent of the vote. While the breakaway Popular Unity party, formed by dissidents of Syriza, failed to break the three percent vote minimum needed to enter parliament.

Tsipras had a difficult challenge to convince the public that he should be re-elected given his turbulent time in office
this year

The 49 percent abstention rate, which is the highest since the fall of the military dictatorship in 1974, certainly helped to secure Syriza’s clear win, yet was not enough to secure a single-party regime. As such, a coalition government is being formed with Syriza’s former coalition partners, the Independent Greeks party.

In Tsipras’ victory speech, he spoke of having a clear mandate to rid the government of corruption and to protect those most vulnerable in Greece today. His first task as re-elected Prime Minister will be to assure European lenders that enough steps are being taken to comply with the €86bn bailout deal agreed in August so as to assure the next payment in received. The deal is due to be reviewed in October.

Tsipras had a difficult challenge to convince the public that he should be re-elected given his turbulent time in office this year. When Syriza first came to power in January, the prime minister pledged to remove austerity measures – yet around seven months later, the incumbent government accepted a new bailout with terms that were even harsher than before. After accepting the overhaul of the country’s pension scheme and raising taxes, Tsipras then resigned from his post.

It is expected that Syriza’s re-election will lead to more stability in the government, particularly as hard-left members are no longer in the party. There is also less likelihood of public protests on the streets. Tsipras’ victory despite his broken promises enables Syriza to swiftly proceed with the austerity measures needed for Greece to comply with bailout agreements and find its way back towards the path to recovery. It will be a complex process that will take some time, yet the people have again spoken of their understanding of the steps needed for long awaited economic and political stability in Greece.

China agrees to issue short-term bonds in London

Following a meeting in Beijing between UK chancellor George Osborne and Ma Kai, the Chinese vice-premier, it has been agreed that the People’s Bank of China will issue short-term debt in London. The short-term bonds would be denominated in the RMB, in London – the first time such debt has been issued outside China. As of yet there are no plans for longer-term bond issuance.

Osborne has previously stated his intention of making the UK the chief offshore base for Chinese finance

“The People’s Bank of China will issue short term central bank renminbi bonds in London. This is the first time these bonds will have been issued outside greater China. This is a major step in developing this market infrastructure,” said the UK Chancellor.

Osborne has previously stated his intention of making the UK the chief offshore base for Chinese finance, proclaiming that the short-term debt issuance agreement would be “China’s bridge into western financial markets”. “I want the UK to be the natural Western hub for renminbi trading,” he also noted, saying that he believes the deal “cements London as the pre-eminent location for renminbi trading and Chinese investment in the West.”

In October 2014, the UK became the first western country to issue a sovereign bond in China’s currency. Being the world’s first non-Chinese issuance of sovereign RMB debt and worth £300m, it was used to finance Britain’s reserves.

The agreement was part of the UK-China Economic and Financial Dialogue, hosted in Beijing. In total 53 agreements were made between the two economies, including the announcement of a feasibility study to look into creating a direct “stock connect” link between the London Stock Exchange and financial markets in Shanghai. China has also pledged £2bn to the UK to underwrite the financing of the UK’s Hinkley Point nuclear power station, opening up the way for other Chinese-UK nuclear deals, such as the potential majority Chinese ownership of a nuclear power plant in Bradwell, Essex.

Could China be Europe’s saviour?

Europe’s infrastructure was once the envy of the world. For centuries, it has pioneered the construction of roads, railways, water works and energy provision. It exported many of the greatest engineers throughout the world. However, as is the case with many countries that once laid claim to dazzlingly advanced societies, they have struggled to keep up with the times; in many cases resting on their laurels and failing to invest while other regions built the latest and greatest new pieces of infrastructure.

With Europe’s economy crippled with debt and infrastructure across the region dating back decades, the ability to pay for a much-needed update has proven increasingly tricky for EU policymakers. Confidence in many European economies is at an all time low, with many investors reticent about putting their money into building major infrastructure projects while there remains a danger of default. At the same time, the EU’s labyrinthine regulatory framework means that getting big projects off the ground is even more difficult than elsewhere.

Falling figures
Infrastructure investment within the EU has fallen over the last few years, largely as a result of both the global financial crisis and the debt troubles experienced across the EU. In the eight years since its peak in 2007, infrastructure spending has reportedly fallen by €430bn, according to aviation industry group the Centre for Aviation (CAPA). In 2013, investment was 15 percent below the pre-crisis peak, while some EU member states were spending between 25 percent and 60 percent less than their previous levels.

Not to be outdone by other regions around the world, the EU has announced plans to set up its own infrastructure fund

However, the determination of the EU’s leaders to modernise the region’s infrastructure has resulted in a proposal that could help deliver the sort of investment it desperately needs. Not to be outdone by other regions around the world, the EU has announced plans to set up its own infrastructure fund that it hopes will attract vast swathes of investment from around the world.

Announcing the European Fund for Strategic Investments (EFSI), European Commission (EC) President Jean-Claude Junker set out plans for a fund worth €315bn over the course of the next three years that will help spur private sector investment in European infrastructure projects. Part of the so-called ‘Junker Plan’ to restore growth in the EU, the EFSI will be run by the European Investment Bank (EIB) and will hope to boost jobs and investment in the flagging European economy.

The fund will take a similar form to the newly formed Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), which the Chinese government has established as a rival to both the US dominated World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. By seeking investment from governments around the world, the idea is that global partners will have a stake in the development of Europe’s infrastructure.

Announcing the plan, Junker said the fund was necessary to help Europe’s economy to grow: “We need the plan right now because it is important to say that consolidating public finances is needed. But apart from that policy, we need structural funds to ensure that medium-term development of the European economy can rise.” EC Vice-President Werner Hoyer added, “We are having a paradigm change in the use of the EU budget because the EU shifts resources from grants to guarantees, from subsidies to loans and this is a great step.”

Leading development in infrastructure
China’s interest in Europe’s infrastructure comes at a time when its own AIIB has helped to spur development across Asia. The country is now set to play a leading role in the development of Europe’s infrastructure. In July it was reported that China’s Prime Minister, Li Keqiang, would pledge around €10bn to the fund at first, with potentially more coming if opportunities arose.

On a visit to Europe in June, Li Keqiang said that existing levels of trade flows between the EU and China had been not been “satisfactory”, and called for a treaty to be brought forward between the two regions. Such a treaty would help to make it easier for Chinese companies to buy into European industry. Speaking to the FT, Li Keqiang said, “The scale of two-way investment, a mere $20bn or less in 2014, is hardly satisfactory given the big size of the Chinese and EU economies and the huge volume of two-way trade. If a comprehensive, balanced and highly standard investment treaty could be reached early, it will bring opportunity for both sides to combine their respective strengths and form a new pattern of co-operation.”

Shortly after Li Keqiang’s trip to Europe, US think tank the Brookings Institution published a report explaining why China was looking towards Europe for investment opportunities. The authors of the report, Jonathan D Pollack and Philippe Le Corre, wrote that part of the reason for China’s interest in Europe was to remind other countries, and in particular the US, that it had other potential partners in global trade.

However, one of the primary reasons for China’s interest was the EFSI, which would complement its own infrastructure plans, namely the creation of a new ‘silk route’ that would restore China’s historically strong trading position. “China sees complementarity in its own grand infrastructure plan [‘One Belt, One Road’] to tie the future development of Central, South and Southeast Asia to increased Chinese trade and investment with Europe.”

They add that it makes sense for Europe’s individual member states to negotiate with China as a group, rather than alone, if they are to secure the best development for the entire region’s infrastructure.

“European leaders understand that dealing individually with a stronger China weakens the EU’s hand. By linking its new ‘silk road’ to Europe’s own plans for infrastructural development, China seeks to play an enhanced role in the global economy and increase its stake in the EU.”

Targeted projects
Many of the projects targeted by the EFSI will focus on infrastructure, education, research and development, and various forms of clean energy. Each of the projects that the scheme will target will receive 20 percent of funding from the fund. There will also be considerable investment in transport infrastructure, with roads and rail networks receiving funding for much needed upgrades. Europe’s many shipping ports are also likely to be clamouring for investment from the fund to ensure they can cope with the increasing demands of global trade.

A number of projects have already been given the green light by the EIB, which will now use the funds from the newly formed EFSI to realise them. These include a number of offshore wind, biomass and transmission energy projects in Denmark, various renewable energy projects and water treatment schemes in Spain, energy efficiency investments in French residential buildings, and the construction and refurbishment of three hospitals in Austria.

There is also going to be a concerted push to deliver high-speed and extensive broadband throughout member states, so that the EU is not left behind by the technological advancements being seen by the internet.

Europe’s digital infrastructure is seen as a vital cog in the future of the EU’s economy, and so a large part of investment will be targeted at expanding things like 4G networks, developing 5G networks, and building fibre optic broadband.

With the EFSI fully operational before the end of 2015, European leaders hope that a wave of investment will soon help get a number of infrastructure projects off the drawing board and built, creating thousands of jobs in the process. However, for the likes of China, the opportunity to buy into lucrative new industries across Europe, and connecting them to their own grand infrastructure schemes could be one not to be missed.

US Fed holds off from raising record low interest rates

The US Federal Reserve has announced its much-anticipated decision to maintain interest rates at the current level of around zero percent. Fed Chair Janet Yellen retreated on the impending rise due to concerns regarding the global economy and China’s slowdown.

“We’ve long expected to see some slowing in Chinese growth over time as they rebalance their economy. There are no surprises there. The question is whether or not there will be a risk of a more abrupt slowdown than most analysts expect,” Yellen said at a press conference, according to the BBC.

Following the announcement, Yellen spoke of the possibility of increasing the interest rate in October instead

Although the US unemployment rate fell to 5 percent in August, the lowest level since 2008, the Fed is keen to see a further improvement to the labour market before raising interest rates. In addition, the target inflation rate of around 2 percent has not been achieved either – which places more pressure on the Fed to hold off on the increase.

Further domestic concerns include falling stock prices and the appreciation of the dollar – factors which could lead to slowing economic growth in the country, despite its positive performance over the past year.

Following the announcement, Yellen spoke of the possibility of increasing the interest rate in October instead. Despite general consensus in the Fed that the rise will take place before the end of the 2015, Reuters reported that four policymakers believe it will not happen until next year or beyond.

Both the World Bank and the IMF have called for the Fed to continue holding off due to the impact that the increase may have on emerging markets, particularly given this year’s global economic slowdown.

What does it take to make a city ‘smart’?

Despite covering just two percent of the globe’s surface, more than half of the world’s population now lives in cities, consuming approximately 75 percent of mankind’s resources. Given the rapid rate of urbanisation, economies must contend with a multitude of complex challenges as pressure mounts for cities to become sustainable, in all aspects related to the term. Those that don’t will bear increasingly harmful repercussions – economically, socially and politically. It’s not just a matter of greener practices; all factions of society stand to lose unless practical solutions to rapidly expanding populations are implemented.

As the world adjusts to the urban phenomenon of the 21st century – albeit it at a frustratingly slow pace – there are some cities that stand out in terms of their efforts to become sustainable. Singapore has made commendable strides to reduce congestion in urban dwellings; Munich is a pioneer in green energy, while Rio de Janeiro is taking steps to tackle its infamous favela crisis.

Yet, no city has got it completely right yet. There is no utopic centre that resolves the various, interlinked obstacles they face, from housing to quality of life and water scarcity – the list goes on. “Cities that are not sustainable begin to breed other problems – not just environmental ones”, said Gilberto Arias, Senior Advisor, participating at the UNFCCC in climate change and sustainable development.

Top 10 sustainable cities, 2015

Frankfurt
London
Copenhagen
Amsterdam
Rotterdam
Berlin
Seoul
Hong Kong
Madrid
Singapore

Source: Arcadis Sustainable Cities Index

Multifaceted challenges
Traffic jams are the mainstay of any metropolis – as all city dwellers know too well. Not only is road congestion detrimental to the environment, (according to the International Road Transport Union, traffic increases CO2 emissions by around 300 percent), it also holds significant economic and social implications. The inefficiency of a city’s road network can stunt both private and public sectors, wasting valuable time and money. Yet air pollution is not limited to vehicles – businesses, homes and public structures alike are guilty of harmful carbon emissions.

The consequences of climate change are already being witnessed globally, identifiable as unpredictable weather conditions that severely disrupt cities and their communities. City mayors and businesses are charged with the feat of promoting efficiency and implementing more effective monitoring systems, but these kind of changes do not happen overnight – they require governmental support for training, funding and most importantly, motivation.

As resources become more scarce and expensive, the issue of efficiency becomes increasingly vital in all aspects of city living and sustainable practices. At present, multiple cities around the world suffer from water shortages – from developing cities such as Sao Paolo, to wealthier counterparts, including Las Vegas and Tokyo. In June, San Diego’s Water Authority banned several activities and placed limits on irrigation with portable water – but a long-term solution requires far more than just temporary cutbacks.

Efforts to reduce consumption, such as partnerships with local businesses and campaigns to advise citizens, can effectively change social habits and perception. Educating a city’s populace holds the key to success as sustainability necessitates support and participation from all layers and sectors of society.

The European Commission’s SWITCH report argues that by introducing green areas and clean rivers to a city, a foundation is laid for the health and character of urban communities. This in turn further motivates initiatives and a desire for a city to become more sustainable. Green architecture, including construction with biomaterials, green rooftops and urban farming not only bring a natural element to the built environment that is aesthetically pleasing, they also penetrate the social consciousness of a city.

Finding some answers
The struggle of transportation within confined urban spaces has forced some city administrators to create innovative solutions. After a warning that congestion would cost Singapore over $2bn, the country’s Land Transport Authority (LTA) introduced the e-Symphony payment card in 2008, enabling citizens to pay for buses, the metro, road tolls and even consumer goods with a simple touch. The huge advantage of the system is that it enables Singapore’s Ministry of Transport to collect extensive data on a daily basis that can alter public transportation routes in order to ensure efficiency.

Improvements are made on a regular basis, such as a distance based fare structure that was introduced in 2010. “LTA is currently working on contactless payment modes that will allow devices with Near-Field Communication technology such as wristbands and mobile phones to be used at the fare card readers in the near-term”, an LTA spokesperson told World Finance. “We are also working towards an account-based payment system where commuters are identified upfront and the transaction will be processed and charged back-end, similar to post-paid mobile phone subscription schemes. By leveraging on innovative technologies, we hope to bring greater convenience to commuters through innovative fare payment systems.”

Yet the system is not without its flaws. There are many cities that would struggle to implement a payment card that so accurately tracks movements and payments, particularly as the threat of cyber security looms more so than ever. “The Singapore proposal is very good, but you have to be careful with what you’re asking people to do, because you’ll have a backlash in different areas. In other parts of the world, people are very nervous about the information they give out to people and the government, but Singapore has a much stronger government”, Arias argued.

Understanding the cultural and social nuances between cities is crucial in order to create unique, bespoke strategies that are effective to the area in question. This again highlights why careful planning is key to the process, so that all caveats of an initiative are examined and incorporated to achieve long-term success.

On the other hand, Bolivia has taken to the skies to solve the crippling traffic jams in La Paz. Over the last two years, the incumbent government has ploughed $234m into the construction of the world’s largest cable car system, and plans to invest a further $450m into a six-line expansion. As well as being the most cost-effective solution presented by the authorities, it has fewer maintenance costs than other systems – but naturally, it also has its own risks. “I think the example illustrates that not all solutions are appropriate to all cities and that the palette is wide open for city administrators to approach intelligent and resilient urban growth.

“The cable car concept was pioneered in Medellín, Colombia and has been a huge success, not only for urban transport, but also as a tourist attraction. These are now, I believe in existence or in planning in Lagos, Nigeria, Rio de Janeiro and other cities. The cost is less than an underground system – though there will be safety issues to consider, of course”, Arias told World Finance.

Survival of the fittest
Sustainability also extends to planning for potential catastrophes and natural disasters. As demonstrated by the typhoon paths that hit Vanuatu earlier this year, which Arias explains were equivalent to the size of the Gulf of Mexico, “It really doesn’t matter where you are – you don’t have to be at the eye of a storm to have a problem. And because we have cities that are more densely populated, more people get displaced, which means that resilience for cities is important not just for places that get hit by the storm, but because people at the storm area may come to your city for shelter.” The increasing incidence and size of natural disasters also highlights the danger of maintaining a centralised power generator system, and the need to implement a robust energy strategy.

Flooding is also affecting more areas than ever before and poses grave danger to densely populated areas. “Cities at risk of flooding as a result of climate change or due to their geographic location can learn from the strategies that the private sectors has helped deliver in places like Rotterdam, where severe floods in the middle of the 20th century were the catalyst for actions taken that have kept the city safe up until the present day”, said John Batten, Global Cities Director at Arcadis, a firm specialising in global natural and built asset design and consultancy.

Curitiba in Brazil is another well-documented example of a city that has successfully mitigated against the risk through an innovative approach to flood management that began in 1995 following floods that caused $40m in damages. The Integrated Urban Drainage Master Plan involved a strategic network of parks in urban areas to not only absorb precipitation runoff, but also to provide corridors for transport through the parks and add aesthetic value to the city. An early-earning system is also in place, which has been supported by a high level of public awareness and involvement.

A tactical approach
“Effective planning can help cities create a framework to become more sustainable by helping to set a clear long-term vision for what it wants to be done and setting a roadmap of how it can get there”, said Batten. “To do this, cities need to take a balanced view of their sustainability vision.” This entails a thorough understanding of various principles and cooperation among all stakeholders in order to provide lasting solutions that meet a city’s needs, while also making it a desirable place to live and work.

More involved growth management practices and a strategic approach is vital for cities to accommodate for their expanding communities, before costs and issues spiral out of control. “We need to figure out better ways to do management of these things because without organisation, planning will become very resource intensive. If you allow cities to sprawl without any real planning or logic to it, transportation from the edges to the centre will be very difficult and expensive – not only in terms of infrastructure, but also in terms of time and services, things like fire services, hospitals, policing, all becomes very difficult”, Arias told World Finance.

A deeply collaborative and strategic effort is therefore crucial in order to make cities smart. We are in the midst of the age of urbanisation – a first in history. As such, governments face issues that they have never before encountered, issues that could be their downfall unless addressed quickly and effectively. But being sustainable involves a complex web of policies, projects and stakeholders.

It is far more than just creating green urban spaces and cleaning rivers – it entails an integrated system that works harmoniously to maximise the potential of a city. And the approach itself is not as simple as a one size fits all proven method – herein lies the difficulty. “Each city has its own challenges, which means that the priorities differ from city to city. While Los Angeles has a need to improve its water supplies, New York is investing in better protection from future storms. Where London needs to replace its ageing infrastructure, Jeddah is building completely new. The challenge for any city is to balance the needs of its people, the planet and profit, so while all are important, some need more immediate attention based on the individual circumstance”, Batten explained.

Creating sustainable centres is not just the moral obligation of city administrators, it is absolutely necessary for survival – with a responsibility to all parties. Involving the private sector can fill the gap in terms of funding, for doing so is to their benefit as much as the populace.

And as technology improves and innovative solutions appear across the globe, more and more cities will be inspired to follow suit. The world is changing – socially, economically and environmentally – cities are therefore responsible for accommodating this new era, and there is certainly no more time or energy left to waste.

Telecoms is experiencing something of a facelift

The breathtaking pace at which technology is advancing is causing massive changes within the global telecommunications industry. Whereas a few established providers dominated many markets, now new entrants, some of whom come from outside the industry itself, are challenging them. This is in turn forcing a wave of consolidation across the world’s telecommunications markets, with many smaller firms being snapped up as a way of defending against these new entrants.

In recent months there have been a number of high-profile mergers between telecoms players. In January, Hutchison Whampoa, the Hong Kong-based telecom giant, bought the UK’s leading mobile provider O2 for £10.25bn ($16.05bn), combining it with the Three network in the process.

Time Warner Cable’s (TWC) proposed merger with rival Comcast rumbled on for the best part of a year before collapsing, only for rival Charter Communications to swoop in and acquire TWC for $55bn. Understandably for such a large deal, US regulators are scrutinising it in the same way it looked at the Comcast deal. However, Charter has made a number of big concessions to try and secure the deal, including promises over both existing jobs and new ones.

Elsewhere, Mexican telecoms mogul Carlos Slim has seen his monopoly of the industry in his home country hit regulatory troubles. He is now facing the prospect of his telecoms empire, including America Movil, being broken up. In order to cope with this new challenge in his domestic market, Slim is expanding his operations overseas, in particular looking to take holdings in European fixed-line telecom companies.

Other companies are looking at ways to broaden their service, capturing customers in the so-called ‘triple play’ deal where they have broadband, telephone and television products all from the same provider. In the UK, BT has expanded into its own cable television service, bidding huge amounts of money for the coveted Premier League and Champions League football matches to secure viewers. It is also in the process of confirming a deal to acquire Mobile Telecom firm EE for £12.5bn ($19.6bn), marking a return to the space 13 years after it sold its stake in Cellnet, which subsequently became O2.

Monthly streaming cost

$7.99

Hulu

$8.99

Netflix

$14.99

HBO NOW

New digital entrants
There are also a number of new entrants into the telecoms market from the tech industry. While the likes of Skype and Whatsapp have been slowly eating into the phone call and messaging business of traditional carriers, the likes of Apple and Google are now getting in on the action. Apple’s FaceTime service has added Wi-Fi voice calls, while Google has launched its own wireless network to power voice calls and data use. Project Fi is Google’s affordable, Wi-Fi service, which it has been testing in a number of US cities. Launched in July, it could present a credible challenge to existing carriers.

It’s not just in broadband and mobile networks that bigger telecom firms are being challenged. In September, Apple unveiled a dramatically updated version of their Apple TV digital set-top box, which is seen as a precursor to a new online streaming television service to rival the likes of Netflix and Amazon. The existing Apple TV has not been updated in three years and has therefore been surpassed in capability by products from Amazon, Google and other new players in the market like Roku. However, the new service will likely harness the power of developers with its own app store, as well as boosting integration with other streaming services.

The company has faced considerable difficulty in persuading existing cable providers to sign up to its own television streaming platform, because these firms don’t want to hand over valuable advertising and viewing data. It’s expected that this service will eventually come in 2016.

HBO has recognised the changing way people are viewing television. For a long time, the popular cable television service refused to offer an online alternative to its cable package, insisting only traditional customers could get access to online versions of its show. Then, earlier this year, it unveiled an updated HBO NOW web app that non-cable subscribers could pay for, allowing them to watch popular shows like Game of Thrones and True Detective. Available on Apple TV, at first exclusively, the service is now being launched across many other digital platforms.

Speaking about the reasons for their change in stance, HBO’s CEO Richard Plepler told reporters in April, “We’re making HBO available in as many was as possible to our consumers. That’s a win for the consumer, that’s a win for our partners and that’s a win for HBO.”

Plepler described the new service as being aimed at a new generation of tech-savvy television viewers who aren’t accustomed to paying for cable subscriptions, describing it as a “millennial missile”. He added, “We think this is a terrific opportunity to earn 10 million broadband-only homes in the US, and that’s largely a millennial audience.”

Monthly costs
HBO will be charging customers of its new online platform a price of $14.99 per month, compared to the relatively cheaper Netflix and Hulu offerings, which are both around half that amount. Plepler believes, however, that customers would be willing to pay the higher price because of the high-quality content it offers. “We think we have a premium product. We have extraordinary content… and it’s the price of a movie ticket and a bucket of popcorn. If you look at the value of that, we think it makes perfect sense and we think the consumer is going to agree with us.”

Instead of cutting into HBO’s existing cable subscriber base, Plepler believes that it will merely expand the number of consumers the company caters to. “We see this as an expansion of the pie, [it is] not cannibalistic at all of our current business. It is very additive to our business.”

The topic of how much to charge for online streaming services is one being hotly debated. Netflix’s monthly fee of $8.99 is widely seen as pretty cheap for the amount of content on offer, nevertheless, the company has struggled to make much money, even though it has steadily increased its user base. Earlier this year, the company announced it had beaten expectations by increasing its subscriber base to 59.6 million, which represented a significant increase on the 46.1 million users the year before. It saw total revenues jump by 24 percent to $1.6bn, reflecting the growing trend of people choosing to use streaming services for their entertainment.

However, while it has expanded its number of users, Netflix has also been heavily investing in original and exclusive content to attract those user figures. As a result, it has seen its profits tumble, to $24m for the first quarter of this year, compared to $53m for the same period in 2014. While this drop in profit can be explained away through international expansion and investment in original content, there has been speculation that the company will have to either raise the cost of its subscription or bring in advertising to help it continue.

Indeed, the company announced it would be testing adverts on the platform in June. Although these are just for their own original programmes – such as political drama House of Cards – the move has certainly worried fans of the platform. However, a spokesman attempted to reassure those users that plans for full-blown advertising across the platform was not going to happen and Netflix had “zero intention” of doing so in the future.

Future trends
Over the coming years there is likely to be further consolidation among the traditional players, as well as bigger moves by tech giants. There will also be considerable investment into new technologies, including 5G spectrums, cloud data infrastructure, and the rise of wearable technology demands on networks. For the traditional players to remain relevant, they will need to look at the tech giants entering their markets as inspiration to innovate themselves.

How the global telecoms market looks in the future will likely depend on how big players react to these new digital entrants, as well as how committed regulators are to ensuring there is enough competition in the market. At the same time, new technology is being invested in at a rapid rate, and all it takes is a dramatic breakthrough for the telecom industry to be shaken up once again.

Saudi Arabia’s stock exchange opens to foreigners – what are the implications?

For the first time in Saudi Arabia’s economic history, the country’s $509bn stock exchange market, known as the Tadawul, is available for international trade. Despite being one of the world’s largest economies, Saudi Arabia is the last of the G20 countries to open its stock market to foreign businesses. It could transform the country and perhaps even the entire region, as capital flows into various industries and the transition to adopt international standards is made.

Granting foreign access to the Tadawul is the latest facet of the Saudi administration’s $130bn strategy to bolster non-oil industries and diversify the economy. As 90 percent of the Saudi economy is driven by the petrochemical sector, the recent volatility of the global market and plummeting oil prices has stressed the necessity of a new model and of achieving emerging market status more than ever before.

The Tadawul lists 165 publicly traded companies in industries ranging from agriculture to telecommunications, and of course, petrochemicals

Talk of the prospects for both foreign parties and the country itself has stirred since the decision was first unveiled in 2014 by the Capital Market Authority (CMA). While there has been growing anticipation within the international sphere, frustration over the lack of information also mounted as the self-set deadline approached. When June 15 came this year, the flurry of foreign investors expected by Saudi authorities did not occur, thus marking various challenges that still exist for the wealthy nation. That being said, the fiscal possibilities are vast and the stock market holds the key to unlocking this incalculable potential.

A new game
The Tadawul lists 165 publicly traded companies in industries ranging from agriculture to telecommunications, real estate, and of course, petrochemicals (see Fig. 1). According to the Tadawul 2014 Annual Report, real estate is the biggest sector and comprises 16 percent of the market.

Given the size of the Saudi economy, international participation is estimated to bring around $40bn of foreign capital into the economy; “it’s certainly the largest in terms of the GCC – it comprises more than 47 percent of the region’s GDP and it has the largest population base”, said Dr John Sfakianakis, Director of the Middle East at the Ashmore Group.

As expected, there are several clauses for foreigners that wish to trade on the Tadawul. Individuals are excluded; only companies are permitted, and sizeable ones at that. Firms must have $5bn in assets under management and five years experience in order to play the game. The idea being that if only serious players participate, the stability of the market is ensured. The CMA is also hopeful that these rules will attract investors with long-term objectives in the country and also limit the flow of hot money.

Foreigners, whether they live in the country or abroad, can own up to 49 percent of a single stock. Qualified foreign investors (QFI) can each have up to five percent of holdings in a single stock, with a 20 percent cap of foreign investment in a single stock. At present, there is a limit of 10 percent in terms of QFIs for the whole market. The country’s ‘negative-list’ – which catalogues businesses that forbid foreign participation – also extends to the Tadawul.

The real estate market in Islam’s holy cities, Makkah and Medina, are the most notable area of exclusion. While six companies have been specified as being off-limits, including Jabal Omar Development, Makkah Construction & Development and Taiba Holding, which, according to The Gulf Times, collectively account for approximately seven percent of the Tadawul All Share Index.

A key consequence of the liberalisation of the Tadawul is that the system will be subject to tighter regulations and will therefore benefit from greater transparency. As a result of the new framework, qualified investors will be able to vote in general assembly meetings and nominate board members, thereby highlighting one way in which corporate governance in the country’s private sector is expected to improve. As Sfakianakis predicts, “a direct effect for them will be to become more governance orientated from the regulatory standpoint and more transparent from the corporate standpoint.”

What is unusual in the Saudi case is that achieving greater liquidity is neither the focus of the shift, nor is it actually that important. At present, the Tadawul is already extremely liquid, particularly in comparison to other countries in the region. According to Reuters, Saudi Arabia trades around $2bn per day on average, thereby dwarfing the collected efforts of say Abu Dhabi and Dubai, which trade a combined volume of $150 to $200m. Instead improving the regulatory framework is the focus of the CMA, and is a core aspect in the goal to achieve the MSCI’s emerging market status. It is predicted that Saudi Arabia will achieve the MSCI emerging market index within the next two to three years – the impact of which could be pivotal in the country’s economic history. Saudi authorities understand the importance of achieving the index, not only as others in the region, such as Qatar and the UAE, have already done so, but also because it will fully incorporate the nation into the emerging market world. “I think there are two phases to the flow of money in Saudi Arabia, one is happening as we speak and it will continue to increase in volume and size over the next two years, and then the next phase of the inflow of money is going to happen because of MSCI inclusion”, Sfakianakis told World Finance.

In turn this status presents a host of opportunities for Saudi Arabia, a new standing for the country within the international framework and will grant it a more powerful voice on the global economic stage. Moreover, it is logical for an economy the size of Saudi Arabia’s to have emerging market status, which plays a role in laying a new path for the future of the country.

MSCI status will be a game-changer for Saudi Arabia, as it will further ease the obstacles preventing foreign investors from joining the Tadawul, while also making it safer for them to do so. The UAE achieving MSCI Index in June illustrates the catalytic transition that can also be expected for Saudi Arabia; it changed what could be invested in and the amount of holdings that a foreign company can have – it essentially changed the way that the UAE’s stock market operates. For Saudi Arabia, inclusion will enable the market to benefit from a reinforced investment landscape, inspire greater confidence and become increasingly attractive for investors.

Top five stocks in Saudi Arabia

Existing challenges
When the market opened in June, the initial reaction hoped for by the CMA did not transpire. Not only had investors not flooded the market, but stocks even fell, highlighting existing challenges and the trepidation of foreign companies. Some industry experts attribute this to an over-valuation of listed companies as a result of high earnings. Others blame administrative issues with licensing and a requirement to settle money up front, as opposed to two days following the investment. At face value, these issues will indeed prevent some investors from entering the Tadawul, but they are only short-term hindrances.

The obstacles are actually more complex and pertain to the ideological. “I think the challenge is getting to know the country and going beyond the stereotypical view that many people have about Saudi Arabia, the concerns whether it is related to geopolitics or visiting the country”, Sfakianakis explained. In-depth research is therefore required by foreign investors in order to gain a better understanding about the economy and the industry of interest, as well as the country itself. “I think it’s important for investors to develop interpersonal ties and relationships so that they see for themselves what the country yields. This plays a very important part of formulating ideas, because the region, especially Saudi Arabia, is based on these network ties and local knowledge”.

“There is always this drive to diversify the economy – it’s easier said than done”, added Sfakianakis. “But Saudi Arabia is more than oil, this is an important point that people forget. First of all, Saudi Arabia doesn’t get impacted as a result of a fall in oil prices, the average Saudi in the street doesn’t feel the price of that.” Despite oil prices being reduced by half, the incumbent regime has maintained the same levels of public spending by making withdraws from vast large reserves that were earned from the oil boom of the 2000s. Moreover, the share prices of petrochemical companies have not dropped by 50 percent either – highlighting an economy that is far more varied and robust than many people assume.

“I would say that for the investor, the diversification story is important and the reason for that is that Saudi Arabia is all about the demographics – it’s all about the individual who has benefitted from the changes that have taken place over the last ten years – they have entered the labour market more actively and more gainfully, and as a result they have a higher purchasing power”. As Sfakianakis explained, regardless of low oil prices, the purchasing power in Saudi Arabia remains extremely strong. This is underscored further when comparing the purchasing power of other emerging markets that lag behind on a per capita basis.

The Saudi economy has a long way to go, there is still a lot of work to be done and it will take patience and perseverance. However, the basis is there – and a strong one at that. The government has a formidable level of capital reserves and it continues to earn a great deal of revenue from the energy sector, regardless of the current price. Furthermore, it is unlikely that prices will remain at their current levels, with many experts predicting an increase over the course of the next two quarters.

There are a number of strong industries in the country, such as real estate development, healthcare and plastic manufacturing – with the greater focus and funding that these sectors are receiving, they are likely to grow considerably in the coming years and spill over into neighbouring states.

Saudi Arabia acts as the epicentre of the Gulf; this role will only be consolidated further as the economy strengthens and diversifies. With a new premier at the helm, the country seems to be on course to achieve this feat, the opening of the Tadawul being a historic step along this road. The MSCI Index will be next and when it does occur, not only will Saudi Arabia’s economic transformation transpire, the whole region will begin a new economic chapter.

China supports Africa’s iron mines and steel market

Chinese investment and trade with Africa encompasses many industries and commodities, from oil projects in Angola and Sudan, to cotton from Burkina Faso and fish from Namibia. Recently, however, China has increasingly been investing in iron-ore mines and steel metal works. While Chinese purchase of African mines is nothing new – it has for many years owned and operated Zambian copper mines – the Communist state has made a number of notable acquisitions of late.

One result of the West African Ebola outbreak in 2014, aside from the tragic loss of human life, has been a slowdown of mining operations in the region. In August of that year Mining Review noted that the health crisis had increasingly made it ‘difficult to transport supplies and skills to the mines’. The world’s biggest steelmaker, ArcelorMittal, the industry magazine reported had, “seen disruption to the expansion of its iron ore mine in Liberia due to the Ebola outbreak. Furthermore, the share prices of some mining companies in Sierra Leone, such as London Mining and African Minerals, have slumped on potential disruption of operations there.” By the end of the year, African Minerals had shut down the continent’s second-largest iron-ore mine, in Tonkolili, Sierra Leone.

At every point in the production process of steel, from the mine to sales, it seems, China is acquiring new assets on the
African continent

Industry take-over
The mine was quickly snatched up by the Chinese state owned enterprise Shandong Iron and Steel Group in April this year. Likewise Hebei and Steel Group – also an SOE – is building a massive steelworks in South Africa, while in May 2015 it was granted permission to buy out the Swiss firm Duferco’s African steel processing and sales network. At every point in the production process of steel, from the mine to sales, it seems, China is acquiring new assets on the African continent. The country is by far the world’s largest steel producer and reportedly facing a glut. According to The Guardian in June, steel was “cheaper per tonne than cabbage”. The motive behind such moves, then, raises some questions.

In March, the National People’s Congress’ opening session started with a declaration that the government is doing everything it can to fight pollution. China’s high polluting steel industry has been at the heart of this, with a number of the worst polluting mines shut down. There is speculation then that China could be trying to shift its high polluting metal industry overseas, where pollution is not its problem.

Alternatively, these seemingly counterintuitive acquisitions may be seen as part of a strategy to solidify China’s reputation in Africa. Due to the country’s supposed newcomer status, China is using a “stick-at-it-strategy”, according to Henry Tugendhat from the Institute of Development Studies. “They hope that good behaviour during a crisis – even if it loses them money in the short run will secure them better contracts in the future”, wrote The Economist. “The better the mine, the fewer impurities in the ore, and the cheaper it is to turn it into high-grade metal.”

The next step
This seems unlikely. China has had a longstanding partnership with many African countries. The famous 1955 Bandung Conference, where 29 countries met to try and foster Afro-Asian relations and to oppose colonialism, China committed itself to fostering economic relations with African states, leading to 50,000 Chinese workers helping to construct the Tanzam railroad that linked the port of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania with Zambia.

Economic cooperation accelerated after China’s gradual embrace of market reforms. In the 1980s total trade between the country and the continent was worth $1bn a year. This increased sixth fold by the 1990s, and by 2012 reached $163.9bn. By 2014, ODI from China to Africa totalled $130bn. At the same time, on average Africans have the highest positive view of China, according to polling by the Pew Research Centre in 2014. China, it would seem, does not need to curry favour by investing in currently unprofitable mines. Chinese intentions aside, these acquisitions will provide much needed jobs and investment for the continent.