JOHANNESBURG/SHANGHAI, Aug 10 (Reuters) – Hobbled by the impact of sanctions against founding shareholder Russia, the New Development Bank (NDB) set up by the BRICS countries needs to increase its local currency fundraising and lending, South Africa’s finance minister told Reuters.
South Africa will host leaders of the other BRICS nations – Brazil, Russia, India and China – as the bloc aims to widen its influence at a Johannesburg summit later this month.
Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana said boosting local currency usage among the NDB’s members will also be on the agenda, with the aim of de-risking the impact of foreign exchange fluctuations rather than de-dollarisation.
The greenback has gained against emerging market currencies since Russia invaded Ukraine and the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates to fight inflation in early 2022, making dollar debt more costly for those countries to service.
“Most countries that are members of the NDB have been encouraging (it) to provide loans in local currencies,” Godongwana said.
Established in 2015 as the flagship financial project of the bloc, the NDB’s ambition to serve emerging economies and de-dollarise finance have been curbed by economic realities and Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
“(It is) not doing as much as member countries require, but that is the strategic direction we are pushing the bank (in),” Godongwana said in a telephone interview last week.
Increasing local currency fundraising and raising capital from new members could help the NDB in tough times, cutting its dependence on U.S. capital markets where sanctions against Russia have driven up its borrowing costs, analysts said.
The NDB has expanded from its original core of five to eight and only makes loans in member countries.
Chief Financial Officer Leslie Maasdorp told Reuters in an interview at the NDB headquarters in Shanghai that the bank aims to increase local currency lending from about 22% to 30% by 2026, but that there were limits to de-dollarisation.
“The bank’s operating currency is dollars for a very specific reason, U.S. dollars are where the largest pools of liquidity are,” he said.
The bank is responsive to its members and will decide the mix of currencies it lends in based on their demands, Maasdorp said in emailed comments.
‘NO PARALLEL UNIVERSE’
Of more than $30 billion in loans approved by the NDB, two-thirds were in dollars, an April investor presentation showed.
That dependence became a liability when the United States imposed sanctions on Russia last year.
The NDB stopped loans to Russia, but this did not prevent a Fitch downgrade in July 2022 and its dollar borrowing costs have spiked by more than others.
A five-year $1.5 billion bond the NDB issued in April 2021 had a 1.125% coupon. Two years later, a $1.25 billion five-year bond had a 5.125% coupon. That is more expensive than other multilateral development banks with similar credit ratings, S&P Global Ratings analyst Alexander Ekbom said.
As a result of this risk premium, which Maasdorp put at about 25 basis points, the NDB has had to rein in new lending.
“Because of the capital market challenges of 2022, and in an endeavour to preserve the bank’s core financial ratios, there was indeed a slowdown,” Maasdorp said.
“You cannot step outside of the dollar universe and operate in a parallel universe.”
While the NDB has approved loans worth $32.8 billion for projects ranging from Mumbai metro lines to solar lighting in Brasilia, the loans on its balance sheet were worth less than half that amount at end-March.
In 2022, the bank disbursed only about $1 billion of loans.
So far, China is by far the NDB’s most successful local currency market. It issued 13 billion yuan ($1.8 billion) across three “panda bonds” last year and more than half of its lending there has been in yuan.
“The renminbi market has increased in significance,” said Ekbom of S&P Global Ratings, which rates the NDB “AA+”. “But that has been more because raising money in the U.S. dollar market has been unfavourable for them.”
Other markets have lagged behind, though the bank is hoping to raise up to 1.5 billion rand ($81 million) in debut bonds in South Africa on Aug. 15. It is also aiming to issue its first rupee bond in India by the end of 2023.
GROWING MEMBERSHIP
Nevertheless, the NDB, established with $10 billion in paid-in share capital from each BRICS country, wants to expand.
Bangladesh, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt have joined since 2021, bringing its membership to eight. Uruguay is part way through the process of joining, while Algeria, Honduras, Zimbabwe and Saudi Arabia have expressed interest.
By comparison, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, which is backed by China and began operating in 2016, has 106 members, including 23 European countries and 45 outside of Asia.
Maasdorp said bringing in capital from new members is “very, very important” and would help the NDB realise its aspiration of becoming a leading emerging market institution, with the BRICS summit “a key platform” for talks with potential new members.
Attracting the large emerging market countries that would lend the NDB more clout and shore up its financial health could require governance changes, Chris Humphrey, a development finance researcher at the Overseas Development Institute, said.
Current bank statutes ensure that, even as it expands, its five founding shareholders will together retain senior leadership positions and majority voting power.
“From the point of view of some other developing countries, that might not be very attractive. They might… say, ok, is that not just another G7 with a different name?,” Humphrey said.
Maasdorp said that the NDB has a “unique” shareholder structure and the aim was to have as much consensus as possible within the bank on decisions but that a majority would prevail.
The voting structure had not been an obstacle to new members so far, he said, adding that they took comfort from the fact that the NDB was “very highly capitalised”.
($1 = 18.6877 rand)
($1 = 7.2132 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Rachel Savage and Brenda Goh; Additional reporting by Tannur Anders in Johannesburg and Vincent Flasseur in London; Editing by Karin Strohecker, Joe Bavier and Alexander Smith)