Dubai Telegraph - 'Rhino bond' charges onto markets to save S. African animals

EUR -
AED 3.859481
AFN 71.756324
ALL 98.731551
AMD 410.573973
ANG 1.898343
AOA 958.299952
ARS 1057.5828
AUD 1.620305
AWG 1.891382
AZN 1.787514
BAM 1.965786
BBD 2.126704
BDT 125.86941
BGN 1.959578
BHD 0.396069
BIF 3111.577045
BMD 1.050768
BND 1.419397
BOB 7.30511
BRL 6.108936
BSD 1.053351
BTN 88.798959
BWP 14.389096
BYN 3.447011
BYR 20595.049833
BZD 2.123186
CAD 1.482918
CDF 3015.70356
CHF 0.930769
CLF 0.037175
CLP 1025.730425
CNY 7.626681
CNH 7.631617
COP 4607.354324
CRC 536.765442
CUC 1.050768
CUP 27.845348
CVE 110.825881
CZK 25.294035
DJF 187.56281
DKK 7.458928
DOP 63.475202
DZD 140.754561
EGP 52.127224
ERN 15.761518
ETB 131.339448
FJD 2.392545
FKP 0.829389
GBP 0.835949
GEL 2.868323
GGP 0.829389
GHS 16.589273
GIP 0.829389
GMD 74.604443
GNF 9077.02445
GTQ 8.133083
GYD 220.369466
HKD 8.177732
HNL 26.61696
HRK 7.495399
HTG 138.250992
HUF 410.051453
IDR 16731.48153
ILS 3.832965
IMP 0.829389
INR 88.571851
IQD 1379.809363
IRR 44224.189139
ISK 145.100113
JEP 0.829389
JMD 167.167612
JOD 0.745307
JPY 161.712177
KES 136.073015
KGS 91.195508
KHR 4227.434928
KMF 492.757542
KPW 945.690665
KRW 1469.37254
KWD 0.323384
KYD 0.877759
KZT 525.96186
LAK 23132.512015
LBP 94323.056453
LKR 306.507041
LRD 189.587683
LSL 19.044143
LTL 3.102644
LVL 0.635599
LYD 5.155188
MAD 10.582559
MDL 19.254813
MGA 4922.003534
MKD 61.670427
MMK 3412.852984
MNT 3570.509093
MOP 8.44098
MRU 41.88499
MUR 49.722097
MVR 16.234917
MWK 1826.47842
MXN 21.614084
MYR 4.693253
MZN 67.14173
NAD 19.044143
NGN 1768.579028
NIO 38.756512
NOK 11.690218
NPR 142.081414
NZD 1.79828
OMR 0.404533
PAB 1.053351
PEN 3.989366
PGK 4.24307
PHP 62.032083
PKR 292.554261
PLN 4.316456
PYG 8206.689576
QAR 3.842446
RON 4.977699
RSD 117.01459
RUB 110.961597
RWF 1438.192258
SAR 3.946062
SBD 8.816563
SCR 14.31215
SDG 632.036594
SEK 11.54187
SGD 1.415316
SHP 0.829389
SLE 23.854978
SLL 22034.081378
SOS 601.952158
SRD 37.295921
STD 21748.772974
SVC 9.216821
SYP 2640.085594
SZL 19.038716
THB 36.517315
TJS 11.227816
TMT 3.688195
TND 3.340977
TOP 2.461006
TRY 36.403794
TTD 7.154344
TWD 34.123163
TZS 2784.535199
UAH 43.712558
UGX 3902.826164
USD 1.050768
UYU 44.896792
UZS 13512.64356
VES 48.945141
VND 26707.891792
VUV 124.74927
WST 2.933314
XAF 659.299937
XAG 0.034685
XAU 0.000402
XCD 2.839753
XDR 0.805693
XOF 659.306243
XPF 119.331742
YER 262.61318
ZAR 19.049477
ZMK 9458.171236
ZMW 29.044545
ZWL 338.346819
  • CMSC

    0.0578

    24.73

    +0.23%

  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    46.57

    -0.39%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    8.91

    +2.02%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    63.26

    +0.24%

  • AZN

    0.7700

    66.4

    +1.16%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    6.79

    +0.29%

  • GSK

    0.1900

    34.15

    +0.56%

  • RIO

    0.6300

    62.98

    +1%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    13.37

    +1.2%

  • BTI

    -0.0500

    37.33

    -0.13%

  • CMSD

    0.1200

    24.58

    +0.49%

  • SCS

    0.4500

    13.72

    +3.28%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    27.02

    +0.93%

  • BCC

    8.7200

    152.5

    +5.72%

  • BP

    -0.4000

    29.32

    -1.36%

'Rhino bond' charges onto markets to save S. African animals
'Rhino bond' charges onto markets to save S. African animals

'Rhino bond' charges onto markets to save S. African animals

Critically endangered black rhinos in South Africa will get help from an unusual source: Wall Street, where institutional investors have expressed a willingness to buy a new type of bond being issued by the World Bank that will pay for successful efforts to save the animals.

Text size:

In this pilot project that will be judged on whether the population of horned animals in two parks in the country increases, the Washington-based development lender will issue a $150 million bond March 31.

Rather than paying annual or semi-annual interest to investors, the proceeds instead will go to the staff in the parks to invest in the battle against poachers, and to improve conditions for the animals.

The funds will benefit the Addo Elephant National Park and the Great Fish River Nature Reserve, the World Bank said.

Officials hope the bond, two years in the making, will offer a new model to leverage private funds to finance conservation efforts or other projects. The catch is they must have benchmarks that can be objectively measured.

"The Rhino bond is a groundbreaking approach to enabling private sector investment in global public goods -- in this case biodiversity conservation, a key global development challenge," World Bank President David Malpass said in a statement.

"The pay-for-success financial structure protects an endangered species and strengthens South Africa's conservation efforts."

The five-year bond, which priced Wednesday, will be sold at 94.84 percent of face value, and will provide investors a guaranteed minimum return once it matures.

But they also can receive a share of $13.8 million from the Global Environment Facility if the number of rhinos increases.

- Spreading the risk -

The return would be based on a sliding scale, and if growth reaches or exceeds four percent, investors receive the entire "success payment."

"What we're looking to do here is really change that risk allocation and say is there a way that we can pass some of that project performance... (and) risk to someone else other than governments and donors," said Michael Bennet, head of market solutions and structured finance at the bank.

The parks will receive about $10 million total, with about half arriving in the first year. These funds, which usually go to bondholders, can be used for things like increasing drone and aircraft surveillance against poachers and creating water holes, Bennet told AFP.

The rhino population growth rate will be independently calculated by Conservation Alpha and verified by the Zoological Society of London.

Black rhinos are listed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as critically endangered, though in the wild their population has doubled to more than 5,000 from a historic low three decades ago.

The animals are slaughtered for their horns, which are smuggled into Asia, where they are mistakenly believed to have medicinal benefits.

The South African government last month issued hunting permits that would allow 10 of the animals to be killed, along with 150 elephants.

The bond issue comes at a time when more investment funds are under pressure to invest in environmentally-friendly or socially-conscious ventures, a category known as ESG.

While boosting the rhino population is the primary goal of this bond, there are many positive benefits to the community, bank officials said.

"The nickname is the Rhino bond, but it's about so much more than that. It also has real tangible benefits to the communities and incentives to protect land," said Heike Reichelt, head of investor relations and sustainable finance at the World Bank Treasury.

And the project can help create more jobs, including for women, she told AFP.

I.Menon--DT