Strategic Investment Funds

Page 76

50

| Strategic Investment Funds

BOX 3.2

Establishment laws that rely on commercial legislation: The case of FONSIS The legal frameworks of strategic investment funds often rely extensively on both special and general laws. The legal framework of Senegal’s FONSIS (Fonds Souverain d’Investissements Stratégiques, or Sovereign Fund for Strategic Investments), for instance, highlights the potential benefits of supplementing special legislation with standard commercial legal frameworks. The establishment of FONSIS was authorized by the Senegal National Assembly under Law 2012-34,a which was subsequently ratified by the President of the Republic. Law 2012-34 prescribes that the rules of organization and functioning of FONSIS “shall be determined by this Act, by the Statutes and the Rules of Procedure in accordance with the standards, in particular those of the OHADA Uniform Act on companies.”b General legislation therefore complements special legislation in areas where the former may be inadequate.

As a limited liability company under OHADA law,c FONSIS is subject to all applicable provisions, but these provisions can be modified when necessary by the FONSIS-specific Law 2012-34. FONSIS’s status as a Senegalese Société Anonyme also means its board has full power over investment decisions, with no need for government approval, thus enhancing operational independence. At the same time, FONSISspecific law includes special provisions not covered by commercial law. Article 24 of Law 2012-34 submits FONSIS to the audit of government administrative bodies such as the General State Inspectorate and the Court of Auditors. Also per Law 2012-34, Senegal owns 100 percent of the company’s capital. Ownership can be open to other state entities, but the state’s direct ownership shall not be less than 70 percent.

Source: FONSIS case study; see appendix A. a. Law 2012-34: Authorizing the creation of a Sovereign Fund of Strategic Investments (FONSIS), adopted on December 27, 2012. b. Article 3, Law 2012-34. OHADA (Organisation pour l’harmonisation en Afrique du droit des affaires, or Organization for the Harmonization of Corporate Law in Africa) is a system of corporate law and implementing institutions adopted by 17 West and Central African nations in 1993. c. The 2014 Acte Uniforme Révisé Relatif au Droit des Sociétés Commericales at du Groupement d’Intéret Économique.

functions. NSIA is also “independent in the discharge of its functions,” under Section 1(4) of the NSIA Act 2011. Similarly, the Ghana Infrastructure Investment Fund was set up under the Ghana Infrastructure Investment Fund Act, 2014, as a “body corporate with perpetual succession,” which “may sue and be sued and have in all respects the powers of a body corporate.”16 In general, primary legislation should establish basic principles that cannot be easily changed, whereas specific fund details can be enshrined in secondary legislation that can evolve over time. As with SWFs, there is great variety in the level of detail in SIF establishment legislation, partly as a reflection of different traditions and constitutional requirements among countries (Al-Hassan et al. 2013). Some countries have extensive primary legislation, with only modest supplementary secondary regulation. Others will rely heavily on secondary regulation, such as rules and policies written by the ministry of finance. As noted by Al-Hassan et al. (2013), for instance, the law establishing Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global has only nine short sections but is augmented by a series of secondary regulations and policies by the Norwegian Ministry of Finance. In general, it is preferable to establish basic principles in primary legislation, which cannot be easily changed, and to prescribe specific fund details in secondary legislation, which may be amended as the fund evolves (World Bank 2015). Details can also be left to other constitutive documents, such as articles of association, depending on the type of legal structure used.


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References

17min
pages 296-303

Notes

2min
page 295

Staffing and recruitment

2min
page 292

Investment strategy

2min
page 284

Portfolio and track record

2min
page 285

13.2 NSIA-NIF core governance bodies

6min
pages 289-290

Mandate for investment

2min
page 283

12.2 Summary of NIIF Limited’s governance bodies

3min
page 277

Legal structure

2min
page 282

Background and mission

1min
page 281

Governance

2min
page 275

Additionality and multiplier considerations

2min
page 274

12.2 NIIF’s Master Fund structure

4min
pages 272-273

12.3 NIIF’s governance structure

2min
page 276

12.1 NIIF’s anticipated fund size and investors at time of writing

5min
pages 270-271

12.1 NIIF structure

4min
pages 268-269

11.1 Key features of the Luxembourg SCSp

2min
page 264

11.4 Marguerite’s ESG assessment throughout the investment process

4min
pages 265-267

11.3 Summary of Marguerite II’s core bodies and functions

2min
page 263

impact report

4min
pages 246-247

10.6 ISIF Irish Portfolio risk categories

11min
pages 248-252

11.1 Marguerite II’s eligible sectors

6min
pages 257-259

10.4 ISIF investment decision process

1min
page 245

10.4 Summary of ISIF’s governance bodies

2min
page 244

10.1 Structure of NTMA and ISIF

4min
pages 236-237

December 31, 2018

7min
pages 238-240

writing

4min
pages 227-228

9.2 Summary of FONSIS governance bodies

3min
page 229

9.4 FONSIS organizational structure

12min
pages 230-235

9.1 FONSIS’s solar investments

2min
page 223

8.3 Summary of ACP’s governance bodies

2min
page 214

References

6min
pages 202-206

8.1 Breakdown of ACP’s committed capital, by source

1min
page 208

Notes

2min
page 201

7.1 Financial reporting standards of select SIFs B7.7.1 Comprehensive sample of metrics disclosed in ISIF’s economic

2min
page 197

7.6 Core components of disclosure for a strategic investment fund

1min
page 196

mechanisms of disclosure

2min
page 195

Unique features of the transparency and disclosure framework for SIFs

2min
page 198

Legal and regulatory context

2min
page 192

Linaburg-Maduell Transparency Index for SWFs

2min
page 191

guidelines

2min
page 190

Key takeaways

2min
page 200

Introduction

1min
page 185

Global transparency and disclosure requirements

2min
page 186

principles for SWFs

5min
pages 187-188

Investment Fund Managers

2min
page 189

References

2min
pages 182-184

6.7 Investment exit: The case of Marguerite

2min
page 180

The NSIA-NIF example

2min
page 172

6.2 FONSIS: Originating investment opportunities as a project developer

2min
page 173

6.6 Exercising active ownership

2min
page 178

Investment exit

2min
page 179

6.2 NSIA-NIF investment evaluation process and responsibilities

2min
page 175

Investment origination

2min
page 171

6.1 Phases of the SIF’s investment process

1min
page 170

References

3min
pages 167-168

Introduction

1min
page 169

Notes

9min
pages 164-166

Risk management framework: Key concepts Components of the risk management framework

5min
pages 157-158

and key actors

7min
pages 160-162

Key takeaways

2min
page 163

5.4 Investor protection provisions in shareholder agreements

8min
pages 154-156

infrastructure SIFs

7min
pages 150-152

5.1 Investment policy–related guidance within the Santiago Principles

5min
pages 142-143

Components of the investment policy

10min
pages 145-148

Key actors in the investment management framework

2min
page 144

References

3min
pages 138-140

4.7 Typical terms of a limited partnership agreement

6min
pages 133-134

4.5 Indicative RFP content for external manager selection

2min
page 131

4.7 Recruiting an external manager for a SIF: PINAI

5min
pages 129-130

4.6 Staffing the NIIF

2min
page 128

equivalent structure

10min
pages 124-127

4.4 SIF board functions

11min
pages 120-123

Key decision-making bodies and their functions

5min
pages 108-109

Authority

5min
pages 111-112

4.2 Public sponsor ownership functions in a SIF

8min
pages 113-115

4.3 Definition of an independent board member

2min
page 116

4.4 Safeguards for government representatives on SIF boards

2min
page 117

Introduction

1min
page 105

References

5min
pages 101-104

Notes

6min
pages 99-100

Private agreements in setting up a SIF Applicability of other domestic, supranational, and

2min
page 90

3.7 National security legislation: The US example

3min
page 97

3.9 Other laws affecting SIF cross-border activities

3min
page 96

3.6 Legal structure and domicile for a variety of SIFs

2min
page 88

3.5 Most popular domiciles

2min
page 89

3.5 Examples of legal structures used by global SIFs

2min
page 86

3.4 SIFs formed entirely under commercial law

5min
pages 84-85

3.3 Common features of primary SIF legislation: Operational elements

7min
pages 81-83

3.3 Specifying the transfer of state assets into a SIF with the SIF law

2min
page 78

FONSIS

5min
pages 76-77

References

5min
pages 68-70

Notes

6min
pages 66-67

Introduction

1min
page 71

3.1 Santiago Principles: Key legal principles for SWFs

2min
page 72

2.6 Preliminary study for the Green Investment Bank, United Kingdom

3min
page 64

Preparatory studies to establish a SIF

2min
page 63

Limitations of a SIF

2min
page 59

Macrofiscal implications of a SIF

2min
page 57

2.4 Santiago Principles and macroeconomic implications of SWFs

2min
page 58

Challenges to establishing a SIF

2min
page 60

managers

2min
page 56

Issues to consider before establishing a SIF

2min
page 62

2.7 Illustrative list of strategic alliances between global SIFs and SWFs

2min
page 53

funds

2min
page 61

Double bottom line mandate

2min
page 45

2.4 SIF mandates, examples from case studies

2min
page 46

SIF ownership and management models

2min
page 42

2.5 Managing the DBL

2min
page 47

2.6 The additional value of SIFs: Case study examples

5min
pages 50-51

Structure

2min
page 34

2.2 Palestine Investment Fund

2min
page 52

Context

1min
page 27
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