Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors?

The research set out to examine the investment & economic suitability of Renewable Energy ("RE") assets for South African institutional investors. Data was collected through a series of structured and semi structured interviews and further triangulated and cross-checked through a thoro...

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Main Author: Molewa, Kholofelo
Other Authors: Biekpe, Nicholas
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25172
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-251722020-10-06T05:10:54Z Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors? Molewa, Kholofelo Biekpe, Nicholas McPherson, Sharron Development Finance The research set out to examine the investment & economic suitability of Renewable Energy ("RE") assets for South African institutional investors. Data was collected through a series of structured and semi structured interviews and further triangulated and cross-checked through a thorough literature review of available policy documentation and academic literature. The limitations concerning this study have much to do with the nascent nature of the renewable energy program and therefore the lack of availability of hard economic and financial historical data. Further there is very little academic literature on renewable energy investing pertaining to a South African context. To mitigate some of the risks presented by the aforementioned limitations, interviewees were mainly subject-matter experts on the issue of RE investing and therefore provided key insights through a series of structured and semi-structured interviews. Within a South Africa specific context, there is very little academic material dealing with RE or infrastructure finance and investment. The implications of this study are therefore crucial in helping set the basis for the development of future theories around this and related topics. Interview discussions and review of other material revealed key themes, which allowed the researcher to discern some key findings: Firstly, there's a cautious but emerging consensus that the economic and financial features of RE assets make them suitable (and even attractive) for consideration in asset class allocation decisions. Further and related: the merging view was that RE assets could offer the benefit of both reducing risk and increasing expected returns within a given portfolio. A key related sub-theme and finding was the need to establish a common set of nomenclature, which would describe and ultimately help benchmark the economic and financial features of RE assets – the ability to benchmark financial and economic data being a key aspect of the asset allocation framework. Secondly data collected indicated that there is strong institutional support for government's energy policy and how it has been implemented to date. Thirdly, in working out the suitability of RE assets investors tend to default to comparable proxies such as bonds, equities, REITS. The emerging theme coming out of the data is that RE assets are likely to resemble fixed income assets in their financial and economic characteristics. Lastly, for all the emerging consensus in support of the government's RE policy, many investors seem to hedge their optimism and remain generally unsure and in some instances sceptical of the overall sustainability of the program, citing the fact that there are still too many unknowns regarding RE assets and their respective futures. This research therefore has some useful practical applications for institutional investors, hopefully further demystifying a sector that could be a lynchpin of the South African economy for some time to come. 2017-09-14T12:16:23Z 2017-09-14T12:16:23Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25172 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Commerce Research of GSB
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Development Finance
spellingShingle Development Finance
Molewa, Kholofelo
Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors?
description The research set out to examine the investment & economic suitability of Renewable Energy ("RE") assets for South African institutional investors. Data was collected through a series of structured and semi structured interviews and further triangulated and cross-checked through a thorough literature review of available policy documentation and academic literature. The limitations concerning this study have much to do with the nascent nature of the renewable energy program and therefore the lack of availability of hard economic and financial historical data. Further there is very little academic literature on renewable energy investing pertaining to a South African context. To mitigate some of the risks presented by the aforementioned limitations, interviewees were mainly subject-matter experts on the issue of RE investing and therefore provided key insights through a series of structured and semi-structured interviews. Within a South Africa specific context, there is very little academic material dealing with RE or infrastructure finance and investment. The implications of this study are therefore crucial in helping set the basis for the development of future theories around this and related topics. Interview discussions and review of other material revealed key themes, which allowed the researcher to discern some key findings: Firstly, there's a cautious but emerging consensus that the economic and financial features of RE assets make them suitable (and even attractive) for consideration in asset class allocation decisions. Further and related: the merging view was that RE assets could offer the benefit of both reducing risk and increasing expected returns within a given portfolio. A key related sub-theme and finding was the need to establish a common set of nomenclature, which would describe and ultimately help benchmark the economic and financial features of RE assets – the ability to benchmark financial and economic data being a key aspect of the asset allocation framework. Secondly data collected indicated that there is strong institutional support for government's energy policy and how it has been implemented to date. Thirdly, in working out the suitability of RE assets investors tend to default to comparable proxies such as bonds, equities, REITS. The emerging theme coming out of the data is that RE assets are likely to resemble fixed income assets in their financial and economic characteristics. Lastly, for all the emerging consensus in support of the government's RE policy, many investors seem to hedge their optimism and remain generally unsure and in some instances sceptical of the overall sustainability of the program, citing the fact that there are still too many unknowns regarding RE assets and their respective futures. This research therefore has some useful practical applications for institutional investors, hopefully further demystifying a sector that could be a lynchpin of the South African economy for some time to come.
author2 Biekpe, Nicholas
author_facet Biekpe, Nicholas
Molewa, Kholofelo
author Molewa, Kholofelo
author_sort Molewa, Kholofelo
title Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors?
title_short Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors?
title_full Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors?
title_fullStr Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors?
title_full_unstemmed Is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for South African non-bank institutional investors?
title_sort is renewable engery a suitable investment choice for south african non-bank institutional investors?
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25172
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