SL drawing enough foreign capital, Cabraal tells Bloomberg

Wednesday, 10 September 2014 00:33 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

Sri Lanka is luring enough foreign capital to meet its growth targets even as the US increases pressure on the country to address allegations of human rights violations, Central Bank Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal said. The US has sponsored three United Nations resolutions in as many years, calling on Sri Lanka to address alleged violations of international law committed during its three-decade civil war. Cabraal, who wants to more than double Sri Lanka’s $ 67 billion economy by 2020, said that while pressure from human rights groups has put a “damper” on some investor interest, the country is still meeting its goals. “We don’t think there is going to be any risk of these issues going to a level in which there can be major complications for the country,” Cabraal said in an interview at Bloomberg’s headquarters in New York last week. “It’s only a matter of time before that story will not have traction.” Sri Lanka’s economy will expand 7.8% this year, said Cabraal, who aims to increase Gross Domestic Product to $ 150 billion by 2020. To reach that goal, the country needs to achieve 8% growth a year, fuelled by investments amounting to 33% of GDP, with 5% of that coming from foreign investors, he said. The Sri Lanka Colombo Stock Exchange All Share Index (CSEALL) has climbed more than 19% this year. It rose to the highest level since June 2011 yesterday. The country’s stocks, which have a total market value of $ 21.6 billion, are rallying as falling interest rates bolster corporate profits. There have been five initial public offerings this year, and three more are expected, Vajira Kulatilaka, Chairman of the Colombo Stock Exchange, said last week in New York. The biggest hurdle to boosting investment is building companies to a size large enough to attract foreign buyers, he said. Foreign direct investment in Sri Lanka was about 1.5% of GDP in 2012-2013, which is low relative to both its emerging and frontier-market peers, Tamara Henderson, an economist at Bloomberg LP in Singapore, wrote in a report 4 September. The Central Bank has pushed smaller banks and financial companies to consolidate, helping attract investments from foreign private equity firms such as TPG Capital Management LP, Cabraal said. The Bourse plans to offer equity derivatives by 2016 and is working on creating exchange-traded funds and real estate investment trusts to draw more investment and bolster inflows, Kulatilaka said. Deepening economic ties with China have given the country a cushion against measures aimed at forcing cooperation with the human rights probe. The US isn’t considering sanctions “at this point,” State Department official Nisha Desai Biswal said in February.

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