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Italian Cooperative Finance: A deeper look

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Title: Italian Cooperative Finance: A deeper look


1
Italian Cooperative FinanceA deeper look
  • Noémi Giszpenc
  • Ownership Associates, Inc.
  • April 2007

2
Follow-Up to Questions
  • Fees paid to National Federations
  • Other federations are similar to Legacoop, i.e.,
    ask for a fraction of a percent of sales annually
  • In regions where the consumer Coop is strong (as
    in Liguria), it represents about half of payments
    to the Legacoop federation
  • Overall, it represents about a quarter
  • Indivisible reserves what are they and how do
    they function?
  • After paying interests, patronage, dividends,
    taxes, etc., the rest goes into indivisible
    reserves.
  • Often this does not amount to much, especially in
    early years, necessitating other sources of
    funding for investment in growth.

3
Follow-up to Questions (cont.)
  • Indivisible reserves (cont.)
  • The percentage of profit going to indivisible
    reserves can vary. (About 87 on average.)
  • Historically, Italian coops have paid very little
    patronage, putting most profits into reserves.
  • Profits put in indivisible reserves were 100
    tax-free from 1977 until 2002.
  • Now 70 of profits can go tax-free into
    indivisible reserves for prevalently mutual
    cooperatives
  • 30 can go for non-prevalently mutual coops
  • At present and in the future, the accumulated
    indivisible reserves are not sufficient for
    investment in growth.

4
Follow-up to Questions (cont.)
  • What are the typical terms of Coopfond?
  • Typically a little more favorable than those of a
    bank--on average below Euribor rates
  • However, there are more controls, which can be
    burdensome
  • Banks rarely take an equity position in coops, as
    the Coopfond does
  • While Coopfond is an investor, it asks that
    profits be returned to indivisible reserves
  • When the coop buys back the shares from Coopfond,
    the conditions are concessionary, usually
    anchored to the rate of inflation.
  • This is similar to how the other 3 coop
    development funds function

5
Whence Coop Financing?
  • Accumulated indivisible reserves (retained
    earnings), largely untaxed
  • Reinvested patronage dividends
  • Member loans
  • Credit from banks debt. (short-term 85)
  • Special consortia help coops interface with banks
  • Credit from suppliers
  • CCFS reallocates excess liquid capital
  • Since 1992 law
  • 3 of profits to development funds,
  • and supporting (non-mutual) members

6
Italian Coop Finance Historical Moments
  • 50s and 60s Financing Troubles. Legacoop coops
  • wanted to pursue regional and national strategies
    for growth
  • Whereas Confcooperative coops were more focused
    on small landholders and businesses
  • But they were unfairly denied credit by banks
  • Not to mention cash-strapped by late-paying
    public entities
  • Turned to self-financing
  • This and short-term debt mainstays of coop
    investment
  • Confcoop had mutual banks, but Legacoop was
    denied authorization to constitute credit bodies
  • 1962 Group of Bologna coops buys Unipol
    insurance
  • 1993 Watershed moment for promoting coops
  • Before law founding 3 funds, promotion pursued
    through real, nonfinancial services
    (consultation, training, and assistance). There
    was little financing, only in special cases.

7
Italian Coop Finance Member Loans
  • most efficient instrument for Legacoop coops
  • Supported development of consumer Coop, housing
    coops, worker coops, etc.
  • Service to members better return on small
    savings than from bank
  • Favored loyalty-building of member-client
  • But only really useful for coops w/ many, many
    members, which are exceptional

8
Coopfond Areas of Activity Two "characteristic"
areas
  • "Promotion" providing risk capital to new coops
    new companies controlled by coops.
  • Other allies are Unipol Merchant for complex
    operations (MA, IPO, etc.), local and sectoral
    funds.
  • For small and medium worker coops and social
    coops there is CFI, a source of private equity
  • "Development" providing credit to disadvantaged
    areas (mostly the South) existing social coops.
  • Other instruments P.I.CO Leasing for leasing
    real estate and Fondo Unipol Banca for
    extraordinary investments.

9
Coopfond Areas of Activity Other Areas
  • "Stable participation" support for institutions
    that sustain coop activity
  • local and national public financing
  • Consorzi Fidi (Confidi) networks that improve
    the credit profile of cooperatives vis-a-vis
    banks
  • these consortia provide guarantees for a certain
    percentage of the amount loaned to members, and
    negotiate better terms for members from banks.
  • "4 fund" financing for studies and research on
    coop themes, training and communication on coop
    culture.

10
Coopfond Investment Process
  • Coopfond does not assume entrepreneurial
    responsibility directly assumes only minority
    positions.
  • Preliminary investigation of projects proponents
    arrive after having obtained a first approval
    from local associations.
  • Nevertheless on average only 1 in 4 proposals are
    approved.
  • Often during the first technical interviews the
    proponents themselves withdraw their projects,
    due to a better idea of the risks involved.

11
Coopfond Process Evaluation
  • Every project evaluated based on the history of
    the proponents
  • because at the center of a cooperative project
    there are always people.
  • Then SWOT analysis of the market
    (opportunities/threats) and of the positioning of
    the new initiative (strengths/weaknesses)
  • Michael Porter-style merchant banking analysis.
  • Then evaluation of the cooperative interest
  • Mix between competitive advantage possible with
    the internal cooperative market and the social
    relevance of the initiative.

12
Coopfond Project Phases
  • 1st contact preliminary evaluation of
    entrepreneurial idea
  • pre-evaluation phase of analytic evaluation of
    the documentation provided by proponent
  • evaluation phase of checking and validating the
    project. All projects brought to the Board of
    Directors are given an evaluation rating.
  • contract phase of formalizing of financing and
    agreements among members.

13
Coopfond Project Phases
  • management and conclusion phase of monitoring
    the agreed upon business plan until the end of
    the participation or the definitive payback of
    the financing.
  • After the disbursement, the life of the financed
    cooperative is followed by monitoring and
    annually it gets assigned a rating.
  • In difficult cases an inspection function seeks
    to correct the management errors of the project
    leaders.

14
Coopfond in Detail
  • Coopfond is a non-speculative, non-profit seeking
    organization.
  • Therefore rate of return on capital is not
    relevant
  • Operationally, aims to contain costs and maintain
    the integrity of the cumulated 3 fund
  • 261 million accumulated 1993-2005. About 2/3 of
    the contributions come from the 50 biggest
    cooperatives, from about 15,000 Legacoop member
    coops.
  • Of 430 accepted projects, 42 were abandoned
  • So far projects that have paid back are
  • 49 (of 183 total) equity projects for 20.9
    million euro
  • 22 (of 136 total) credit projects for 40.9
    million euro
  • 8 (of 69 total) stable projects for 28.8
    million euro
  • Pure start-ups have the greatest failure rate.

15
Coopfond Leverage
  • On average risk capital investments by Coopfond
    have mobilized investments of about 5 times the
    value
  • I.e., have mobilized 1,500 million euro with
    direct financing of 300 million euro
  • Beside investing in Confidi, public financing,
    and CCFS (its a member), Coopfond has BIG
    investment in Unipol
  • has invested 30 of its total endowment in the
    Unipol group
  • with the objective of having a big banking and
    insurance group to work with
  • Also, dividends allow the fund to stay in the
    black

16
More on CCFS
  • From 1960s. 2004 Fincooper was merged into CCFS
  • Consorzio Cooperativo Finanziario per lo Sviluppo
  • Excess liquidity from coops used to fund
    development projects of other coops
  • Working capital
  • Advantageous credit for social coops
  • often in partnership with Coopfond
  • Pooling credit with other banks for medium term
    (3-7 year) loans
  • Medium to long-term mortgages
  • Project financing
  • a way for coops to get more public contracts
  • Loan guarantees
  • Consultation for Financing

17
More on Unipol
  • Got its start in the 60s. Red coops had limited
    access to credit and insurance
  • Wanted insurance because understood that it would
    be great to use reserves for investment
  • Finally bought a spin-off car insurance agency of
    troubled car company in 1962
  • Grew rapidly, during Italys golden age
  • Has invested in the coop movement as well as
    associations of workers and unions and small
    business associations
  • Now offers members of these associations
    discounts on insurance products

18
More on Unipol (cont.)
  • Suffered a setback in the summer of 2005 when
    attempted a takeover of BNL (Banca Nazionale di
    Lavoro) with improper methods.
  • But negotiated a deal with Gruppo BNP Paribas for
    it to buy BNL and for Unipol to become BNPs
    privileged Italian partner for selling insurance
  • BNP also bought 4.5 of FINSOE from Holmo
  • And Unipol still on the lookout for ways to
    expand into the banking sector.
  • Coopfond considers this important for financing
    coops

19
Unipol Ownership Structure
Strategic members
20
Just for Information Italian Cooperative Laws
  • 1947 Basevi Law
  • No dividend payments on capital over a legal
    limit
  • No distribution of reserves to members
  • Devolution of assets in case of liquidation
  • 1971 Little Reform
  • No transforming coops into ordinary companies
  • 1977 no taxation of indivisible reserves

21
More Laws
  • 1985 Marcora Law
  • Creation of Foncooper at the BNL for modernizing
    coops
  • Founding of a fund for job-saving (buying
    businesses in difficulty or making new ones)
  • Combined Confcooperative, Lega, Agci, and 3 major
    labor unions to form CFI (Compagnia Finanziaria
    Industriale)
  • 1991 creation of social cooperatives
  • Enterprises without profit motive, for social
    purposes, similar to our non-profits
  • 1992 3 profit contribution to devt funds

22
Yet More Laws
  • 1992 creation of supporting members who can
    invest money in coops
  • Have right of pre-emption during liquidation
  • Have right of up to 5 votes, but collectively not
    more than 1/3 of all votes
  • OR coops could emit preferred stock.
  • Supporting members/preferred stock cannot earn
    more than 2 more than other members
  • 2002 Distinction between prevalently mutual and
    non
  • I.e. most business conducted with members or not
  • Non-prevalently mutual only can put aside 30 of
    profits into tax-free reserve. Prevalent 70.

23
Sources Used
  • La promozione cooperativa, M. Bulgarelli and M.
    Viviani, eds. 2006
  • 2004-2005 Bilancio sociale Relazione
    dellAmministratore Delegato Marco Bulgarelli,
    Coopfond, February 2006.
  • Verso una nuova teoria economica della
    cooperazione, E. Mazzoli and S. Zamagni, eds.
    2005.
  • Primo rapporto sulle imprese cooperative,
    Unioncamere and Istituto Tagliacarne, February
    2005.
  • www.unipol.it
  • www.ccfs.it
  • www.cfi.it
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