“If the cost of debt is 14%, the weighted average cost of capital could increase to as high as 18-19%, as the cost of equity is also likely to rise due to the increased financial risk to equity holders,” Wu Yan Bin, chief financial officer at Summit Power International, explains with the precision of someone who has watched competitors struggle with Bangladesh’s punitive borrowing costs. “Cost of equity may need to be around the mid-twenties for it to be attractive to any investor. If your equity IRR is in the mid-twenties, it’s simple economics; your tariff needs to be high.”
Summit Group’s 2016 corporate restructuring solved this arithmetic brutally. While domestic independent power producers remained trapped by Taka financing at 14% interest rates, Summit Power International’s Singapore incorporation unlocked US dollar funding at rates that created an unbridgeable competitive moat.
Regulatory Arbitrage Creates Market Dominance
Few developing market companies have successfully exploited the gap between domestic and international capital costs. Summit Group’s approach required International Finance Corporation backing—$175.5 million from IFC, IFC Asset Management Company, and EMA Power—to establish credibility that pure Bangladeshi entities couldn’t achieve.
Singapore’s AAA sovereign rating became Summit’s rating proxy. International banks began assessing credit risk through Singapore’s regulatory lens rather than Bangladesh’s frontier market constraints. Wu Yan Bin describes the transaction as “the largest single foreign investment into the country at that point in time,” but the strategic value lay elsewhere: permanent cost advantages that compound over 20-year project lifecycles.
Standard Chartered Bank, Clifford Capital, and Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation established relationships impossible under domestic corporate structures. Swiss Export Credit Agency’s 14-year financing for Summit’s Meghnaghat II project demonstrated how offshore incorporation could access European development finance—tenure lengths that local competitors cannot secure.
Merit Order Economics Reveal Competitive Distance
Bangladesh’s electricity dispatch system ranks generators by marginal cost, creating transparent performance metrics. Summit’s plants consistently occupy top positions among independent power producers, a direct result of financing cost differentials that translate into tariff advantages.
“At any point in time, if you compare our projects, it was always at the lowest cost and the most competitive rate that we submitted those projects and signed those projects,” notes Ayesha Khan, managing director and CEO of Summit Power International. Market data supports this claim: Summit’s 590-megawatt Meghnaghat II plant, operational since April 2024, secured tariff rates that domestic competitors using Taka financing cannot match.
GE’s H-class turbine technology anchors the facility, but financing structure determines profitability. Competitors face weighted average cost of capital approaching 20%, while Summit’s offshore funding enables project returns at significantly lower tariff levels—a mathematical advantage that regulatory changes cannot eliminate.
Foreign Partnerships Demand Offshore Structure
Japan’s JERA acquired 22% of Summit Power International for $330 million during 2019, but the transaction required Singapore’s corporate governance framework. “If SPI were to remain completely within Bangladesh, it wouldn’t have been so easy or straightforward for JERA to obtain their approvals to invest,” Wu Yan Bin explains. Japanese utility regulations favor established regulatory jurisdictions over emerging market exposures.
General Electric’s partnership structure illustrates technology transfer economics. Beyond turbine supply, GE holds 20% equity stakes across multiple Summit projects with 22-year maintenance commitments—risk allocation that domestic financing rarely supports. Manufacturer-operator alignment creates operational efficiencies while sharing long-term performance risks.
Mitsubishi Corporation’s involvement with Summit’s LNG infrastructure followed identical logic. Floating storage and regasification units require specialized technical knowledge and substantial capital commitments that Singapore’s regulatory environment made feasible for Japanese partners.
Due Diligence as Competitive Barrier
International project finance imposes oversight requirements that function as quality controls. “To pay an invoice to a contractor, this has to be certified by the lender’s technical advisor that indeed those milestones have been met before lenders are even willing to disperse funds,” Wu Yan Bin details. Such mechanisms distinguish Summit Group from domestic competitors operating under less stringent financial supervision.
Dividend distributions follow “cash flow waterfall” structures where debt service and coverage ratios must be satisfied before shareholder returns. Bangladesh Bank approval governs foreign currency remittances, adding regulatory layers that create transparency standards exceeding typical local practices.
Compliance costs appear burdensome but generate credibility premiums with international lenders. Access to lower-cost capital more than compensates for additional oversight expenses—a trade-off that purely domestic competitors cannot evaluate.
Market Transformation Through Capital Efficiency
Bangladesh’s electrification rate increased from 20% during 1997 to near-universal access today. Founder Muhammed Aziz Khan attributes such transformation partly to competitive electricity pricing that made grid expansion economically viable. “We had to move from an agrarian society to an industrial society and electricity is a fundamental requirement for that,” Aziz Khan explains.
Summit’s financing advantage creates sustained market leadership. While competitors using 14% Taka financing face escalating capital costs, US dollar funding provides currency stability and predictable debt service that enables long-term capacity planning.
Ayesha Khan frames the structural challenge: “What Bangladesh has is a lot of opportunities and a lot of growth. But what it lacks is governance and what it lacks is a mature financial market, both of which are very much necessary to do long-term infrastructure projects.” Summit’s Singapore incorporation bridges this gap through regulatory arbitrage.
Capital efficiency optimization remains central to operations. “We need to continuously work on decreasing our weighted average cost of capital. Our aim is to bring our weighted average cost of capital down. That is what makes it possible to provide a low price for electricity,” Khan emphasizes.
Summit Group’s corporate restructuring proved that developing market infrastructure companies could transcend domestic capital constraints via sophisticated jurisdictional planning. Economic benefits—measured by hundreds of millions from foreign investment and sustained tariff competitiveness—validate Aziz Khan’s execution of complex cross-border financial engineering.