OHUASI Academy

How to Read a Privatization Program Like an Institutional Underwriter

Source-backed researchStrategic asset underwritingCapital formation lens

Briefing position

To read a privatization program like an institutional underwriter, start with the legal basis, asset perimeter, procedure, valuation transparency, transferability, settlement, FX, and exit rights.

To read a privatization program like an institutional underwriter, start with the legal basis, asset perimeter, procedure, valuation transparency, transferability, settlement, FX, and exit rights.

A privatization program is not a list of opportunities. It is a transfer architecture. The analyst’s job is to determine whether the program can convert state-held assets into bankable instruments for institutional capital.

Executive thesis

Most weak privatization analysis begins with the asset list. Strong privatization analysis begins before the asset list.

The underwriter asks what legal instrument authorizes the program, what assets are inside the perimeter, what assets are excluded, what procedure applies, what rights transfer, what disclosures exist, what market infrastructure is required, what settlement mechanics apply, and what exit architecture investors can rely on.

Only after those questions are answered should valuation begin.

Step 1: Identify the legal basis

Every privatization program should have a legal foundation.

The underwriter should identify:

  • The law, decree, regulation, resolution, or policy instrument.
  • The publication date.
  • The authority issuing the instrument.
  • The program period.
  • The assets included.
  • The assets excluded.
  • The procedures authorized.
  • The implementation bodies.
  • Any amendments to prior programs.

The legal basis tells investors whether the program is a political announcement or an executable transaction framework.

Step 2: Define the asset perimeter

The asset perimeter answers the question: what exactly is being transferred?

This may include:

  • Shares.
  • Minority stakes.
  • Controlling stakes.
  • Indirect holdings.
  • Operating companies.
  • Concessions.
  • Licenses.
  • Land-use rights.
  • Mining rights.
  • Spectrum rights.
  • Route rights.
  • Infrastructure assets.
  • Media operating rights.

A vague asset perimeter creates weak underwriting. A clear perimeter allows investors to isolate risks.

Step 3: Read the exclusions

Exclusions matter as much as inclusions.

When a major asset is excluded, the analyst should ask:

  • Was the asset removed because of timing?
  • Was it removed because of political sensitivity?
  • Was it removed because of IPO readiness?
  • Was it removed because restructuring is incomplete?
  • Was it removed because the state wants to retain control?
  • Does the exclusion change the program’s center of gravity?

In Angola’s PROPRIV 2026 cycle, Sonangol’s exclusion changes the analytical center of gravity by redirecting attention toward telecom, banking, aviation, mining, industrial, special-zone, and media assets.

Read: Why Sonangol’s Exclusion Changes the Underwriting Center of Gravity

Step 4: Classify the procedure

Privatization procedure shapes investor access and execution risk.

Common procedures include:

  • IPO or public offering.
  • Public tender.
  • Limited tender by prior qualification.
  • Auction.
  • Strategic sale.
  • Concession.
  • Management contract.
  • Project finance.
  • Blended-finance structure.

The procedure must match the asset.

A telecom company may be suitable for public offering if disclosure, market depth, and governance are credible. A sovereign airline may require limited tender because buyers need technical capability. A small minority bank stake may be more suitable for a targeted buyer than a broad listing.

Step 5: Identify the buyer universe

A privatization program should imply a buyer universe.

The underwriter should ask:

  • Is the program designed for domestic retail investors?
  • Domestic institutional investors?
  • Foreign institutional investors?
  • Strategic buyers?
  • Development finance institutions?
  • Existing shareholders?
  • Qualified operators?
  • Consortiums?

The buyer universe affects disclosure, pricing, timing, governance, and exit.

Step 6: Test transferability of rights

The asset may not be the company. The asset may be the rights attached to the company.

The underwriter must test:

  • Licenses.
  • Concessions.
  • Land rights.
  • Spectrum.
  • Mining rights.
  • Route rights.
  • Banking approvals.
  • Media operating rights.
  • Utility rights.
  • Environmental permits.
  • Foreign ownership rules.
  • Change-of-control approvals.

If rights do not transfer, value may not transfer.

Step 7: Demand valuation transparency

Valuation transparency requires evidence.

Investors need:

  • Audited financial statements.
  • Liability schedules.
  • Capex plans.
  • Revenue breakdown.
  • Contract summaries.
  • Ownership structure.
  • Regulatory obligations.
  • Tax exposure.
  • Related-party transactions.
  • Legal claims.
  • Environmental obligations.
  • Comparable transactions or market benchmarks.

A privatization without valuation transparency is not institutional capital formation. It is a pricing dispute waiting to happen.

Step 8: Underwrite settlement mechanics

Settlement mechanics determine whether the transaction can close.

The underwriter should ask:

  • What currency is used?
  • Where is payment made?
  • What approvals are conditions precedent?
  • Who receives proceeds?
  • Are debt offsets involved?
  • Are arrears or legacy obligations involved?
  • Are foreign investors permitted to participate?
  • How are shares, licenses, or rights transferred?
  • What happens if deadlines are missed?

Settlement risk is often where attractive transactions become difficult transactions.

Step 9: Analyze FX and repatriation

Foreign investors need to understand entry currency and exit currency.

The underwriter should ask:

  • Can capital enter lawfully?
  • Can dividends be converted?
  • Can sale proceeds be repatriated?
  • Can debt service be paid in hard currency?
  • Are central-bank approvals required?
  • Are local banks able to process flows?
  • Are there transfer restrictions?
  • Can political-risk insurance address currency risk?

Read: The Kwanza Question

Step 10: Apply the OHUASI STATE Matrix

STATE dimension Privatization-program question
Sovereign settlement risk Can the program close transactions cleanly under credible payment and approval mechanics?
Transferability of rights Do the value-driving rights move with the asset?
Asset cash-flow quality Is revenue visible, recurring, auditable, and resilient?
Transparency of valuation Are financials, liabilities, capex, contracts, and legal obligations clear?
Exit and enforcement architecture Can investors exit, repatriate returns, and enforce rights?

Read: The OHUASI STATE Matrix

Step 11: Place the program inside the Capital Formation Stack

A privatization program must be read inside a larger system:

  • Sovereign balance sheet.
  • Regulatory architecture.
  • Market infrastructure.
  • Asset quality.
  • Capital pathway.

Read: The OHUASI Capital Formation Stack

Step 12: Build the investor watchlist

A proper privatization note should end with a watchlist.

The watchlist should include:

  1. Official legal instruments and amendments.
  2. Tender documents and prospectuses.
  3. Transaction calendars.
  4. Asset financial statements.
  5. Regulatory approvals.
  6. FX and repatriation rules.
  7. Settlement mechanics.
  8. Market infrastructure readiness.
  9. Buyer qualification criteria.
  10. Post-transfer governance documents.

Common analytical mistakes

Mistake 1: Treating the asset list as the investment case

An asset list is not an investment case. It is only the start of underwriting.

Mistake 2: Ignoring excluded assets

Exclusions reveal political sensitivity, timing, IPO readiness, or strategic retention.

Mistake 3: Using country-risk labels instead of transaction risks

Generic country-risk language is too blunt. Investors need specific risks: settlement, rights, cash flow, valuation, FX, governance, and exit.

Mistake 4: Assuming IPO means liquidity

A public offering does not guarantee secondary liquidity. Market infrastructure must be underwritten.

Mistake 5: Forgetting exit currency

A local-currency asset may be attractive, but foreign investors need credible return conversion and repatriation.

Application to Angola PROPRIV 2026

Angola’s PROPRIV 2026 perimeter is a useful live case.

The program includes assets across telecom, finance, mining, aviation, industry, special economic zones, and media. That diversity means no single underwriting template works.

Unitel and Angola Telecom require telecom and public-market readiness analysis. TAAG requires airline restructuring analysis. ENDIAMA requires mining governance analysis. SBA and BCA require banking and minority-stake analysis. ZEE requires land, utility, tenant, and corridor-demand analysis. Grupo Medianova and TV Zimbo require media-governance analysis. Nova Cimangola requires industrial-margin visibility analysis.

Read: Angola PROPRIV 2026: Strategic Asset Underwriting Briefing

Final position

To read a privatization program like an institutional underwriter, do not begin with opportunity language. Begin with transfer architecture.

The program must show what is being transferred, under what authority, through which procedure, with what disclosure, under what settlement mechanics, with which rights, under which FX conditions, and through what exit path.

Only then can the market decide whether privatization is becoming capital formation.

Sources reviewed

Disclosure

OHUASI publishes institutional research and strategic analysis. This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, legal advice, tax advice, a securities recommendation, an offer, or a solicitation.

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Use these controlled entry points when the research moves from reading into committee review, source verification, or transaction screening.

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Disclosure. OHUASI publishes institutional research and strategic analysis for informational purposes. This article does not constitute investment advice, legal advice, a securities recommendation, an offer, or a solicitation. Readers should verify source materials and obtain professional advice for transaction-specific decisions.