Governments and private investors face the same core challenge in public-private partnership projects. In fact, the financial structures are complex, the contracts are long, and the risks are hard to allocate without the right expertise. Without strong PPP advisory services, projects stall at the feasibility stage or fail to reach financial close. At FinSphere Global, we provide specialist PPP advisory support across every stage of the project lifecycle.
We support public authorities, project sponsors, and lenders across the United States, United Kingdom, Europe, and GCC region. Specifically, our advisory covers financial modelling, project structuring, due diligence, and transaction support. Therefore, every client benefits from clear financial analysis and structured advice designed to get projects to close.
Structuring a PPP project or evaluating a concession? Speak to a FinSphere PPP advisor today.
Book a Free ConsultationA public-private partnership (PPP) is a long-term agreement between a government body and a private company. In this arrangement, the private sector finances, builds, and often operates a public asset or service. The government, in turn, pays the private party over time or allows it to collect user fees. As a result, PPP structures are widely used for infrastructure projects where public budgets are limited.
However, PPP projects are among the most complex transactions in project finance. For example, they involve long contract periods, multiple parties, and significant financial risk. According to the World Bank PPP Resource Centre, a strong framework is essential for PPP success. This covers the legal, financial, and regulatory environment. Therefore, specialist advisory support is critical from the very start.
PPP advisory covers financial, commercial, and transaction support. It guides a project from development and structuring through to close. In addition, advisors protect the interests of both public and private parties throughout the contract period.
Key global references on PPP frameworks include the World Bank PPP Resource Centre, the IFC Transaction Advisory, the European PPP Expertise Centre (EPEC), and the EBRD PPP Guidelines.
Every PPP project begins with a feasibility question. Is this project viable as a public-private structure? Can it generate enough revenue or public value to justify private sector involvement? Therefore, these questions must be answered before any procurement begins.
At FinSphere Global, we assess project feasibility from a financial and commercial perspective. Specifically, we evaluate three things. First, is the project bankable? Second, is the risk profile acceptable to lenders? Does the structure deliver value for money for the public authority?
Our feasibility work ensures that projects enter procurement on a sound basis. As a result, public authorities avoid committing resources to projects that are unlikely to attract private sector interest or reach financial close.
Robust financial models are the foundation of every successful PPP transaction. Specifically, lenders, equity investors, and public authorities all rely on the financial model to evaluate the project. Therefore, the model must be transparent, auditable, and stress-tested against a wide range of scenarios.
Our financial modelling team builds integrated PPP models that cover the full project lifecycle. Moreover, these models reflect the specific contractual structure of the PPP, including payment mechanisms and exit terms.
In addition, our models follow accepted standards for project finance. This gives lenders confidence in the outputs. Furthermore, we build models that are transferable to the client team for use throughout the project lifecycle.
Need a bankable PPP financial model or feasibility study? Our advisors are ready to support your project.
Speak to a PPP AdvisorAbove all, risk allocation is at the heart of every PPP structure. In fact, the way risks are allocated between the public authority, the private operator, and the lenders determines whether the project is bankable and whether it delivers value over the long term.
FinSphere Global's PPP advisory services help both public and private parties build risk frameworks that are fair, transparent, and aligned with market practice. Specifically, we ensure that each risk sits with the party best placed to manage it — which is the core principle of sound PPP design, as set out by the European PPP Expertise Centre.
The procurement phase is where PPP projects are won or lost. For instance, a poorly managed procurement process leads to low bidder interest, weak competition, and poor terms for the public authority. Similarly, private bidders without strong financial advisory support often price risk incorrectly and submit bids that destroy value.
FinSphere Global provides financial and commercial advisory support throughout the transaction process. We work with both public authorities and private sector participants. In this way, we ensure the process delivers a sound, sound financial outcome.
Our transaction advisory draws on experience across PPP procurement processes in the UK, Europe, GCC, and wider emerging markets. Therefore, clients benefit from both global best practice and local market knowledge.
Most PPP projects use a mix of senior debt, equity, and development finance. In some cases, government support is also included. Therefore, getting the capital structure right is essential. An over-leveraged project faces coverage breaches. An under-leveraged project leaves equity returns too low.
FinSphere Global advises on capital structure for PPP projects. Furthermore, we help clients prepare the financial information needed to engage with banks, development finance institutions, and equity co-investors.
For guidance on PPP financing frameworks, refer to the EBRD PPP Guidelines and the IFC Transaction Advisory, which together set out accepted standards for PPP financial structuring across global markets.
PPP projects in the GCC and emerging markets present a distinct set of challenges. For instance, regulatory frameworks are still developing in many markets. Similarly, local currency financing is often limited. In addition, political and sovereign risk must be carefully managed in the project structure.
FinSphere Global has advisory experience across GCC infrastructure projects. These include energy, transport, and social infrastructure. We understand the procurement environment in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, and the wider GCC. Therefore, we structure models and deliverables that meet the expectations of both government authorities and international lenders.
For cross-border projects, our advisory also integrates with FinSphere's tax advisory team. This ensures holding structures and financing arrangements are set up in a tax-efficient way.
Our PPP advisory services cover a broad range of infrastructure and public service sectors. Each sector has its own risk profile and financing needs. Therefore, we apply sector-specific knowledge alongside our core project finance expertise.
Transport and Toll Roads
Energy and Renewables
Water and Wastewater
Healthcare Facilities
Education Infrastructure
Urban and Smart City Projects
In addition, we support social infrastructure PPPs, including housing and government buildings. Furthermore, our financial modelling and M&A advisory capabilities complement our PPP practice for clients pursuing secondary market transactions in infrastructure assets.
Many advisory firms approach PPP from a legal or technical angle. At FinSphere Global, however, our PPP advisory services are grounded in financial analysis. Specifically, we focus on the numbers, the structure, and the financial viability of the project. These are the factors that determine whether a PPP succeeds.
What is a public-private partnership (PPP)?
A public-private partnership is a long-term contract between a government body and a private company. In this structure, the private sector finances, builds, and often operates a public asset or service. For example, common structures include Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT), Build-Own-Operate-Transfer (BOOT), and Design-Build-Finance-Operate-Maintain (DBFOM). Therefore, PPPs allow governments to deliver infrastructure without immediate public spending.
What does a PPP financial advisor do?
A PPP financial advisor supports both public and private parties throughout the project lifecycle. Specifically, this includes feasibility analysis, financial modelling, risk structuring, due diligence, procurement support, and financial close coordination. As a result, the advisor ensures that the project is financially sound, bankable, and structured to deliver the intended outcomes.
What is value for money (VfM) in PPP projects?
Value for money analysis compares the cost of delivering a project through a PPP structure against the cost of traditional public procurement. Specifically, it considers risk transfer, whole-life costs, and the efficiency benefits of private sector involvement. As a result, a positive VfM assessment justifies the choice of a PPP over direct government delivery.
What is the difference between a PPP and a concession?
A concession is a specific type of PPP where the private operator collects revenue directly from users, such as tolls on a road. In a broader PPP, the government may pay the private party based on availability or performance rather than user fees. In both cases, the structure involves a long-term contract, risk sharing, and private sector financing of public assets.
How long does a PPP project take to reach financial close?
Most PPP projects take between 18 months and 4 years from initial feasibility to financial close. Specifically, the timeline depends on project complexity, regulatory approvals, procurement length, and lender due diligence. Cross-border projects and those in markets with developing PPP frameworks typically take longer. Therefore, early engagement of advisors significantly reduces the risk of delays.
Which sectors are most suitable for PPP structures?
PPP structures work best in sectors where assets have a long useful life, demand is reasonably predictable, and revenue can be linked to performance or usage. Transport, energy, water, healthcare, and education are therefore the most common PPP sectors globally. In addition, social infrastructure PPPs are increasingly common in markets where governments face fiscal constraints.
Do you advise public authorities or private sector clients?
FinSphere Global provides PPP advisory services to both sides of the table. We advise public authorities on project structuring, feasibility, and procurement. In addition, we advise private sector project companies and sponsors on financial modelling, bid preparation, and transaction support. However, we do not act for both parties on the same transaction to protect the independence of our advice.
PPP projects reward early preparation. FinSphere Global is ready to support your project from the first feasibility question to financial close.
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