Glossary
Browse OHUASI research and resources in this collection.
This index is structured for institutional review: scan the priority routes first, then filter the full corpus by asset, country, source class, corridor, framework, or advisory use case. Each listed page carries canonical metadata, source-backed positioning, and related research links.
Use this page as a controlled navigation layer rather than a generic archive: it groups public research into a route that supports fast source review, memo drafting, and follow-up investigation. The goal is quick orientation without weakening the underlying evidence trail.
Priority routes
Asset Cash-Flow Quality: Institutional Underwriting StandardCapital-Market Absorption: Definition for Frontier ListingsExit and Enforcement Architecture for African Strategic AssetsInstitutional Capital Readiness for African Strategic AssetsPost-Transfer Governance: Why Privatization Does Not End at ClosingCollection index
OHUASI defines asset cash-flow quality for strategic assets, covering recurring revenue, collectability, subsidies, capex, liabilities, tariffs, and.
Asset perimeter defines the rights, liabilities, contracts, licenses, assets, employees, and obligations included or excluded from a privatization or.
OHUASI defines capital-market absorption for frontier listings, including market depth, liquidity, custody, settlement, disclosure, investor base, and offer.
A capital pathway is the route through which a strategic African asset moves from state ownership, concession, or reform into investable capital formation.
Definition of concession termination compensation in PPP and infrastructure contracts, including public authority default, private default, force majeure.
Corridor finance explained for investors: how transport, trade, infrastructure, guarantees, and development finance combine in projects such as the Lobito.
Development policy loan explained for investors: how it supports reform, how it differs from project finance, and how to use it in Angola investment analysis.
OHUASI defines exit and enforcement architecture for African strategic assets, including liquidity, sale rights, repatriation, arbitration, insurance, and.
Definition of expropriation versus regulatory transfer risk in African strategic assets, including creeping expropriation, licenses, tariffs, concessions.
Definition of a golden share in privatization, including state veto rights, strategic assets, minority shareholder risk, public-interest controls, and.
OHUASI defines institutional capital readiness for African strategic assets, including disclosure, governance, liquidity, rights, settlement, FX, and exit.
Policy-based guarantee explained for investors: how it differs from a project guarantee, why it matters for Angola reform finance, and what diligence.
Political duration risk measures whether an African strategic asset can retain legal, regulatory, fiscal, and public support across political cycles and macro.
Political risk insurance explained for investors: what it can cover, what it does not cover, why MIGA matters, and how to use PRI in Angola and corridor due.
OHUASI defines post-transfer governance in privatization, including board rights, minority protections, disclosure, related parties, dividends, and.
Privatization perimeter defines the official scope, procedure, stake, rights, and obligations of a privatization process before asset-level diligence begins.
OHUASI defines regulatory transfer risk in African privatization, including approvals, licenses, concessions, foreign ownership, sector regulators, and.
OHUASI explains settlement mechanics in sovereign-linked asset transfer, including payment currency, approvals, closing conditions, custody, FX, and delivery.
A sovereign-linked asset transfer is a transaction where state authority, public policy, regulation, or sovereign ownership materially shapes asset.
OHUASI defines sovereign settlement risk in strategic asset transfer, covering payment, approvals, FX, state obligations, closing conditions, and delivery.
OHUASI defines strategic asset bankability for African capital formation, including transfer architecture, cash flow, regulation, valuation, governance, and.
Trade finance intermediary explained: how banks and eligible institutions distribute trade finance, why Afreximbank uses intermediaries, and what investors.
OHUASI defines transfer architecture for strategic asset transfer, including legal basis, asset perimeter, procedure, rights, settlement, governance, and.
OHUASI defines transferability of rights for strategic assets, including licenses, concessions, spectrum, land, routes, mining rights, approvals, and change.
OHUASI defines transparency of valuation in privatization, including financials, liabilities, capex, contracts, valuation methods, disclosure, and price.