Teo Yian Ping, Regional Treasurer for Shell Asia Pacific (APAC), is based in Singapore and leads Shell treasury’s activities across the region. She manages a team of 14 people providing liquidity management, FX, cash management, funding and treasury advice to Shell’s APAC businesses.
The team is supported by Shell Business Operations (SBO) staff across the globe. Yian Ping has been in this leadership position for four years and treasury is leading the way in treasury and finance strategy across APAC and into other emerging markets. Under her leadership, treasury has demonstrated an ongoing focus on efficiency, further optimising treasury and finance processes as part of a global transformation initiative to extract more value from banking services.
At the same time, the team has established a strong focus on business partnering and has embedded itself within the business to understand their priorities and challenges and identify macro risks that could affect the continuity of the businesses. In addition, the team constantly monitors market developments and connects with its banks to explore possible solutions. Lastly, the team works in close coordination with the Group treasury teams in London to share business needs, challenges and opportunities and tap into their insights of global best practices and vice versa, transferring best practices in APAC to other regions.
There are two points of treasury excellence to highlight which were sponsored by Teo Yian Ping and supported by Shell’s regional treasury team in strong alignment with the Group Treasury teams in London and its banking partners.
Liquidity management excellence: domestic and cross-border sweeping with an interest optimisation overlay, Shell operates a unique and highly efficient liquidity structure that not only ensures efficient centralisation of local liquidity but also significantly enhances returns on local currencies. This liquidity management excellence is underpinned by the following pillars:
Process excellence: Teo Yian Ping and her regional treasury team, in conjunction with the SBO teams, have also pushed the envelope of developing process excellence and best practices within Shell and the SBOs in Kuala Lumpur, Chennai, Manila, and Krakow.
Many of the APAC countries faced lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic. Teo Yian Ping’s team had to rethink the processes to manage cash flow forecasting and the execution of FX deals to ensure robust treasury operations during this crisis. Where possible, some of the cash forecasting activities were brought forward by a day to allow some FX executions to be done early on the following day. The team also revised the tolerance limits to accept greater volatility and created higher cash and borrowing buffers.
The team overcame pandemic lockdown constraints on wet-ink signatures and documentation, working with its banks to quickly accept e-signing and even leveraged the opportunity to permanently entrench e-filing or e-signing across the region wherever possible. In addition, they worked with core banks to ensure sufficient backup liquidity and adopted digital payment and receipt solutions. They extended the short-term borrowing to longer tenures, built in higher buffers and safety margins to pre-empt any liquidity surprises, and regularly tested the unsecured facilities to ensure they are available and converted some of the uncommitted facilities to committed facilities. This ensured the businesses could continue to operate seamlessly even during the pandemic crunch.
2020 was supposed to be a banner year for Pilipinas Shell Petroleum Corporation (PSPC), coming from its previous year milestone of 105 years in the country. But 2020 proved to be a perfect storm for the local energy industry. This started with the Taal Volcano eruption, followed by the OPEC and Russia price war, and then the COVID-19 pandemic which culminated with the longest running government-imposed quarantine in the world. All these factors posed a significant strain in treasury operations.
Logistics were affected, as banking hours and manual cash management activities (cheque movements) were severely curtailed threatening cash conversion. But the bigger responsibility came from the need to carefully manage cash pressures to meet the demands of suppliers, tax authorities, banks and shareholders against a backdrop of a significant drop in revenues, delayed trade collections and very tight market liquidity. For Shell, non-payment of obligations to stakeholders meant not only a disruption of operations but would have also had an adverse impact on their license to operate.
It was therefore critical for PSPC to maintain a reliable handle on the cash conversion cycle by aligning and coordinating the full ecosystem of its cash and treasury activities.
Shell nimbly adapted to the new reality, where the organisation reinforced its financial resilience by managing cash and liquidity. Some of the key innovations undertaken include:
The implementation of a highly innovative cash and liquidity strategy allowed PSPC to demonstrate its agility and financial resilience as a publicly listed company.
“Enabled by multi-functional collaboration, PSPC has turned the challenges posed by the pandemic into opportunities to evolve our processes and systems to thrive in a changed economy,” says Rey Abilo, CFO, PSPC.
The regional team in Singapore worked with their Philippines colleagues to manage the challenging year in the Philippines. It’s a true collaboration and close business partnering that involved many people.
In the four years that Teo Yian Ping has been leading regional treasury, the treasury centre has become a true centre of excellence where the treasury team has been actively pursuing new initiatives to improve liquidity management, adopt new collection and payment solutions, proactively manage the risks in the APAC markets and getting the banking partners to provide better solutions and stronger support.
Shell’s high performing and professional treasury team successfully navigates the complexity and restrictive nature in most markets across APAC. They have been preceptive and proactive in partnering with the business to identify possible gaps and opportunities and then working across internal and external teams to deliver the solutions. The team stands out by actively managing treasury risks during the COVID-19 pandemic and ensuring business continuity in the region. This has enabled Shell not only to extract more value from their banking relationships, but to also to future proof the business for growth and innovation going forward.