Sources of Private Capital: Advantages and Disadvantages
Sources of borrowed capital for MFIs
- savings mobilization from clients and others
- concessionary loans from foundations, multilateral banks
- international socially responsible investors (individuals and institutions)
- lending from affiliated apex organizations
- local commercial bank loans leveraged with outside guarantees
- line of credit or loans based on the MFI's portfolio
- limited partnerships or limited liability companies
- open-ended mutual funds; closed-end funds; venture capitalists
- debt instruments issued through national securities exchanges
- issuing financial instruments like CDs to obtain debt internationally
- issuing commercial paper backed by MFI portfolio
Advantages:
- local savers may provide less costly funds; an important habit among clients and the public is rewarded
- lower interest loans provide experience for MFI in borrowed funds
- local banks become familiar with MSE (micro and small enterprise) potentials
- access to larger sums more quickly based on track record
- allows longer term projections than grants
- provides a discipline similar to that of MSE clients
Disadvantages:
- higher financial costs force organizational decisions and changes
- substantial initial collateral requirements
- more risky as debt holders can force closure of MFI
- more tricky cash flow management as principal is repaid
- early negotiations require a new set of skills and contacts
- local banks may not be willing to be cooperative
- loans may be dollarized in an inflationary situation
- too many subsidized loans can retard move to market rate
Sources of equity investment for MFIs:
- donations to the MFI used for equity equity from retained earnings
- apex organizations or NGOs taking an ownership position
- multilateral bank investments
- open-ended and closed-end funds; private placement funds
- venture capital funds or enterprise funds equity or quasi-equity investment funds
- limited partnerships or limited liability companies
- private institutional and individual investors for social and financial returns
- private institutional and individual investors for only profit goals
- equity-like subordinated debt
Advantages:
- usually long-term patient capital that is not amortized
- local and international capital invested at often lower returns
- investors willing to take risks and be paid only if MFI profitable
- can leverage more debt capital
- ultimately can grow systematically based on owner's resources
Disadvantages:
- must be not only sustainable but profitable cost of funds much closer to market rate
- requires strong financial controls and management
- social aims of MFI diluted or may be lost
Minimal External Economic Conditions before MFI Borrows Internationally:
- inflation below 15 percent if borrowing hard currency
- a reasonably predictable currency devaluation sufficient political % land stability for clients' businesses
- higher interest rates in passive savings accounts than that paid to investor
- easy to convert local to hard currency legally with minimal transaction losses. small difference between street K official rates
- ease of bank accounts in local and external currencies
- few restrictions in importing or exporting hard currency
- a large client sector that is undeserved regulatory environment not hostile to MFIs
Minimal Internal Conditions of MFI before Borrowing Capital Internationally.
- good, 3-year track record of lending donated funds proves methodology is efficient
- realistic and regular rating of each outstanding loan, provisioning for loan loss, and writing off bad debt
- real losses of usually less than 5 percent and an ability to sustain larger losses
- changes in organizational culture to handle funds that must be repaid; includes experience with and commitment to seizing the client's collateral if necessary and a commitment to charge market rates
- a system of informal or formal guarantees that permit sufficient pressure so clients pay
- lending to diverse economic activities to minimize risk
- good management information system with reliable numbers for management
- tracking late payments and real losses; deploying staff to maximize the return on resources
- having reached operational self-sufficiency with a reasonable projection of when financial self-sufficiency will be reached, Otherwise, the loan may finance operating costs with no way to repay investors
- moving from just covering costs to generating a surplus (profit)
- commitment to staff training and paying market rate salaries and incentives
- Staff clear on the MFI's core values and vision
- sufficiently attractive guarantee to offer to external investors
- equity of at least 15 percent of total portfolio anticipated
- adequate cash reserves to insure the liquidity necessary to pay investors on time
- clear definition of the MFI's lending market and good statistics
- a strong commitment to expansion in order to attract investors
- a detailed understanding of its competition in financial markets where operating or expanding
- access by clients to training and business development services
- mechanisms for mobilization of savings and other local resources
- accountability to the board, donors, clients and investors
- sufficient knowledge of socioeconomic impact on the clients
- regular external audits and internal controls to prevent fraud and put idle cash into interest bearing accounts
- link with other MFIs through an association or international organization, providing training and professional standards for MFI.
- Source:
- Garber, Carter (1997) Private Investmnet as a Financing Source for Microcredit. The North-South Center, University of Miami.