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Innovations for SME finance to counter the economic crisis

Innovations for SME finance to counter the economic crisis. Thierry Sanders Director & Founder BiD Network APEC SME Symposium Taipei, June 8-9 2009. a “declaration of ignorance” 1997. Developing country SMEs seeking between US $10,000 – US $1 million. Peru Postcards US$ 60,000. PNG

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Innovations for SME finance to counter the economic crisis

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  1. Innovations for SME finance to counter the economic crisis Thierry Sanders Director & Founder BiD Network APEC SME SymposiumTaipei, June 8-9 2009

  2. a “declaration of ignorance” 1997

  3. Developing country SMEs seeking between US $10,000 – US $1 million Peru Postcards US$ 60,000 PNG Lighting US$ 200,000 Philippines Lobsters US$ 86,000 Vietnam FaceMasks US$ 15,000

  4. BiD Network: Supports SME centers with Sourcing BPs, BP coaching, investors & internet 500 100 7000 300 25,000 members in 12 countries APEC members: Philippines, Mexico, Peru+ interest from Indonesia, Chile, PNG, Thailand, Vietnam

  5. 1/4 BiD Network helped start 300+ SMEs in 4 years • Average $150,000 financing need • +/-200 of 300 (66%) start without formal finance • 10 direct jobs created within 2 years / SME • 30 jobs created within 3 years / SME • 4 jobs on average, per $60,000 invested / SME • Cost per job: $1500 (BiD budget) or $15,000 invested • Estimated 50% failure rate • Aim for a 15% IRR

  6. Outline • Why are SMEs important? • Consequences of the Economic Crisis for SMEs • Innovations in SME Finance to counteract the crisis

  7. “The Missing Middle”  lack of finance is the biggest constraint to SME growth Contribution of businessto GDP(IFC average) Finance Finance Availability Availability (Indicative ) ( indicative ) International International +/- 20% > $2 > $2 million million commercial commercial finance finance Local banks & Local banks & +/- 30% $ 500,000 $ 500,000 - - subsidized subsidized $ 1 $ 1 million million finance finance Missing Middle +/- 30% Local Local banks banks , , $5,000 $5,000 – – ‘ ‘ hawkers Loan sharks’ & ’ & $ 500,000 $ 500,000 personal personal loans loans +/- 20% Microfinance Microfinance , , $ 0 $ 0 – – ‘ ‘ hawkers Loan sharks’ & ’ & $ 5,000 $ 5,000 personal personal loans loans 1/4

  8. 1/4 SMEs are job creators,exactly what we need in an economic crisis • 95% of the poor earn their income from/via SMEs • 40% of formal GDP and 50% of formal employment • 70%-80% of formal + informal employment Sources: IFC msme database 2005. OECD Private sector development reports 2006

  9. 2/4 Consequences of the Crisis for SMEs • SMEs facing big problems • SMEs doing relatively well ... and the big picture

  10. 2/4 SMEs in the crunch i.e. The bigger formal-sector SMEs. Capital intensive, middle-class & export markets. The ‘financiable’ SMEs. SME Selling products for the middle classes Selling commodities Low cash reserves Capital intensive Leased assets Dependent on export sales Short term loans (1-2 years) Paying off loans via foreign sources (e.g. remittances) Variable interest rates i.e. high debt-equity ratio

  11. 2/4 SMEs doing relatively well SME Selling products for lower classes Buyer of commodities Seasonal labour Selling local markets Labour intensive Low Debt/Equity ratio Reserves Long term loans (3-10 years) Restructuring from debt to equity Fixed interest rates Equity finance or suboordinated loans

  12. 2/4 Sectors Hard hit • Mining • Energy & Utilities • Chemicals • Trade & Transport • Food processors (export) • Textiles & Manufacturing • Construction • Finance • Tourism Doing OK • Agriculture • Fisheries • Affordable consumer goods • Repairs • Supermarkets

  13. 2/4 Growth opportunities in 2009 are with SMEs & growth countries (IMF April 2009 data)

  14. Invest in the middle classes to safeguard SMEs • The Middle classes are: • Consumers • SME entrepreneurs • SME investors • Well educated • The Economist, February 12th 2009

  15. ASIA is by far the biggest market among the poor. Income per person: < $ 3000 / year < $ 3,35 / day Brazil <$ 1,89 / day Ghana <$ 1,58 / day India Source: “Next 4 Billion” WRI 2007

  16. 3/4 8 innovations for SME finance in times of crisis Banks Investors Governments Debt-Equity Swaps Debt-Equity Swaps Help liquidations Royalty Finance Matching Fund Matching Fund Sourcing SMEs Business Angels SME centers online Investor Services BiD-X Finance Systems

  17. 3/4 #1: Help liquidations Bancruptcy = breath of fresh air for the entrepreneur? Cancel payments to creditors. Cancel bank loans. But, lose collateral, debtors & reputation. And, restart with a healthy balance sheet. Law & regulations needs to support this.

  18. 3/4 #2: Source SMEs from banks Banks are writing off bad SME loans. They have shortlists of poor-performing SME loans. Risky clients are interesting clients for investors, especially if the bank is rid of them for favourable terms & for SME is debt is replaced with equity. Investment scouts should talk to banks. BiD Network service

  19. 3/4 #3: Get SME Centers online • Get your SMEs to register themselves & their BPs • Organise BP competitions • Get coaches involved • Seek out the best BPs • Organise investor meetings • A good online platform can increase visibilitydomestically & internationally • Organise an annual event for investors & SMEs BiD Network service

  20. 3/4 #4: Business Angel Networks • Unlisted investments have investor interest • These individuals are poorly organised • Find them, organise peer-networking events • Get them to learn from eachother • Source & discuss deals together • Co-invest, syndicate www.eban.org www.angelcapitalassociation.org BiD Network Latin America (Mexico)

  21. 3/4 #5: Debt-Equity Swaps (revisited) • Short term loans  Long term loans • Variable interest  Fixed interest • Loans  Suboordinated loans • Loans  Royalty Finance • Loans (bank)  Swap to Equity (investor) i.e. investor pays off the loan (principal + interest) to bank for an equivalent value in shares in the company.

  22. 3/4 #6: Royalty based finance Loan Low fixed interest rate (~ 5%) Fee over the sales (~ 1%-5%) Penalty clause for early repayment Exit fee negotiable i.e. Pay more when the sales are good. Business Partners International – South Africa BiD Network service

  23. 3/4 #7: Matching funds 50% automatic matching by government of investment transactions. • Government allocates money to a fund (€50 million). • The fund manager (TechnoPartner, Netherlands) audits & approves participant investors & VC funds. • Investment transactions by investors are automatically doubled by Fund, on the same terms as investor.

  24. 3/4 #8: BiDx - online auction for SME financing (launch 2010) • Established SMEs (€20,000 - € 2 million) • Investors (€ 5000 +) We seek 1 more partner for US$ 750,000

  25. 4/4 BiD Network  www.bidnetwork.org

  26. Thank you !thierry.sanders@bidnetwork.org

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