Title: Financial instruments in MF
1Financial instruments in MF
- When shown a good business opportunity, banks
- and we would add any investor
- will take it regardless of the client group
- as long as it fits their investment objectives.
- - Robert Peck Christen
Yin Yu Michelle Lai yin.lai.wh08_at_wharton.upenn.ed
u September 2006
21 The context, philosophy and state of MF today
(fnce)
- Lending methodologies and other financial
instruments in MF - Types of institutions delivering MF services
- A specific analysis of the various types of
savings/lending structures that exist in MF how
different types of methodologies address
collateral and risk - Principles of effective MF
- Savings mobilization as a financial service to
the poor
31 The context, philosophy and state of MF today
(fnce) - altered
- A specific analysis of the various types of
savings/lending structures that exist in the
microfinance world how different methodologies
result in different effective interest rates, eg
loan term, accounting method (declining balance
or flat-rate), up-front interest-fee, compulsory
savings and group fund contributions, Loan
pricing formula is explained. - Other financial instruments demand-side and
supply-side dichotomy (demand) savings,
insurance, and others (supply) bank loans,
guarantees, debt equity, remittances, and
others. Philosophy, mechanism, pricing, and
examples.
4My resources
- GFUSA growth guarantees (reading list)
- News articles on new products
- Securitization challenges
- MicroBanking Bulletin 11 special edition on
financing (MBB11) - MF Handbook Chp 3 (Products and services), 6
(Designing savings products) - Microinsurance the Next Revolution (J. Murdoch,
NYU) - Leveraging the impact of remittances (Accion
insight) - Bridging the finance gap (Aaccion insight)
- MFIs and foreign exchange risk (Accion insight)
- Econ of MF chp 1
- Others
5Outline / Overview
- Demand side
- Savings
- Micro-Insurance
- Remittance-related
- Credit/debit/smart cards
- Supply Side
- Regular bank loans
- Guarantees
- Debt
- Equity
6Demand-side instruments
7Savings
- Types Compulsory Voluntary
- Unregulated MFIs (many NGO MFIs) not allowed to
take deposits - Loan-deposit ratios vary widely
8Savings arguments for against
- ()
- Income smoothing effect
- Inculcate savings habit
- Motivate repayment (savings locked in)
- Collateral to loans (sustainability of MFI)
- Savings mobilization (on-lending) allows local
financing avoid forex risk)
- (-)
- Savings mobilization/on-lending Credit risk (of
MFI) - Locked up capital
- Increase default rate if compulsory savings leave
little left over - More expensive than intl capital or subsidized
funds (15 vs 6-9)
9Income, consumption smoothing
- Conclusion
- Savings, as well as credit, help consumers
adjust intertemporal income and consumption to
increase total utility (IC2gtIC1). - Agricultural communities, and other communities
dependent on seasonal earnings or unpredictable,
require savings services.
10Income, consumption smoothing(alternative
illustration)
11Micro-Insurance
- Relatively new
- Philosophy
- The poor are especially vulnerable to unexpected
adverse events like natural calamities and
illness because of living conditions and lack of
rainy-day savings. - They would benefit from insurance
income-smoothing - MFIs are best-positioned to be the intermediaries
because of their existing network and
infrastructure - Types health, life, agriculture (crop yields or
weather) - Model
- Insurance is offered by formal insurers,
microfinance institutions (MFIs), health
institutions, agricultural and health
cooperatives, traditional societies (e.g funeral
societies), etc. - MFIs link with formal insurance companies and act
as agents for the formal insurer, although the
insurer retains all of the risk.
12Micro-Insurance
- Barriers
- Moral hazard (esp for agricultural insurance)
- Asymmetric information / adverse selection gtgt
limited scope for risk pooling (see appendix) - High transaction costs, limited scale economics
(individual assessment for small amount) - No historical health data mispricing
- High potential losses
- eg individual loss expensive illnesses like
AIDS. Solution? Caps and exclusions (eg Uganda) - eg widespread catastrophe tsunamis. Solution?
Reinsurance agreements to diversify share risk.
- Basis risk (when agri insurance is made based on
weather and not crop yields) - Solution? Eg Global Weather Risk Facility by
Aquila, Inc (Kansas) underwriting of weather
derivatives or weather parameter based insurance
in emerging markets. Backed by International
Finance Corporation (IFC)
13Micro-Insurance
- Examples
- Bangladesh
- Grameen Bank served 3.4 million clients in early
2004 - Life insurance
- China depositsinsurance (see appendix)
- Credit-life insurance (see appendix)
- Health insurance
- Self-Employed Womens Association (SEWA) of
Ahmedabad, India (with Life Insurance Corporation
of India and United India Insurance Company)
14Remittance-related products
- If MFIs can offer better service at lower prices
than other remittance service providers and
develop financial products appropriate to this
market, remittances can provide fee-based
revenues, attract new clients and open
opportunities to crosssell microfinance products
to recipient families. - Products
- Savings Direct Deposits, DD w/ debit card,
programmed savings - Credit product related to housing credit (eg as
downpayment or as credit evaluation in applying
for bank loan), loan guarantee (increase loan
capacity) focus on asset building (both in
host country and home)
15Credit/debit/smart cards
- Very new
- Factors
- Acceptance as mode of payment
- Advantage to MFI and client op, admin and tnx
costs, ongoing line of credit - Examples
- ADEMI MasterCard (ADEMI Banco Popular
Dominicano) - Swazi Business Growth Trust Smart Card
16Supply-side instruments
17Investors their concerns
- International development investors
- Social impact
- Sustainability
- Private investors
- Repayment ratio
- Return on investment (on debt or equity)
- Dividends (wrt equity)
- benchmarking and determining risks as
reflected by ratings on MIXMarket and other
indices (eg SP, Moodys)
18Bank funding
- Regular bank loans
- May be international or domestic
19Guarantees
- Guarantees have played an important role in the
early stages of local capital market funding and
could be an effective way to support MFIs that
are exploring alternative financing options
beyond bank loans. - Philosophy
- Excess liquidity exists in the commercial banking
sector these can be harnessed (as guarantees) to
encourage the flow of capital to MF industry gtgt
used to encourage banks to approve unsecured
loans, esp in cases of asym info gtgt as payments
are made, credit-worthiness is proved, and MFIs
can borrow without guarantee gtgt guarantee funds
are free for another guarantee CYCLE - Reduces foreign exchange risk (when no default
occurs) b/c loans are made in local currency
guarantees (in US) need only be mobilized if
default occurs - Guarantors earn income on assets risk of loss
reduced by loan loss reserve (about 5 of loan),
which is provided by donors and other
socially-motivated agencies
20Guarantees
- Mechanism
- Usually, the proportion of a loan that is
guaranteed is adjusted down as the MFI proves its
credit-worthiness and does not need as high a
guarantee in order to make the same amount of
loan - Now, debt issuance (vs just bank loans) by the
MFI is also guaranteed. This also improved the
rating, making the financing cheaper. This is an
importance source of longer-term financing,
beyond the funds available from bank loans and
deposits (savings).
Examples GFUSA USAID Development Credit
Authority Accions Latin American Bridge Fund
(1984) Accions Global Bridge Fund (2005
non-affiliates as well debt issuance by MFI)
21Profile of capital structure is varied
Investors in capital market offerings
22Debt-equity mix
- Major factors in funding diversification age,
legal registration and size/scale - Debt varies with age
- Regulated MFIs are more highly leveraged
- Unregulated NGO structures - face limitations on
financing options, with no license for taking
public deposits and no shareholder structure for
attracting equity other than donations. - Debt varies with scale
- Larger MFIs attract more external funding,
including borrowing and deposits - Other factors
- the openness of the local capital markets to
microfinance, - the presence of donors (equity),
- the financial services that it offers clients, or
other factors
23Leverage borrowings (bonds)
- Two types Internationl and local
- History
- BancoSol in Bolivia first tapped the
international capital markets in 1996 with three
separate bond issuances of US1 million each.
These issues were 50 percent guaranteed by USAID
and privately placed with Bolivian
institutions.15 - Geneva-based BlueOrchard Finance and Developing
World Markets issued the first U.S.
dollar-denominated microfinance bonds - To attract risk-averse institutional investors to
its seven-year 40 million subordinated debt
issue, the funds got a 30 million credit
guarantee from the Overseas Private Investment
Corp., a U.S. development agency. - Collateralized debt obligations The senior
notes, backed by the OPIC-guaranteed funds, yield
55 basis points over Treasuries, while three
junior tranches offer between 100 and 500 basis
points over Treasuries. The riskiest equity piece
is held by the sponsors. - Proceeds from bond offering expected to help
40,000 microentrepreneurs in Latin America, Asia,
Africa, Eastern Europe.
24Leverage borrowings (bonds)
- Who invests in these issues?
- Pension funds
- Mutual funds
- Public entities
- Banks
- Insurance companies
- Private equity
- Public bond issuances have, however, been largely
limited to Latin America and have yet to be used
by regulated MFIs in other regions. - Newest instrument direct securitization of loans
to MF borrowers Bangladesh Rural Advancement
Committee (BRAC)
25Leverage borrowings (bonds)
Example Local Bond Issues of 3 Leading MFIs
Conditions of Bond Financing
26Leverage mobilized savings
- See Savings section in demand-side instruments
27Equity financing
- The Council of Microenterprise Equity Funds, a
private group founded in 2003 - These are now attracting private, socially
responsible investors not just public
development banks gtgt enormous potential for
growth - Characterized by illiquidity hence importance
of dividends - Risk The higher the equity as of portfolio,
the higher the risk - Other measures of risk include PAR, hedging
policy (forex)
28Case XAC bank
- Please refer to attached handout (MBB p35-40)
- MIX Market and MicroBanking Bulletin
participation five-diamond transparency grade - 12 credit products, 6 deposit products, and a
range of other services including funds
transfers, foreign exchange and micro-leasing - Achieved reach and economies of scale through
mergers hedges foreign exchange risk and
achieves longer-term stability through savings
mobilization - Market orientation and focus on transparency
29Case XAC bank
30Appendix / notes
31Risk-pooling
- Problems
- adverse selection, and
- cream skimming by other firms
- Conclusion
- average (pooled) rate cannot be charged for
micro-insurance - new pricing methods need to be examined (see
Lesson IIB)
32Micro-Insurance Innovations
- China depositsinsurance
- Instead of receiving interest, the depositor
receives insurance coverage - Drawback in places where disposable income
levels are very low, the principle amount (eg
40) to generate the yearly premium (equivalent
to the interest, eg 2) may not be available - Credit-life insurance
- For a percentage of each loan (ie adding to
borrowing rate), bank will pay off any debt
outstanding at time of death, plus some for the
family - Drawback coverage only available to
micro-borrowers - Eg FINCA Uganda
- Additional 0.5 interest per month
- 630 payout at death by accidental cause
- AIG earns fat 30 profit
33Foreign VS Local funds
- MicroBanking Bulletin 11 (p39)
- Foreign eg institutional investors
- Local savings deposits
- Local is more costly (15, XACBank), Foreign is
usually cheaper (6-9) even with forex risk
premium - Local is strategic (long-term) more stable
source larger potential value service to poor
limit forex risk
34Additional topics
- Leasing to aid microentrepreneurs
- Mortgage loans for homes
- Building, renovation or extension
- Mortgage loans for businesses
- Refer to Lesson IIB for more on the above