Title: KHULA STRATEGY PRESENTATION
1KHULA STRATEGY PRESENTATION TO THE PORTOLIO
COMMITTEE 22 May 2002
2Corporate Governance
- Main shareholder is DTI
- Independent board of directors sub committees
internal and external auditors - Directors endorse the code of Corporate
Practices and Conduct - Compliance with the laws of the country and other
regulations
3Value statements
The group subscribes to a rigorous code of ethics
which fosters honesty, transparency,
accountability, responsibility and integrity to
our stakeholders.
4Vision
- To become a financing partner of first choice in
SMMEs finance.
5Mission
- To facilitate sustainable access to finance, by
engaging with the private and public sector,
through innovative products in order to promote
SME growth.
6General external objectives
- Be responsive to the needs of clients and
stakeholders - Facilitate mobilisation and flow of resources
(public private sector) for SMME development - Support the promotion of a conducive legislative
environment for the SMME sector
7General internal objectives
- Procure and maintain a professional, skilled,
effective, motivated dynamic workforce within
affordable levels - Practice the enshrined values of the organisation
- Ensure proper and efficient support structures in
areas such as finance, admin, marketing - Ensure adherence to Khula policies and
operational guidelines - Effectively manage the business risks
8Key strategic objectives
- To achieve a return on investment that ensures
retention of the capital base - To offer sustainable credit and capital through a
network of efficient network of distribution
intermediaries - To acquire,retain and develop the Human resources
to meet the short,medium and long term needs of
Khula - To develop and implement an integrated business
marketing strategy
9Key Corporate Objectives
- Scaling and growing the operations to achieve
impact. - Resource committed, competent and capable people.
- Implement effective financial and risk management.
10Income Statement highlights
11Employment featuresBy Province as at 31/03/2001
KhulaStart RFI CGS Individual CGS Portfolio Total
Gauteng 1.47 28.92 36.17 16.58 28.24
North West 0.01 4.18 7.07 1.03 4.15
Mpumalanga 9.2 6.68 2.47 4.16 6.65
N. Province 16.28 8.56 0.68 12.96 8.63
Free State 8.18 3.3 9.55 5.18 3.58
KZN 58.79 16.48 23.83 10.37 17.84
Western Cape 0 15.74 8.47 12.96 15.12
Eastern Cape 4.79 8.21 3.30 0 7.98
Northern Cape 0 0.79 3.84 8.81 0.86
Unknown 0 7.15 4.62 27.95 6.96
Total 22,800 746,215 17,056 2,623 788,694
12EMPLOYMENT FEATURES
- Average employment
- KhulaStart 1.92
- RFIs 8.34
- Credit Guarantee Scheme(Individual) 12.01
- Credit Guarantee Scheme (Portfolio) 8.34
- Total new jobs since 1996 (66 of total direct
jobs) 521,307 - Total direct jobs (new and sustained) 788,650
- Indirect jobs created and sustained 394,325
- Assumed multiplier of 1.5 X 788,650
- Total jobs direct and indirect
- 1,182,975
13Gender of enterprise customers
14Spacial Composition
15Estimated number of people financially benefiting
from business
Type of Business Average per business Estimated total for all businesses
KhulaStart 6.23 73,981
RFI 15.86 1,417,154
CGS Individual 17.95 25,489
CGS Portfolio 9.04 6,888
TOTAL 1,523,512
16Image of Khula or its agents
Khula Programs who would recommend Khula
KhulaStart 88
RFI 94.3
CGS Individuals 84.5
CGS Portfolio 76.8
Thuso Mentorship 80.6
17New Directive from DTI
- Khulas original mandate too broad
- Special circumstances in servicing sector
- Servicing of Micro and small enterprise sector to
be moved new institution - Move will affect 10 of Khula employees
- Exact parameters of separation unclear
18Various scenarios considered
- Scenario 1
- Retention of the status quo - everything remains
unchanged. - Scenario 2
- All MCOs and some RFIs (non-sustainable) 10
staff affected. - Scenario 3
- All MCOs and RFIs move across 30 staff impact
- Scenario 4
- Scenario 2 plus Retail option. Open the
discussion and further research.
19HISTORICAL SEGMENTATION OF KHULA PORTFOLIO
Small (upper end) Equity Funds
Small (lower end) Credit Guarantees
Very small-RFIs / KhulaStarts/Portfolio
Guarantees/ Sizabantu
Micro-KhulaStarts/ RFIs, Survivalist
20PROPOSED SEGMENTATION OF KHULA PORTFOLIO
Small (upper end) Medium Equity Funds
Small (lower end) Credit Guarantees
Very small-RFIs /Portfolio Guarantees/Sizabantu
Micro-KhulaStarts/RFIs Survivalist
21Growth Strategies
- Mobilise banks for mass or scale delivery.
- Training workshops with bankers and marketing
- Mainstream and roll-out a credible mentorship
- To stimulate the provision of venture start-up
and small scale equity finance. - To research and package innovative products that
can mobilise and attract the financial industry
participation in Khula mandate. - Build on nation wide communication campaign
22Growth Strategies
- Segment the market and design a suitable product
mix and structure accordingly. - Emerging and matured markets
- To support the distribution network in line with
market needs. - capacitate and develop to serve the all market
segments from under-banked to bankable
enterprises - To improve outreach and efficiency of emerging
market network - Improve market access through business linkage
initiatives
23Key Performance Indicators/Targets
24Key Performance Indicators/Targets - Credit
Guarantees
2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06
R180m R182m R258m R310m R341m R375m
Individual R241m
Portfolio R10m
TTGF R6m
Rehab R0.5m
25Key Performance Indicators/Targets Regional
Equity Funds 2 existing Funds 3rd Fund
operational 2002/3
2000/01 2001/02 2002/03 2003/04 2004/05 2005/06
Nil R7mil R14mil R19mil R23mil R27mil
26Key Performance Indicators/Targets
27Summary of Assumptions
- Required capital is obtained
- Seed activities are inherent risk mitigation
mechanisms of Khula balance sheet. network and
capacity support of RFIs and quality mentoring - Investment levels are necessary to off-set the
price shortfall results. - A stable and committed human resource especially
at senior level is achieved.
28Summary of Assumptions
- Political support is unwavering all government
levels and based on sound corporate
administration. - Access to markets becomes sensitive to SMME
needs. Government and state enterprise
procurement systems adapt - Financial institutions including insurance
houses do come to the party
29Thank you for your Support
- Presented by Brendan Mbatha
- Marketing Executive
- Khula Enterprise Finance (Pty) Ltd
- 22/05/02