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8/27/20151 Innovations for SME finance to counter the economic crisis Thierry Sanders Director & Founder BiD Network APEC SME Symposium Taipei, June 8-9 2009
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8/27/20152 2 a “declaration of ignorance” 1997
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8/27/20153 Developing country SMEs seeking between US $10,000 – US $1 million 3 PNG Lighting US$ 200,000 Philippines Lobsters US$ 86,000 Vietnam FaceMasks US$ 15,000 Peru Postcards US$ 60,000
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8/27/20154 BiD Network: Supports SME centers with Sourcing BPs, BP coaching, investors & internet 4 7000 500100 300 25,000 members in 12 countries APEC members: Philippines, Mexico, Peru + interest from Indonesia, Chile, PNG, Thailand, Vietnam
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8/27/20155 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 5 1/4
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8/27/20156 Outline 1.Why are SMEs important? 2.Consequences of the Economic Crisis for SMEs 3.Innovations in SME Finance to counteract the crisis 6
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8/27/20157 “The Missing Middle” lack of finance is the biggest constraint to SME growth Contribution of business to GDP (IFC average) +/- 30% +/- 20% +/- 30% +/- 20% FinanceAvailability (indicative) > $2million $ 500,000- $ 1million $5,000– $ 500,000 $ 0– $ 5,000 International commercial finance Local banks & subsidized finance Localbanks, ‘hawkers’ & personalloans Microfinance, ‘hawkers’ & personalloans FinanceAvailability (Indicative ) > $2million $ 500,000- $ 1million $5,000– $ 500,000 $ 0– $ 5,000 International commercial finance Local banks & subsidized finance Localbanks, ‘Loan sharks’ & personalloans Microfinance, ‘Loan sharks’ & personalloans Missing Middle 1/4
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8/27/20158 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 8 1/4
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8/27/20159 Consequences of the Crisis for SMEs 1)SMEs facing big problems 2)SMEs doing relatively well... and the big picture 9 2/4
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8/27/201510 SMEs in the crunch 10 2/4 SME Low cash reserves Capital intensive Leased assets Paying off loans via foreign sources (e.g. remittances) Short term loans (1-2 years) Variable interest rates i.e. high debt-equity ratio Selling products for the middle classes Selling commodities Dependent on export sales i.e. The bigger formal-sector SMEs. Capital intensive, middle-class & export markets. The ‘financiable’ SMEs.
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8/27/201511 SMEs doing relatively well 11 2/4 SME Labour intensive Low Debt/Equity ratio Reserves Restructuring from debt to equity Long term loans (3-10 years) Fixed interest rates Equity finance or suboordinated loans Selling products for lower classes Selling local markets Buyer of commodities Seasonal labour
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8/27/201512 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 12 2/4
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8/27/201514 Growth opportunities in 2009 are with SMEs & growth countries (IMF April 2009 data) 14 2/4
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8/27/201515 Invest in the middle classes to safeguard SMEs 15 The Middle classes are: - Consumers - SME entrepreneurs - SME investors - Well educated The Economist, February 12th 2009
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8/27/201516 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
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8/27/201517 8 innovations for SME finance in times of crisis BanksInvestorsGovernments Debt-Equity SwapsDebt-Equity SwapsHelp liquidations Royalty FinanceMatching Fund Sourcing SMEsBusiness AngelsSME centers online Investor Services BiD-X 17 3/4 Finance Systems
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8/27/201518 #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
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8/27/201519 #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. 19 3/4 BiD Network service
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8/27/201520 #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 visibility domestically & internationally Organise an annual event for investors & SMEs 20 3/4 BiD Network service
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8/27/201521 #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 21 3/4 BiD Network Latin America (Mexico)
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8/27/201522 #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
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8/27/201523 #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 23 3/4 BiD Network service
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8/27/201524 #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
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8/27/201525 #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 3/4
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8/27/201526 BiD Network www.bidnetwork.org 26 4/4 National Partner countries Peru, Mexico, Bolivia, Ecuador, Colombia, Argentina Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Jordan and Philippines Web community members* 25,000 Entrepreneurs* 7,000 Coaches 400 Investors 80 SMEs started* 300 Finance Leveraged* Eur 5 mln Direct jobs created* 2500 First year of operations 2005 * Since January 2005 Legal FormA not-for-profit “stichting” (Foundation) in Amsterdam
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8/27/201527 Thank you ! thierry.sanders@bidnetwork.org
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