MSMEs in Africa get a boost with US$36m committed capital fund

0

Verdant Capital Hybrid Fund (VCHF) – a new fund to support micro, small and medium-sized enterprises (MSME) growth in Africa – has reached its first closing with committed capital of US$36m.

The fund is targetting high developmental impact – including job creation and income generation through SMEs and micro-entrepreneurship.

The fund is targetting two further closings with a targetted amount of US$100m and

will be investing hybrid capital and subordinated debt instruments into inclusive financial institutions on a pan-African basis.

The fund will target specialist banks, microfinance institutions, leasing; and factoring companies, fintech and other non-bank financial institutions.

A strong focus will be to ensure that the investments comply with high environmental and social standards.

KfW Development Bank, on behalf of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ), is contributing about US$34m to the VCHF.

Besides KfW, the fund is benefitting from capital commitments of private investors including the fund manager of VCHF, Verdant Capital.

Verdant Capital, an investment manager operating on a pan-African basis, has a successful track-record of advising and investing in the financial service market for MSMEs in Africa.

The fund is domiciled in Germany, yet most of the investment team is based in Verdant Capital’s offices across Africa.

The rationale for the fund includes addressing the market- gap in terms of availability of equity, equity-like or hybrid capital in the inclusive financial institution sector of Africa.

Such capital is much needed, including because the COVID-19 pandemic has eroded the capital bases of African lenders.

The investments by VCHF can be leveraged by traditional debt funding, thereby crowding-in other investors and ultimately expanding lending to MSMEs.

The fund also intends to broaden use of such hybrid financial instruments in Africa and contribute to the overall development of capital markets in Africa.

The German Federal government is providing an additional budget in the amount of US$4.5m for accompanying support measures.

The VCHF Technical Assistance Facility will support African financial institutions in growing their MSME loan books, strengthening organisational capacities and improving responsible finance standards – and forms an important part of the fund’s post-investment value-add strategy.

Leave a Reply