IFC Partners with Nepal’s Bank of Kathmandu on Trade Finance and SME Development
In New Delhi:
Minakshi Seth
Phone: +91 11 4111 1058
E-mail: mseth@ifc.org
Kathmandu, Nepal, May 21, 2007 —
IFC, the private sector arm of the World Bank Group, is providing a $2
million facility to the Bank of Kathmandu in Nepal, as part of its Global
Trade Finance Program. IFC Advisory Services in the region - the IFC SouthAsia
Enterprise Development Facility - will also help the bank tailor a program
for institutional capacity building that will help enhance the bank’s
services to its small and medium enterprise clients.
Radhesh Pant, Bank of Kathmandu’s Managing
Director, said, “IFC’s Global Trade Finance Program will help us expand
our network of corresponding banks and create new and valuable business
opportunities for our clients in Nepal and around the world. This program
will enhance visibility of Nepalese Banks in the Global Financial Market.
In addition, through the capacity building program being instituted with
IFC-SEDF’s advice and support, we hope to adopt better risk management
practices and enhance the overall access to finance to small and medium
enterprises in Nepal.”
IFC’s support to the Bank of Kathmandu
fits well with its strategy to partner with financial institutions and
banks that are committed to developing the corporate and small and medium
enterprise (SME) sectors. The program will provide risk coverage in a challenging
market and a global network that will help grow the bank’s trade finance
business.
Per Kjellerhaug, IFC’s Country Manager
for Nepal, Bangladesh, and Bhutan added, “Trade finance is a good example
of the many products IFC offers to help develop a sector. Through this
program, we provide risk coverage in difficult markets and combine global
reach and maximum flexibility. We assist trade finance deals by delivering
solutions through a global network of participating banks. The program
complements the capacity of banks to deliver trade financing, and this
partnership with Bank of Kathmandu paves the way for countries like Nepal
to increase their share of global trade.”
Earlier, IFC-SEDF conducted an SME Banking
Diagnostics that provided a needs-gap analysis for the Bank of Kathmandu.
Anil Sinha, General Manager of IFC-SEDF, said, “We will collaborate with
Bank of Kathmandu to develop appropriate SME banking products and services,
build its institutional capacity in risk management, and help it develop
a pro-SME sales and credit culture.” Sinha is also the South Asia Regional
Coordinator for IFC Advisory Services, an increasingly large component
of IFC’s contribution to private sector growth in developing regions.
BOK acknowledges the needs of marginalised
groups and the poorer sections of the Nepalese society and has been extending
small and micro credits. IFC-SEDF will equip BOK in extending small
and micro credits in a more structured way.
The Global Trade Finance Program supports
trade with emerging markets worldwide and promotes the flow of goods and
services between developing countries. IFC provides partial or full
guarantees against underlying trade instruments and covers the payment
risk of participating issuing banks. The program allows issuing banks
to increase the volume and value of trade transactions, with enhanced tenors
and access to competitive pricing terms. The letter of credit, bank guarantee,
and other trade related instruments issued by Bank of Kathmandu (BOK) will
now be confirmed by a large number of confirming banks (through IFC guarantee)
listed by IFC under this program across the globe.
Trade development and advisory services
for issuing banks represent an integral part of IFC’s Global Trade Finance
Program. Advisory services modules include basic and intermediate courses
on trade finance. In some cases, IFC places experienced trade finance bankers
with issuing banks to help them develop their trade finance and other banking
skills.
About IFC
IFC, the private sector arm of the World
Bank Group, promotes open and competitive markets in developing countries.
IFC supports sustainable private sector companies and other partners in
generating productive jobs and delivering basic services, so that people
have opportunities to escape poverty and improve their lives. Through FY06,
IFC Financial Products have committed more than $56 billion in funding
for private sector investments and mobilized an additional $25 billion
in syndications for 3,531 companies in 140 developing countries. IFC Advisory
Services and donor partners have provided more than $1 billion in program
support to build small enterprises, to accelerate private participation
in infrastructure, to improve the business enabling environment, to increase
access to finance, and to strengthen environmental and social sustainability.
For more information, please visit www.ifc.org.
About IFC SouthAsia Enterprise Development
Facility
IFC-SEDF is a multidonor funded facility,
managed and operated by IFC. One of 11 such regional programs managed by
IFC worldwide, the facility is funded by IFC, the governments of the Netherlands
and Norway, the European Commission, DFID (U.K.), CIDA (Canada) and the
Asian Development Bank. Set up to promote the growth of SMEs in the region,
it facilitates increased access to finance and provides quality business
development services to projects in Bangladesh, Bhutan, northeast India,
Maldives, Nepal, and Sri Lanka.
IFC-SEDF also works to create a business-enabling environment that is supportive
of SMEs and assists in value addition to firms through sector development,
organization-specific advisory services, capacity-building programs, training,
and research. IFC-SEDF's ultimate goal is to assist in private sector development
to create market opportunities for SMEs and promote pro-poor economic growth
in the region.
About the Bank of Kathmandu
Established in 1993, the Bank of Kathmandu is involved in all types of
commercial banking activities of Nepal. The bank provides its services
through 14 branches and four service centers located in all five development
regions of Nepal. The bank had a total asset base of $165.70 million as
per the latest audited balance sheet and has a current market capitalization
of $91.5 million. In its drive to contribute towards economic growth through
access to finance, the bank focuses on developing and strengthening the
SME sector in Nepal.
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