Country: Sudan

Innovative finance is essential to tackle barriers to investment in Africa’s climate finance needs – at an average investment of USD 250 billion annually from 2020 to 2030

11 August 2022: The African continent presents a massive investment opportunity for investors to advance the deployment of climate solutions in the coming decade according to a new report Climate Finance Innovation for Africa. However, this will require innovation in financing structures and the strategic deployment of public capital to ‘crowd-in’ private investment at levels not yet seen.

Current levels of climate finance in Africa fall far short of needs. Africa’s USD 2.5 trillion of climate finance needed between 2020 and 2030 requires, on average, USD 250 billion each year. Total annual climate finance flows in Africa for 2020, domestic and international, were only USD 30 billion (CPI forthcoming), about 12% of the amount needed.

Barriers related to shallow financial market depth, governance, project-specific characteristics, and enabling skills and infrastructure have stifled private investment in African climate solutions to date.

To overcome these challenges will require innovation in financing structures. But there is no one-size fits all. Public and private investors must tailor their financial instruments and strategies depending on the acute or chronic nature of the barriers identified.

Recommended actions for increasing the deployment of innovative finance include: Identifying and understand barriers constraining finance by sector and geography, matching instruments with barriers, matching instruments with project and technology lifecycles, enhancing engagement and co-financing with local stakeholders, and supporting innovation by establishing conducive policy and regulatory frameworks.

This work provides a framework for how these instruments and strategies can be efficiently deployed to overcome barriers to finance and capitalise climate solutions in Africa.

Read full report here.

Catalytic patient capital provided by FSD Africa Investments for climate venture building

Persistent raises $10 Million Equity Round led by Kyuden International and FSD Africa to grow climate venture building in Africa

New York, Nairobi, Tokyo: 12 July 2022 – Today, Persistent Energy Capital LLC announced that it has raised USD 10M in equity in its Series C round.  The raise, which was achieved with the support of two lead institutional investors, Kyuden International Corporation and FSD Africa Investments, will enable Persistent to continue to grow its successful climate venture building business in Africa.

The equity raise took the form of Series C Preferred Units of ownership in Persistent, giving Series C investors a seat on the Board of Directors. The largest investor of this Series C round, Kyuden International Corporation (“Kyuden”), is the overseas business arm of the Japanese Kyushu Electric Power Group. Kyuden has energy investment activities and consulting services across the world and shares with Persistent a strong commitment to renewable energy and building sustainable communities. Investing in Persistent represents a strategic move for Kyuden to expand their overseas business with an established partner in Africa, where the demand for clean power and electric mobility is growing dramatically. Persistent will benefit from the expertise, know-how, and network accumulated from domestic and overseas energy businesses of Kyuden around the globe.

This successful fundraise was also achieved thanks to the catalytic patient capital provided by Financial Sector Deepening Africa Investments Ltd.

We are delighted to support Persistent as it expands its innovative climate venture building model. We look forward to working with the Persistent team to accelerate the investment needed by African entrepreneurs in the nascent and fast-growing climate sectors. The combination of Persistent’s capabilities and approach, together with FSDAi’s expertise, patient capital and focus on green finance represents a very strong proposition in areas where innovation and early-stage equity capital are highly needed.
Anne-Marie Chidzero, CIO – FSD Africa Investments

FSD Africa Investments joins 2X Collaborative

Membership to 2X Collaborative paves way for FSD Africa’s participation in the co-creation of the 2X Certification mechanism and enhances FSD Africa Investment’s co-investment, networking and partnership opportunities on gender lens investing

Nairobi: 5th July 2022: FSD Africa Investments (FSDAi), the investment arm of FSD Africa has today joined the 2X Collaborative.  Launched at the UN Generation Equality Forum 2021 in partnership with GenderSmart and the Investor Leadership Network (ILN), the 2X Collaborative is a leading industry body for gender lens investing. Its mission is to convene and equip investors to increase the volume and impact of capital flowing towards women’s economic empowerment.

FSDAi’s membership to 2X Collaborative will provide access to peer learning networks, knowledge, co-investment platforms, partnership and training opportunities, and innovative investment tools.  These benefits are useful for FSDAi in applying a gender lens investing framework through its investments such as Nyala Venture which provides a facility for local capital providers that are mostly women-led or apply a gender lens in their approach.

There is a huge opportunity to finance inclusive and accelerated green growth in Africa by tapping into the economic participation of women. We are therefore delighted to join the 2X Collaborative and shine a light on GLI investing to advance innovations that demonstrate the investment case for gender smart finance.
Anne-Marie Chidzero, CIO – FSD Africa Investments

What financial services would you need if you found yourself as a refugee?

I often find it difficult for most people to relate to refugees. We seem to forget that we can be in the same situation depending on the circumstances around us. The happenings in Ukraine have shown just how delicate our stability status is, and that we can quickly be turned into forcibly displaced people overnight!

While conflict, war or persecution have been traditionally viewed as the main forces giving rise to refugees, natural disasters triggered by climate change among others are fast becoming a force to reckon with. The number of forcibly displaced people has now surpassed 100 million for the first time, fueled by the war in Ukraine and other ongoing conflicts around the globe.

This takes me back to a scenario in June 2018 when FSD Africa, FSD Uganda and BFA Global were conducting a design sprint with 6 Ugandan financial service providers (FSPs), to develop new ideas for financial products and services for refugees in the country. The 4-day event reached a phenomenal breakthrough when one of the participants posed: “What if something happened and we found ourselves in another country as refugees? What financial services would we need?” Those two questions opened the minds of the participants and ideas started flooding in. The design sprint was one of the 4 steps that FSD Africa has been following to develop financial inclusion for refugees (FI4R) projects. The other 3 are:

  1. Market assessments that capture the financial lives of refugees and show the potential of serving these populations.
  2. Innovation competitions where FSPs are invited to pitch ideas of how they would address refugee financial needs
  3. Financial support and technical assistance to FSPs to develop, pilot and roll-out financial solutions.

In Uganda, working with FSD Uganda, we identified Equity Bank Uganda Limited, VisionFund Uganda and Rural Finance Initiative to offer financial services in various refugee settlements from October 2019. While the project concluded in March 2022, these FSPs have continued operations as this turned out to be a viable business for them. The project engaged BFA Global as the learning and research partner. They undertook a baseline study in January 2020 and a series of 4 financial diaries (linked below) – capturing the financial needs and uses of refugee households.

The 4 financial diaries:

They then carried out an endline study in November 2021. The partners achieved the following results:

  • Over 26,300 customers accessed loans, with 73% being female
  • Cumulative loans amounted to £9 million ($2.7million)
  • 262 bank agents were recruited across the settlements, 15% of which were women
  • Over 93,300 households registered on Equity Bank Uganda’s digital platform
  • 65,484 households receiving digital payments as of March 2022.
  • The bank made payments worth UGX 10.8 Bn (£2.2m) during the first quarter of 2022
  • 8 humanitarian agencies used the Equity Bank Uganda platform for disbursements

Below is a summary of some of the different financial services offered by the FSPs:

Based on the end-line study findings, there is still work to be done to improve financial services for refugees in the following areas:

 

Financing for natural capital in Africa

Africa is highly exposed to risks associated with climate change and biodiversity loss.

In 2022, the IPCC reported with ‘high confidence’ that the continent is already experiencing significant changes from climate change and that future impact on the region will be ‘substantial’.

Effects include ongoing and accelerating changes in rainfall patterns, water availability and heatwaves with a sharp reduction in agricultural productivity – the mainstay of many African economies – and increased climate-related ill-health and mortality.

The economic consequences are likely to be severe. According to calculations by the African Climate Policy Centre are likely to be as much as a 12% contraction of Africa’s gross domestic product (GDP).

Furthermore, biodiversity loss of forests and coastal ecosystems threaten the environment and livelihoods in Africa and will contribute to an acceleration in global climate change.

Despite these risks, finance for the maintenance and enhancement of Africa’s natural capital is grossly insufficient. There is a financing gap in Africa of more than $100 billion annually. The biggest gap is in the sustainable management of landscapes and seascapes – a key area for Africa given the lower carbon intensity of its economies relative to developed countries.

Moreover, the limited finance that is available is from public sources. But domestic public budgets do not have the potential to increase sufficiently to close the financing gap by 2030.

Without a step-change in finance, we will witness an accelerated decline in biodiversity, the collapse of ecosystems and repeated climate disasters leading to the reversal of decades of poverty reduction and economic growth in the region as well as the acceleration of the global climate crisis.

Given these challenges, this study, commissioned together with ODI, suggests five key approaches to greater mobilisation of finance for biodiversity in the region:

Break the bias: Empowering women in Africa for prosperity

Worldwide, women’s access to finance is disproportionately low. Despite substantial overall progress—in 2017, the World Bank reported, 1.2 billion more people had bank accounts than in 2011—there is still a 9% gap between women’s and men’s access. In sub-Saharan Africa, only 37% of women have a bank account, compared with 48% of men, a gap that has only widened over the past several years.

Africa’s gender gap in access to finance can have a dramatic impact on social and economic progress. Women today dominate African agriculture, the continent’s most important sector. When women farmers lack access to financial services, their ability to invest in modern technologies to raise their productivity is limited. They cannot diversify their farms. They cannot grow high-value crops and invest in assets such as livestock. And they cannot invest in better nutrition for their children.

Sub-Saharan Africa is the only region in the world where more women than men become entrepreneurs. But when it comes to tal, the situation looks less rosy. There is an estimated USD 42 billion financing gap for women in Africa today[1]. As a result, many female-owned businesses do not actualize their potential; and many investors miss profitable investment opportunities.

On average, women in Africa own fewer assets than men, often due to discriminations encoded in property laws, and so they lack the collateral necessary to secure larger loans. And women are sometimes required to present more significant collateral for the same size loan, further inhibiting their access to capital.

Inclusive Finance

Each year, the world comes together for International Women’s Day to renew the push for gender equality. At FSD Africa, we’re working to make equality a reality in Africa by breaking the economic bias against women, through the power of inclusive finance.

Two strategies are spearheading our mission: gender bonds and gender-lens investing. Both have the potential to make a real impact, by helping to fund women-led businesses and elevating the role of women in the economies of Africa.

Gender bonds

Gender bonds are an asset class with a specific purpose: to support gender equity and the empowerment of women.

They do this by creating proceeds that are used exclusively to finance women-owned and women-led businesses.

Although 89% of women in sub-Saharan Africa are in the informal sector, their businesses historically struggle to access finance. These businesses were severely impacted by the Covid pandemic.

Gender bonds are a way of addressing this inequality, and with our projects at the forefront, they’re breaking new ground in Africa.

Our projects in Morocco and Tanzania

FSD Africa began by working with UN Women to analyse the global market for gender bonds and assess how corporate gender bonds in sub-Saharan Africa could help to empower women.

Following this research, we partnered with Morocco’s capital market regulator to publish guidelines on issuing gender bonds – the first development of its kind in North Africa.

Later that year, we supported the issuance of North Africa’s first gender bond: the Banque Centrale Populaire Gender Bond in Morocco.  Approximately USD 21 million was raised by way of private placement.

We also helped to develop the Jasiri Gender Bond Framework in Tanzania and provided support for the second party opinion.  This led, in February 2022, to the issuance of NMB Bank’s Jasiri Bond: the first gender bond in East Africa.  The offer closes on 21st March 2022 and NMB aims to raise approximately USD 17.2 Million.

<i”alignnone size-full wp-image-6055″ src=”https://fsdafrica.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/calin-stan-7a_PHX91su8-unsplash.jpg” alt=”” width=”640″ height=”402″ />

Gender-lens investing

Gender-lens investing is a term for investment strategies that are built around empowering women – while also aiming to generate return for investors.

Our investment arm, FSD Africa Investments, is focusing on gender-lens investing as a way of supporting our work towards equality.

They’re doing this in three ways: by applying a gender lens across their investments; by boosting gender diversity within FSD Africa Investments itself; and, by providing capital to existing investments that promote the role of women.

Bridging the financing gap

One route through which we aim to provide gender-lens capital is by directly investing in funds.

We will soon be announcing a partnership with a financing facility to support the growth of small, women-led businesses by providing funds and capacity-building to local capital providers. These providers, rooted in the local market, are best placed to serve the needs of small and growing businesses.

Creating real impact for women

We’re closely monitoring the impact of our gender bonds and gender-lens investing programmes as they progress. This will help us to grow and evolve our approach, to make sure we achieve real impact for women across Africa.

As we move forward, we’re more committed than ever to breaking the bias and making gender equality a reality.

To find out more about our work, get in touch: mary@fsdafrica.org


[1] AfDB

Long-term debt financing in Africa is a problem…and an opportunity

Long-term debt in Africa

Financial sector assets in Africa are heavily concentrated in banking, according to the latest research by the Africa Long-term Finance Initiative (LTF). Taken together, insurance company and pension fund assets represented less than 40% of GDP on average in 2019 across the continent, against an average of almost 100% of GDP for commercial banks. No surprises, then, that the largest providers of long-term debt in Africa are banks.

Why the lack of diversity in domestic sources of long-term debt? In part, it comes down to the risk aversion of fund trustees: most institutional investors in Africa prefer to invest in government securities and real estate rather than taking on project risks with which they are unfamiliar.

Instead of investing long-term saving commitments in long-term investments, institutional investors hold a significant portion of their assets as term and savings deposits with banks. This upends the maturity transformation role often viewed as the core purpose of financial intermediation – that is, meeting the needs of lenders and borrowers by taking short-term sources of finance and turning them into long-term borrowings.

Where institutional investors have been willing to take on project risk, their investment has been limited to brownfield infrastructure – projects that are already constructed with regular income streams from delivery of services, where the risks are much lower than in the greenfield construction phase. Even here, institutional investors typically lean on Development Finance Institutions (DFI)s to provide first loss-guarantees.

Turning to the role of commercial banks, a disproportionate share of bank lending is allocated to the public sector. The deepest segment of most capital markets in Africa is the market for government securities (mostly short-term): the volume of outstanding government bonds represents, on average, some 20% of GDP across the continent. By contrast, most African countries do not have a market for corporate bonds. Wher exists, the market represents less than 5% of GDP in most cases. This imbalance between deep sovereign debt markets and shallow corporate debt markets is exacerbated by the high concentration of liquidity in just a few capital centres south of the Sahara: Lagos, Nairobi, and Johannesburg.

Government securities are attractive to banks as they represent ‘risk-free’ assets and do not encumber banks in terms of capital adequacy. Conservative culture or ‘career risk’ also plays a role: as one bank executive in our network observed, “nobody worries about losing their job for buying yet more T-bills”. In some cases, as government spending ballooned in response to COVID-19, and credit risk associated with lending to the private sector increased, top-tier domestic banks have seen the purchase of government securities as a welcome “safe-haven”..

From the perspective of users of debt finance, although traditional banking products are available to most formal enterprises, they often come at a high costernative formal sources of finance only play a marginal role on the continent, access to long term finance is often constrained. Likewise, lending to the housing sector is very modest – the average percentage of adults with loans for home purchase across the continent was around 5% in 2017.

Not only are domestic markets for private debt constrained – we could say “crowded out” – by the borrowing needs of the public sector, foreign borrowing is also limited, and entails foreign exchange risk that increases its cost. This underscores the pressing need to deepen domestic debt markets for the private sector (both enterprises and households) across the continent.

The importance of long-term debt

Long-term debt is essential to sustainable development, in particular because it allows investments to be financed over their active lifetime, thus matching the liquidity needs of the investment project. Debt is also generally less costly than other forms of finance, such as equity, dueniority, its payment structure (regular installments) and (re)financing flexibility.

Depth of the financial system (2016[1], % of GDP)

The depth of the financial systems depicted in the figure below for a selection of African countries is gauged by commercial banks’ assets, government bond market capitalisation, corporate bond market capitalisation, and stock market capitalisation. The figure shows, for each indicator, the average across the continent in 2016 and the percentage for each country in the same year, scaled by GDP.

Sources: World Bank (World Development Indicators) and BIS, supplemented by the LTF Survey

In developed economies, long-term debt finance is used by governments, enterprises, and households alike. For governments, debt is the only alternative to tax revenues when raising capital for investment. Enterprises find debt the most advantageous form of finance because it has a low cost of capital, often provides tax shields, plays a disciplinary role for managers and avoids diluting founders’ control. Households also find debt to be useful in alleviating liquidity constraints and thereby allowing them to smooth their income over the life cycle, opening up possibilities for purposes such as finance of housing, education and retirement.

Lack of data creates higher risk perception

In developed capital markets, the amount of long-term debt provided to the different sectors of the economy is well-balanced. Banks have a broad portfolio of loans that includes both public and privateending, and well-diversified institutional investors allocate their capital to both governments and corporates.

However, when data is not readily available to market participants, lenders tend to restrict their lending due to higher perceived risk. For example, solid and reliable credit history registries reduce these “information asymmetries”, allowing borrowers to have easier access to long-term finance.

Valid data on debt under the Long Term Finance (LTF) scoreboard

By improving market intelligence through data collection, the LTF initiative seeks to deepen markets for long-term finance in Africa by reducing information asymmetries. Governments can use this data not only to benchmark but also to improve their debt management practices, enabling productive financing that yields return better than the cost of debt itself. Likewise, private sector stakeholders stand to benefit from being able to better manage the risks associated with their investment in local African capital markets.

Coordinated efforts need to be made by a range of stakeholders – private investors, public investors, concessionary lenders, and expert providers of technical assistance – to increase the deployment and investment of domestic sources of long-term finance in productive assets, especially those resources available for long-term investment by pension funds and patient capital investors.  As we’ve outlined in this short blog post, the pis information asymmetry made worse by an inertia that comes from traditional over-reliance on government securities. For innovators, it is a status quo replete with opportunity.

Investment in productive assets like infrastructure will create a ripple effect on economic expansion over time. As economies expand, more capital for growth and scale-up is needed, which will attract larger foreign investment flows into Africa. This in turn will create job opportunities, higher disposable incomes and household savings, and – ultimately – inclusive economic growth.


[1] Data on government and corporate bonds are only available until 2016.

Smartphones and micro-entrepreneurs in Nairobi’s informal settlemen

In the space of two decades, the smartphone has revolutionised communication and enabled millions to access the internet. This is particularly true in Africa, where it is estimated more households now own a mobile phone than have access to electricity or clean water.

Within Africa, Kenya is one of the most digitally connected countries, with more mobile phone registrations than people.[1] An estimated 96% of internet users gain access via a mobile device,[2] and Kenya also leads the world in the adoption of mobile money services, with over 79% of adults holding a mobile money account.

Nairobi is one of Africa’s most vibrant and connected cities. As the continent urbanises and more young people enter urban job markets, understanding how Nairobi’s micro-entrepreneurs operate in the digital age offers useful insights for cities across Africa.

Much has been written on the digital dividend that internet connectivity can bring in terms of accelerating growth, creating opportunities and delivering financial services. But it is difficult to know whether this dividend pays out to poorer households, who may be the last to own mobile phones and less able to afford access to the internet.

These were the issues explored by FSD Africa as part of the Youth Enterprise Grant, an innovative pilot project that provided smartphones and enterprise grants to 1,000 youth in Mathare, one of Nairobi’s largest slums.

The Youth Enterprise Grant

The YEG project ratwo years, starting at the end of 2018. All participants lived in Mathare, with most aged 18–35. The project provided each participant with a smartphone and an enterprise grant totalling $1,200. Some received the money in three lump-sum payments at the start of the programme, while others received a monthly stipend of $50 over two years.

The project was implemented by cash transfer specialists GiveDirectly, who helped FSD Africa assess if and how young people used the money and the phone to improve their livelihoods. The research sought to ascertain the value of digital technology in building business skills and knowledge, money management and financial literacy.

The smartphones were pre-loaded with several apps. These included Facebook and M-PESA, the mobile money service via which the grants were paid. The phones were also loaded with Touch Doh, a money management app that uses animated characters, speaking in Sheng (Swahili street slang), to help users with budgeting. On Facebook, participants were held to set up a profile (if they did not already have one) and become a member of the Hustle Fiti page, a business advice and chat group operated by Shujaaz Inc.

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[1] https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/IT.CEL.SETS.P2?locations=KE

[2] https://datareportal.com/reports/digital-2021-kenya

FSD Africa backs fintech pioneer to build a new platform aimed at increasing access to carbon markets

London: 12 October 2021

  • Investment in 4R Digital Ltd to build a platform that will use digital technology to help democratise access to climate finance for small, green projects in Africa
  • The Carbon Value Exchange’s (CaVEx) use of remote monitoring technology will create verifiable carbon credits from projects such as solar pumps, electric vehicles, and nature-based solutions, as well as use digital finance to deliver proceeds from credit sales directly to project participants
  • 4R Digital’s co-founder Nick Hughes to reveal details at the AFSIC Investing in Africa Conference in London on 12th

FSD Africa, the UK Government’s flagship financial sector programme in Africa, is making an initial investment (£650,000) in a highly innovative digital solution connecting carbon credits from small-scale green projects across the global south to international buyers. The investment will deliver funding through the test phase of the solution being developed by Nick Hughes, who led the development of Africa’s revolutionary mobile money service M-PESA.

Hughes is co-founder of 4R Digital, a green fintech start-up developing financial solutions for a range of business partners committed to climate positive projects in Africa spanning distributed solar energy, electric mobility and nature-based schemes. 4R Digital is building a solution that connects these projects to investors looking to offset greenhouse gas emissions at the same time as supporting locally-led climate action.

It is illogical that Africans highly exposed to environmental change find themselves barred from carbon markets intended to fund our fight against the climate crisis. 4R Digital is developing a revolutionary solution with the potential to throw open international sources of finance for entrepreneurs, farmers, and small businesses in developing countries.
Juliet Munro, Director, Digital Economy

 

You can also find out more details by visiting the FSD Africa exhibition stand at AFSIC where the 4R Digital team will be giving a presentation on the technology and meeting interested parties.