- AfDB Okays $250m Risk Participation Pact With ABSA
The African Development Bank (AfDB) Board of Directors has approved an unfunded $250-million Risk Participation Agreement with ABSA Bank Limited.
The Risk Participation Agreement, housed within AfDB’s Trade Finance operations, will enhance African issuing banks’ ability to leverage trade financing through a multi-sectorial approach.
When fully utilised, forecast estimates indicate that the facility will catalyse roughly over $2 billion worth of trade in three years. The facility’s alignment to address the acute market demand for trade finance in Africa through agriculture, transport and manufacturing is consistent with the Bank’s goals of ensuring that Africa industrialises, trades more, and is able to feed herself. By extension, this RPA will also foster financial sector development and regional integration.
Presenting the project to the Board, the Bank’s Financial Sector Development Director, Stefan Nalletamby, made a robust case for how, through strategic partners like ABSA, the bank’s RPA instrument continues to facilitate trade on the continent; thereby helping to reduce Africa’s trade financing gap.
“This facility, through a 50/50 risk-sharing approach, will help to promote broad-based economic growth on the African continent through increased facilitation of import-export activities of African corporates and SME’s, and increase intra-Africa trade and regional financial integration in line with the Bank’s Hi5 strategic objectives,” he said.
Most African issuing banks are relatively small and face challenges in obtaining adequate trade finance facilities from international confirming banks to support African importers and exporters. De-risking (the idea of international banks reducing their credit risk stake in developing markets or leaving them altogether) has exacerbated this already dire situation, especially for Africa’s SMEs.
The bank’s additionality, therefore, lies in the use of its “AAA” credit rating to provide greater comfort to allow ABSA to increase its risk-taking appetite on local banks in Africa and provide them increased trade finance facilities. This consequently enhances the broadening and deepening of Africa’s financial systems.