The African Development Bank
(AfDB) has approved a $9million equity investment in the Fund for Agricultural
Finance in Nigeria (FAFIN) to provide expansion capital to agric small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs),this was made known in a statement issued by the bank on Sunday, August 8, 2016.
The statement said FAFIN is
a first-generation private equity fund that provides financial,
capacity-building and technical assistance to commercially viable SMEs in the
Nigerian agribusiness sector.
It said FAFIN used a unique
value chain-centric approach, a combination of equity, quasi-equity and
convertible loan instruments to provide loan for SME s.
According to it, FAFIN
implements its strategy and constructs its portfolio through a bifocal lens
consisting of the twin objectives of competitive financial returns and
measurable positive social impact.
The Fund is jointly
sponsored by the German KfW Development Bank and the Government of Nigeria,
through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (FMARD).
The Fund Manager is Sahel
Capital (Mauritius) Limited, a fund management firm incorporated in Mauritius
in 2013.
The project is expected to
deliver strong development outcomes from household benefits and employment
through the creation of a large number of jobs and the provision of agric
products.
It also said this would
bring about positive gender and social effects through the implementation of
out-grower schemes and supporting rural development and private sector
development.
It said through alleviation
of financial constraints faced by agribusinesses, this would enhance
agricultural value chains.
“The project’s contribution
to inclusive growth is expected to be significant, given the large numbers of
jobs to be created and out-growers to be reached at the level of
sub-projects,’’ the statement explained.
Its contribution to green
growth is expected to be low, because the Fund targets the agribusiness sector
with some expected negative effects on the environment.
The Fund’s primary focus
will be on SMEs across the agric value chain with crop value chain and
geographic diversification.
It aims at fixing broken
value chains to increase efficiencies, reduce post-harvest loss, and increase
smallholder farmer incomes and SME agribusiness profitability.
Investment instruments will
be primarily quasi-equity (convertible bonds, preference shares and structured
royalties) and direct equity. The ticket size ranges from $500, 000 to $5
million.
The Fund is aligned with the
Bank’s Ten Year Strategy focusing on inclusive growth, strengthening
agriculture and food security, and access to local SME finance.
It added that this
encapsulated in the Bank’ High Five Development Agenda for Africa, specifically
Feed Africa and Industrialise Africa.
It is also in line with the
Bank’s Strategy for Agricultural Transformation in Africa (2016-2025), Strategy
on Jobs for Youth in Africa (2016-2025).
Others are the Bank’s
Country Strategy Paper for Nigeria (2013-2017), which supports an enabling
environment for agriculture.
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