European Investment Bank vice president Pim Van Ballekom at a past function. FILE PHOTO | SALATON NJAU |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
By ISAAC KHISA, The EastAfrican
In Summary
- The credit line will be restricted to firms active in long term investments in manufacturing, agriculture, and tourism sectors.
- The loan facility is the second lending programme in Uganda by EIB managed by Housing Finance Bank.
- Housing Finance MD says the new credit will strengthen the banks’ capacity to extend long term loans to its customers with repayment period of up to ten years.
The European Investment Bank (EIB) has offered a
further $16.5 million to Uganda’s Housing Finance Bank for lending to
small and medium-sized firms.
The credit line will be restricted to firms active
in long term investments in manufacturing, agriculture, and tourism
sectors, deemed to be critical for economic growth, job creation and
reduction of poverty in the country, the EIB executives said.
“Small businesses need to invest to create jobs
and explore new business opportunities. The new partnership agreed will
benefit companies across Uganda operating in abroad range of sectors and
builds on successful past cooperation with the Housing Finance Bank,”
the EIB vice president Pim van Ballekom said.
Ballekom said EIB is committed to supporting
private sector investment across East Africa, through offering long-term
loans to microfinance institutions at a negotiable interest rate, with
up to ten-year repayment period.
The new funding is being extended through the East and Central Private Enterprise Finance Facility amounting to $200 million.
The loan facility is the second lending programme
in Uganda by EIB managed by Housing Finance, having successfully
utilised $4.32 million credit offered to the latter in 2010 financing 48
projects.
Mathias Katamba, the Housing Finance Bank managing
director said the new credit will strengthen the banks’ capacity to
extend long term loans to its customers with repayment period of up to
ten years based on the prevailing interest rate on the market.
Currently, Housing Finance Bank is offering loans
to its customers at 18 to 21 per cent interest rate per annum depending
on the nature and risk of the business, Katamba said.
Similarly, EIB also extended a $35.4 million loan to Uganda’s Crane Bank a fortnight ago for the third time for lending to SMEs.
In the previous schemes, EIB lent Crane Bank $3.7 million in 2007 and $15.1 million in 2010.
Over the past five years, the EIB has provided
over $507.74 million to 26 different financial institutions in East
African including commercial banks, development banks and micro-finance
institutions through dedicated SMEs and micro-finance credit lines.
Last year, the EIB provided a
further $101.2 million in loans to small and medium-size enterprises
across East Africa. The credit line was disbursed through 12 commercial
banks in the region including Family Bank and Prime Bank in Kenya, DFCU
in Uganda and KCB in Rwanda.
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