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Financing Your First Brickyard
At Hydraform, we know how passionate you feel about your business. And we know how frustrating it can be to have a dream without having the necessary capital to set down as the foundations for the realisation of that dream. No matter how brilliant small business ideas are, all of them require money. Whether it is funding at the launch stage or the business expansion phase, the biggest challenge is finding money. There is no single perfect-fit approach for all situations. According to the required amount, purpose, type of business, ownership, the sources may vary dramatically.
There are, however, various institutions across the African continent which support the development and upliftment of communities by funding small businesses. We’d like to provide you with a few possibilities which you may not have considered.
The Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA)
The purpose of the DBSA is to ‘Build Africa’s Prosperity by driving inclusive growth and securing innovative solutions that drive socio-economic development in emerging economies in sub-Saharan Africa. This is done by mobilising funding resources to be channelled into projects aimed at building sustainable infrastructure planning and development across the continent.
DBSA has identified specific sectors which are critical in the development and growth of the regional and national economy. Their aim is to support the government in its goal to reach a healthy economic standing in order to place South Africa – and other African countries – in a position where it can compete in the global market. DBSA has, therefore, identified economic infrastructure and social infrastructure as their main sectors of focus.
Economic infrastructure includes:
- Information and Communication Technologies (ICT);
- Transport;
- Water and Sanitation; and
- Social infrastructure includes:
- Health;
- Education; and
- Human settlements.
- Agro Processing and Manufacturing
- Eco-Tourism
- Forestry and Fisheries
- Commercial Property
- Aqua and Marine Culture
- Non – Farm Activities (rural based)
- Projects must be financially sustainable
- BEE applicants should be actively involved in the day-to-day operations of the business
- Technical partners should be actively involved in the day-to-day operations of the business
- The NEF will invest using debt, equity and quasi-equity instruments
- Minimum black ownership of 25.1% is a requirement
- Joint ventures between black and non-black partners to support skills transfer
- The business should be able to repay NEF’s investment
- The business must have a clear value-add with a sustainable business case
- The NEF will exit from the investment in 5 to 10 years
- The NEF reserves the right to oblige applicants to participate in the NEF mentorship programme
Fincheck
Fincheck partners with South African banks, lenders, and insurers to offer a real-time and independent means of comparing and applying for finance across 30 lenders. They serve business owners seeking finance in South Africa. Amount: R20,000 – R72 million.Lulalend
Lulalend delivers business funding by using proprietary scoring technology which offers an instant funding decision on applications. They predominantly serve South African businesses across all industries trading for more than one year with annual revenue of R500,000+. Amount: R20,000 – R1 million Choose Africa The French Choose Africa initiative fulfils France’s commitment to support African entrepreneurship. With Choose Africa, AFD Group (Agence Française de Développement and its private sector financing arm, PROPARCO) makes all its tools available to African start-ups, microenterprises and SMEs to finance and assist them at the various stages of their development, particularly through local partners supported by the Group. In response to the economic crisis triggered by Covid-19, which is hitting microenterprises and SMEs hard, AFD Group is extending its mechanism with Choose Africa Resilience. It comes in addition to the initial responses to provide macroeconomic support. This EUR 1bn program is designed to support the formal and informal private sector in Africa The Choose Africa initiative was initially set at EUR 2.5bn and has now been increased to EUR 3.5bn for 2018-2022. You can find out more here. The World Bank A key area of the World Bank Group’s work is to improve SMEs’ access to finance and find innovative solutions to unlock sources of capital. Their approach is holistic, combining advisory and lending services to clients to increase the contribution that SMEs can make to the economy including underserved segments such as women-owned SMEs. Advisory and Policy Support for SME finance mainly includes diagnostics, implementation support, global advocacy, and knowledge sharing of good practice. For example, the World Bank provides:- Financial sector assessments to determine areas of improvement in regulatory and policy aspects enabling increased responsible SME access to finance
- Implementation support of initiatives such as development of enabling environment, design and set up of credit guarantee schemes
- Improving credit infrastructure (credit reporting systems, secured transactions and collateral registries, and insolvency regimes) which can lead to greater SME access to finance.
- Introducing innovation in SME finance such as e-lending platforms, use of alternative data for credit decisioning, e-invoicing, e-factoring and supply chain financing.
- Policy work, analytical work, and other Advisory Services can also be provided in support of SME finance activities.
- Advocacy for SME finance at global level through participating and supporting G20 Global Partnership for Financial Inclusion, Financial Stability Board, International Credit Committee for Credit Reporting on SME Finance related issues.
- Knowledge management tools and flagship publications on good practice, successful models and policy frameworks
- delivering wholesale and direct lending credit facilities or products;
- providing credit guarantees to SMMEs and Co-operatives;
- supporting the institutional strengthening of financial intermediaries, so that they can effectively assist small and micro-enterprises and co-operatives;
- creating strategic partnerships with a range of institutions for sustainable small, micro and co-operative enterprise development and support;
- monitoring the effectiveness and impact of our financing, credit guarantee and capacity development activities; and
- developing (through partnerships) innovative finance products, tools and channels, to speed up increased market participation in the provision of affordable finance.
- Asset Finance
- Bridging Loan
- Term Loan
- Structured Finance Solutions
- Credit Guarantee Scheme
- Land Reform Empowerment Fund
- Promote structural transformation, towards a dynamic industrial and globally competitive economy.
- Provide a predictable, competitive, equitable, and socially responsible environment, conducive to investment, trade and enterprise development.
- Broaden participation in the economy to strengthen economic development.
- Continually improve the skills and capabilities of the DTIC to effectively deliver on its mandate and respond to the needs of South Africa’s economic citizens.
- Co-ordinate the contributions of government departments, state entities, and civil society to effect economic development.
- Improve alignment between economic policies, plans of the state, its agencies, government’s political and economic objectives and mandate.
- Promotes the Constitution, with special reference to the chapters on human rights, cooperative governance and public administration.
- It promotes decent work outcomes (more jobs as well as better jobs), industrialisation, equitable and inclusive growth and social inclusion.
- Operational excellence – service delivery standards, international best practice, Batho Pele Principles, continuous improvement and ethical conduct.
- Intellectual excellence – continuous shared learning, innovation, relevant knowledge and skills improvement and knowledge management.
- Quality relationships – improved and continuous communication, honesty, respect, integrity, transparency, professionalism, ownership, leadership, and teamwork.