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kenza_abdelhaq

Peer-to-Peer Lending: Best Websites of February 2021 - 0 views

  • If you can’t or don’t want to borrow money from a brick-and-mortar bank or a conventional online lender, peer-to-peer (P2P) lending is an option worth exploring. P2P lending works differently from the financing you may have received in the past. You are not borrowing from a financial institution but rather from an individual or group of individuals who are willing to loan money to qualified applicants. P2P lending websites connect borrowers directly to investors, as these lenders are called. Each website sets the rates and the terms (sometimes with investor input) and enables the transaction. P2P has only existed since 2005, but the crowd of competing sites is already considerable. While they all operate the same basic way, they vary quite a bit in their eligibility criteria, loan rates, amounts, and tenures, as well as their target clientele. To jump-start your search, we scoured the online P2P marketplace and came up with these top six platforms, depending on your exact financial situation.
    • nouhaila_zaki
       
      P2P lending could be a strategy pursued by the eligible fintech companies that we have this semester. P2P lending means that the company would not be borrowing money from a financial institution but rather from an individual or group of people that are willing to lend money to qualified applicants/organizations. This article enumerates the most prominent platforms for P2P lending.
  • Types of Loans Available Through Peer-to-Peer Lending P2P loans can be used for many of the same purposes as personal loans. Here are a few of the loan types you may find on popular P2P websites.  Personal LoansHome Improvement LoansAuto LoansStudent LoansMedical LoansBusiness Loans
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      If a company does not want to borrow from conventional banks or a fintech company want to offer this service, Peer-to-Peer lending is a great alternative.
nourserghini

African Digital Credit Goes West - 0 views

  • While CGAP could not confirm the profiles of borrowers in Ghana, experience in East Africa suggests that many are borrowing from formal lenders for the first time. JUMO, one of Ghana’s most successful digital lenders, also operates in Tanzania, where it found that 81 percent of its borrowers had never before borrowed from a formal financial institution. The ability to reach excluded customers and help them to build formal credit histories has always been touted as the promise of digital credit. And while more data are necessary before forming any conclusions about the potential impact of digital loans in West Africa, the results from Ghana are cause for optimism.
    • nourserghini
       
      This article is interesting because it gives insights on Ghana's digital lending situation which is the sector of operation of Carbon. Also, because it states that Jumo is Ghana's most successful digital lending service which means that it's a strong competitor of Carbon since they offer the same services in Ghana.
mohammed_ab

Former Kiva.org CEO Starts Mobile Microfinance Effort in Kenya - 2 views

  • The downloadable Branch app analyzes social and financial data on a borrower’s phone to determine creditworthiness before providing up to $20. Those with a “digital identity” too limited to establish credit standing can start off borrowing smaller amounts and climb a “trust ladder” to larger loans by timely repayment. Kiva.org, launched in 2005, facilitates more than a million dollars a week in small loans to entrepreneurs in developing countries by matching them with microlenders.
  • The downloadable Branch app analyzes social and financial data on a borrower’s phone to determine creditworthiness before providing up to $20. Those with a “digital identity” too limited to establish credit standing can start off borrowing smaller amounts and climb a “trust ladder” to larger loans by timely repayment. Kiva.org, launched in 2005, facilitates more than a million dollars a week in small loans to entrepreneurs in developing countries by matching them with microlenders.
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    Connecting lenders with borrowers is not an easy task. I think that we should give credits to Kiva for doing this great task!
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    I like the fact that Kiva does give the chance to everyone to borrow money, even if you don't have a digital identity, which is in my opinion is a necessity in such a business model. It's also very interesting to see the volume of lending per week.
mehdibella

In a cash-strapped age, are microloans the answer? | World news | The Guardian - 0 views

  • Millions of people in developing countries depend on microloans to raise the funds to grow a business or just stay afloat in hard times. And thanks to digital platforms, smartphones and free-moving global capital, growing numbers of people in the rich world are using their money to lift others out of poverty.
  • But the reality is often a lot messier – something that may not initially be obvious to the lender. In fact, like Cabusog and Lendwithcare, borrowers and crowdfunding sites connect via local partner microfinance institutions (MFIs) who do the essential work of assessing creditworthiness and administering loans. To pay for that, most MFIs charge interest to borrowers, often at wildly varying rates.
  • Kiva is the slickest of the microfunding websites, offering a mind-bogglingly glossy catalogue of projects sorted into different categories, countries and attributes, all illustrated with backstories and pictures.
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  • Kiva is often already in the borrower’s pocket, lent by a local MFI long before the loan target has been met. There are good practical reasons for this, explains Kathy Guis,
  • Kiva is using blockchain technology in Sierra Leone to create an online ID database so that loan applicants outside the formal banking system can prove their credit history, and it hopes to extend the system to other countries if successful.
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    It seems that microfinance or crowdfunding is life-saving for many young entrepreneurs. However, there are some practices that sometimes interfere with the non-profit status of companies like Kiva. On Kiva's website, It's stated that loans are free of charge, but the MFIs charge interest to borrowers at varying rates depending on the region, which might affect the borrowers.
kaoutarchennoufi

Covid-19 | Kiva - 0 views

  • People across the world are economically impacted by the COVID-19 Coronavirus pandemic. Funding these loans will provide a financial safety net during an uncertain time, in addition to leading borrowers on a path to recovery.
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      The Covid19 has financially impacted people and Kiva took this fact into consideration and tried to help people overcome their financial difficulties in many ways. When I read the different donations during Covid19, I found that Kiva has financed many small businesses and made some dream come true even in a global pandemic where people were hopeless. This is such a human act!
mohammed_ab

Fawry Microfinance considers borrowing from its existing shareholders | ZAWYA MENA Edition - 0 views

  • Fawry Microfinance, a subsidiary of the listed Fawry for Banking and Payment Technology Services, intends to borrow at least EGP 300 million from its existing shareholders, Enterprise cited Fawry CEO Ashraf Sabry on December 14th
  • Fawry’s subsidiary plans to expand its microfinance portfolio to EGP 500 million by the end of 2021, up from EGP 204 million until September 2020, the news portal added.“We have seen solid growth in 2020 and we see the potential of lending to small businesses to finance their working capital and purchases from suppliers,” Enterprise quoted Sabry as saying.
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    I think that Fawry is trying to penetrate more the market of microfinance which is the reason why she is planning to borrow money from its current shareholders. It's known that shareholders always invest in opportunities that will have returns. Taking into account that they have agreed to lend EGP 300 million, I'm sure that they saw great potential for the growth of Fawry microfinance.
mehdibella

Kiva's Person-to-Person Claim Questioned | News | PND - 0 views

  • Kiva has promoted itself as a link between individual lenders in the developed world and individual borrowers in the developing world, allowing visitors to its Web site to learn about and lend money to people in poor nations seeking small loans for specific purposes.
  • the loans made by individual lenders through the Kiva site do not actually end up in the pockets of individual borrowers. Instead, those loans are aggregated and used to backstop microfinance institutions that have already paid out microloans to the borrowers featured on the site.
  • Kiva president Premal Shah said he could foresee a day when Kiva really did provide a direct person-to-person connection, once certain legal hurdles are cleared and as more individuals in the developing world began using mobile phones to access credit and make electronic payments. In the meantime, the organization has changed the wording on its homepage from "Kiva lets you lend to a specific entrepreneur, empowering them to lift themselves out of poverty" to "Kiva connects people through lending to alleviate poverty."
kaoutarchennoufi

Conflict zones | Kiva - 0 views

  • Support small business owners in regions affected by violence or instability, where credit is often very difficult to access.
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      Kiva is also helping unbanked people who are living in violent and instable places to reach out financial services. Many organizations tried and did not managed to reach those places and provide the necessary financial aid to people living there. However, Kiva has succeeded to provide 61 loans to different groups and individual which is very impressive.
chaimaa-rachid

About | Kiva - 0 views

  • We do this by crowdfunding loans and unlocking capital for the underserved, improving the quality and cost of financial services, and addressing the underlying barriers to financial access around the world. Through Kiva's work, students can pay for tuition, women can start businesses, farmers are able to invest in equipment and families can afford needed emergency care.
  • We do this by crowdfunding loans and unlocking capital for the underserved, improving the quality and cost of financial services, and addressing the underlying barriers to financial access around the world. Through Kiva's work, students can pay for tuition, women can start businesses, farmers are able to invest in equipment and families can afford needed emergency care.
    • aminej
       
      Kiva is an interesting platform that offers very interesting funding access to people in different areas of the world. It would enable them to either start a new business or improve theirs. There are already 1.9 million lenders which is quite huge and a repayment rate of 95.9% so I believe that it is really developped.
  • We do this by crowdfunding loans and unlocking capital for the underserved, improving the quality and cost of financial services, and addressing the underlying barriers to financial access around the world. Through Kiva's work, students can pay for tuition, women can start businesses, farmers are able to invest in equipment and families can afford needed emergency care.
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      Kiva is a very impactful organization since it financially helps students and women who want to start their own business. It is well known that these two categories usually face difficulties to contract loans or get any financial service. We need more organizations like Kiva all around Africa.
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  • Kiva started as a pioneer in crowdfunding in 2005, and is constantly innovating to meet people’s diverse lending needs. Whether it’s reinventing microfinance with more flexible terms, supporting community-wide projects or lowering costs to borrowers, we are always testing and learning.
  • We envision a financially inclusive world where all people hold the power to improve their lives.
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    I love the concept of Kiva where you can see technology helping people in their lives. The company aims to link borrowers with lender in order to improve the lifestyle of the people interested in this service. I just like the way Fintech plays a big role in improving our life and Kiva is just a good example of it.
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    Kiva provides attractive access to funding individuals to improve their lives.
mehdi-ezzaoui

Microfinance in online space: a visual analysis of kiva.org: Development in Practice: V... - 1 views

  • Microfinance practices were originally developed in offline contexts. Modern microfinance practices were based on development models for the financial and social empowerment of the poorest of poor in developing countries. Several of these practices drew from existing traditions of money lending within local communities that were reformed to be in sync with rural development and the empowerment of the underprivileged individual. In present ‘postmodern’ times, microfinance providers are using online tools in the hopes of broadening the reach and extending the advantages provided by such a model of micro-lending and micro-borrowing. In this article, we examine an online peer-to-peer lending and borrowing website, Kiva.org, which uses online social networking tools in microfinance. The study is thus a close look at the actual content of the website with a view to understanding the representational practices of online space through Internet mediated microfinance.
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    this article is interesting because its talks about online microfinance in general and talk about KIVA .
mohammed_ab

How to Get a Kiva Loan: A Step by Step Guide - Small Business Trends - 2 views

  • Kiva Small Business Loan FeaturesSome attractive aspects of a Kiva loan includes more flexible terms, low costs to borrowers and emphasis on supporting community-wide projects that can shape the future for a family or an entire community.
  • Some attractive aspects of a Kiva loan includes more flexible terms, low costs to borrowers and emphasis on supporting community-wide projects that can shape the future for a family or an entire community.
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    Kiva is helping financing many important projects in Kenya. This business is changing people's life and I think that's the objective of Fintechs.
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    I think that we should see more fintech companies like Kiva. I believe that fintech companies should always offer solutions that support community projects. I like the social impact that Kiva has on African countries.
mehdibella

South African lending startup Jumo raises $12.5 million - 0 views

  • CEO of Jumo, Andrew Watkins-Ball, comments: “We have a proven business model, evidenced in the strategic partnerships we have built with forward-thinking banks, mobile money operators and partners like Uber."
  • Since launch in 2014, more than 10 million people have saved or borrowed on the Jumo platform, with nearly 70% of these being micro and small business owners across Africa and Asia. To date, the company has originated almost US$1 billion in loans and maintained savings growth of over 50% month-on-month on its platform, which manages over 45 million customer interactions per month.
  • Jumo currently has offices in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Ghana, Zambia, Pakistan, United Kingdom, Singapore and South Africa. It set up its Asia Pacific headquarters in Singapore earlier in the year and has plans to enter several new Asian markets in 2019.
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  • South African lending startup Jumo raises $12.5 million
  • Since launch in 2014, more than 10 million people have saved or borrowed on the Jumo platform, with nearly 70% of these being micro and small business owners across Africa and Asia. To date, the company has originated almost US$1 billion in loans and maintained savings growth of over 50% month-on-month on its platform, which manages over 45 million customer interactions per month.
    • mehdibella
       
      JUMO secured another funding round of US$55 million to support market and product expansion.
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    The business model is one of the bases of a company success, and making a partnership with a brand name like Uber would increase the number of customers.
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    Through this article, we notice a lot of people have used the JUMO platform and they are happy with it. The company is ready to enter many new Asian markets since it has been successful in different countries.
mehdibella

FarmDrive Helps Unbanked Farmers in Kenya | The Borgen Project - 0 views

  • FarmDrive combats this lack of financial visibility by calculating alternative credit scores for Kenyan smallholder farmers. The startup requires users to input their expenses, revenue and yield via SMS and creates a platform for farmers to record business activity. FarmDrive then uses a complex algorithm to combine individual financial information with additional factors like the climate in the farmer’s region.
    • tahaemsd
       
      farmdrive eliminates some of the risk for banks by considering both the self reported financial history of farmers as well as exogenous variables that will affect their crop yields
  • By accruing farmer data, FarmDrive eliminates some of the risk for banks. FarmDrive has partnered with African financial firms who accept their alternative credit scores and determine appropriate loans for smallholder farmers. Lending institutions thus consider both the self-reported financial history of farmers as well as exogenous variables that will affect their crop yields.
    • mehdibella
       
      FarmDrive collects data from farmers via and combines it with satellite imaging, alternative data points to create detailed yield estimates and assess credit risk.
  • FarmDrive depends on aid organizations, like USAID, and private firms that operate in the agricultural industry. FarmDrive is expanding its data collection through new partnerships with Planet, a satellite company, and The Impact Lab, a data analytics group, to potentially incorporate climate information gathered via satellite imagery into its algorithm.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      In addition to financial firms, FramDrive partners up with aid organizations, private firms operating in the agricultural industry, satellite company, and a data analytics group.
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  • There are 50 million smallholder farmers in Kenya, but less than 10 percent of this population has their economic needs fulfilled by traditional lenders. The agricultural sector makes up 32 percent of Africa’s GDP and employs 65 percent of its population, but less than 1 percent of bank lending goes to agriculture. Worldwide, there is an estimated $450 billion agricultural lending gap. African smallholder farmers face barriers to traditional lending because they are labeled high-risk borrowers by financial institutions. Traditional banks use credit scores and bank statements to determine a loan applicant’s riskiness. However, the average farmer in Africa cultivates fewer than five acres of land and owns no collateral or financial records.
    • aminej
       
      Unfortunaely for most farmers, they can't access credit from traditional banks because they are considered as high risk borrowers since they face many risks such as climate change, theft, lack of fertilizers. Now, through farmdrive everything changed with these new Fintechs who started giving more importance to farmers
mehdibella

Carbon reveals the appeal of fintech transparency in second profitable year, with $17mi... - 0 views

  • Lending through a pandemic COVID-19 has prevented them settling into Kenya, where there are no less than 50 digital lending platforms competing for an adult population that is over 80% financially included.  Reports of predatory lending have increased red tape in the East African country. A newly gazetted directive bars digital lenders from reporting defaulting borrowers below certain amounts to credit bureaus, among other rules.  It increases the time it will take for a new entrant like Carbon to comfortably express its various services. “We haven’t really had a chance to test the engine,” Dozie says, but they have given out enough loans to calibrate their algorithm. In Nigeria, they have reduced lending to shore up against the uncertainty caused by the pandemic, revising the repayment schedule for 9,016 loans. However, Dozie says they are currently at more than half the level achieved last year, in value and volume. Another profitable year ahead? Carbon’s products need overall improvement, in responding to customer complaints (see responses to this tweet) about deductions, and notification lags, among others. The pandemic’s impact on the Nigerian economy could have an effect on the company’s bottom line. Profit in the next report might as well be less impressive than what this year’s report contains. “It will be easier to beat [this year’s] numbers in naira terms, but we are all at the mercy of macroeconomics on the dollar terms,” Dozie says. He says they will report whatever happens, as part of a long-term pitch to customers who, he believes, will be impressed by an honest expression of financial strength. Otherwise, focus remains on leveraging other strategic moves from 2019, notably the acquisition of payments startup Amplify.  The latter’s intellectual property has gone into developing an SME platform, as well as in developing Carbon Express, a smartphone keypad button that can be used for instant transactions within any app. Carbon acquired Amplify particularly for this feature and their engineering. Maxwell Obi, one of Amplify’s two co-founders who joined Carbon as part of the deal, has left the company, but the others have been instrumental in building valuable aspects like an iOS app.
  • Another value-adding space is credit reporting. Carbon doesn’t produce the reports; they source from partner bureaus, and make them available to customers. 
    • samiatazi
       
      In 2019, Carbon purchased Amplify, a startup for payments. The latter has established a SME platform. Intellectual Property Carbon Express is a keypad button for any application to use for instant transactions. At present, they are more than half the level of value and volume reached last year. The effect of the pandemic on the economy in Nigeria could affect the bottom line of the business.
  • In an audited report published this week, Carbon, the Nigerian fintech company, declared that it made the naira equivalent of $312,905 in profit after tax in 2019. 
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  • Carbon reveals the appeal of fintech transparency in second profitable year, with $17million in revenue
  • Carbon offered 975,000 loans valued at $64.1million in 2019. The average loan offered to borrowers is $65.8 which, according to CEO Chijioke Dozie, is at the same level from 2018. A larger income tax bill ate into the company’s 2019 balance, reducing net profit by 23.5%
  • Carbon lent 76% more and, with $17million, accrued 70% more in revenue. But the real metric for progress last year was in the other lines of business feeding its base in Nigeria, and now being exported to Kenya where it launched last December. 
aminej

FarmDrive Raises Funding to Help Africa's Smallholder Farmers Get Finance with Credit S... - 0 views

  • So far, 3,000 farmers have registered with FarmDrive, borrowing over $130k in loans. That’s a tiny portion of what’s needed across Africa where 65% of the workforce is involved in agriculture, but less than 1% of bank loans go to the industry. And globally there’s a $450 billion funding gap in agriculture, according to FarmDrive.
    • kenza_abdelhaq
       
      FarmDrive is fulfilling a market gap by providing loans and access to financing to farmers who represent 65% of the workforce in Africa.
  • FarmDrive, a Kenyan data analytics startup helping smallholder farmers in Africa access credit from local banks, has raised funding from the venture arm of Safaricom, the biggest communication company in East and Central Africa, Safaricom Spark Venture Fund.
    • aminej
       
      More and more companies are raising funds for agricultural fintechs since they are realizing that agriculture is very important mostly during crisis period. Also, small holder farmers need protection and investments in order to maximize their profit
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    "So far, 3,000 farmers have registered with FarmDrive, borrowing over $130k in loans. That's a tiny portion of what's needed across Africa where 65% of the workforce is involved in agriculture, but less than 1% of bank loans go to the industry. And globally there's a $450 billion funding gap in agriculture, according to FarmDrive."
mohammed_ab

0% Interest Small Business Loans | Kiva - 1 views

  • Kiva expands access to and lowers the cost of capital for small business owners by providing 0% interest, crowdfunded loans, raised from its network of 1.6 million supportive lenders around the world. Many of these lenders become borrowers' new customers, brand advocates, and biggest fans.
  • WE NYC has partnered with Kiva, a platform specializing in crowdfunded loans, to help more women entrepreneurs achieve crowdfunding success. Participating in WE Fund Crowd means WE NYC will be your first lender, pledging 10%, or up to $1,000, of your crowdfunding goal. Friends, family, and new supporters who see your campaign will know that WE NYC believes in your business and your dreams.
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    Kiva has a very interesting platform that aims to help small businesses that have no interest.
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    This partnership between the city of New York and Kiva should be an example for all major cities.
mbellakbail69

FinTech for All: Moneyfellows founder on helping friends and family to save or borrow i... - 0 views

  • Unique challenges are mainly regulations for Fintech companies usually being a grey area, without enough clarity on what exactly they might fall under.With lack of enough funds and diversity, fundraising is also another challenge for most of the startups in the MENA region.
    • ayachehbouni
       
      Fundraising is a priority for start-ups and companies in the MENA region as it is thanks to it that the companies can grow and work at full potential
  • Tackling these challenges, the EFSE Fund and the SANAD Fund for MSME, advised by Finance in Motion, have partnered with Village Capital and the LHoFT to develop the Fincluders Bootcamp 2017, unique investment readiness program designed for entrepreneurs offering inclusive financial products.
  • ‘Financial Inclusion’ might be the most noble sector of financial technology, solving problems the traditional finance industry won’t — servicing underbanked demographics in areas with poor financial infrastructure.
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  • In my opinion, Financial inclusion isn’t just about opening a bank for those that are unbanked, but rather being able to offer them actual financial services like lending, savings and improving their credit scoring (which is the building block for all financial services), helping them improve their actual living standards, eventually.
kaoutarchennoufi

Due diligence | Kiva - 0 views

  • Kiva takes due diligence and monitoring very seriously as part of our responsibility to lenders and borrowers. We encourage all lenders to learn about the risks of lending on Kiva as Kiva does not guarantee repayment on any loans. Lending on Kiva may involve loss of principal, for a variety of reasons including if the borrower doesn’t repay, the Field Partner doesn’t repay or from currency loss. The level of due diligence relevant to a specific loan on Kiva depends on a variety of factors, including how the loan is administered. Most loans on Kiva are administered by one of our local partners working in more than 80 countries. Kiva conducts due diligence on all Field Partners prior to allowing them to begin posting loans on the Kiva platform. To learn more about this process visit our Field Partner due diligence page.
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      The financial world involves many risks such as default risks,loss of principal... As a transparent organization, Kiva emphases on due diligence and inform its lenders about the risks they might encounter. The due diligence is also applied to field partners in case some currency or country risks take place. Therefore, the loans and their risks are monitored in a very efficient and strategic way that might result in decreasing the level of risks.
kaoutarchennoufi

Okoa Stima, Kopa Stima, Safaricom Okoa Stima Service - Safaricom - 0 views

  • You can now get electricity when you need it then later pay later! Okoa Stima allows you to borrow any amount based on your pre-determined credit limit. This limit is based on your historical relationship with Kenya Power. The loan comes at a facility fee of 10% and is payable in 7 days. Your M-PESA account will be deducted with amount of top plus facility fee so there is no delay. You will be able to register up to 3 meters and tokens purchased/Bill paid cannot be used on another meter except the 3 you have registered. To take advantage of this great service just dial *885# from your mobile phone.
    • kaoutarchennoufi
       
      This is the first time I realize that there are such favourable and valuable facilities in Africa. Okoa Stima has allowed kenyans to borrow a speciafic amount to pay their electricity Bill and then repay it in 7 days. The amount is taken from one's M-Pesa account. I hope that there will be more similar solutions in Africa.
hibaerrai

FarmDrive | WSA - 1 views

  • FarmDrive is a Kenyan ¬based social enterprise that is unlocking access to financial services for over 50 million smallholder farmers in Africa. Using simple mobile phone technology, alternative data sets, and sophisticated data analytics, FarmDrive is closing the critical information gap that keeps smallholder farmers from getting loans that would allow them to grow and diversify their businesses. Potentially creditworthy smallholder farmers are often denied loans because they lack the traditional credit profiles that lenders rely on to evaluate borrowers.FarmDrive bridges the funding gap between smallholder farmers and financial institutions in two ways. The first step is to bring together multiple streams of data to create yield-predictive agronomic algorithms specific to each farming vertical and geographical region. T hese streams of data can be classified into three categories: 1. Agronomic Data: crop portfolio, soil health, drainage, weeds, pests, etc. 2. Remote Sensing Data: vegetation, weather conditions, climate trends, etc. 3. Market Data: offtake security, price trends, etc. FarmDrive then creates credit profiles for farmers by combining the agronomic algorithm with behavioral data. The behavioral data is obtained from farmers through a simple SMS/Android mobile phone application. With this application, Farmers can track their revenues and expenses, and also send demographic information to FarmDrive.
    • hibaerrai
       
      FarmDrive specializes in smallholder farmers businesses; it is not common in Africa. This Fintech helps farmers extract needed loans that will help them grow and expand. This initiative closes thus the gap between agricultors and financial services, and increases financial inclusion.
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