Tag: SMEs’

  • CII launches ethics guide for SMEs

    CII launches ethics guide for SMEs

    Two ethical books to help employers have been launched by the Chartered Insurance Institute (CII), London.

    The books are intended to assist firms, especially Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs).

    A third guide is due for publication later this year.

    In past five years have, the institute has invested in some initiatives which provided guidance and support to members, to ensure they not only understood, but also show awareness of the code of ethics and its practical requirements.

    The new guides are: Demystifying the Code of Ethics,published last year,and this year’s online ‘ethics toolkit’ for financial advisers.

    The CII’s emphasis on ethics echoes greater scrutiny by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) on culture; this combined with intensified public interest following the LIBOR crisis and the subsequent Banking Standards Commission report, which called for increased professional standards in the banking sector.

    Early findings from a forthcoming  skills survey of CII members indicates there is an increased awareness and requirement for support from professionals themselves, with three quarters of respondents (74 per cent greater emphasis on ethical and conduct training and support.

    On the books, David McIntosh, chair of the CII Professional Standards Board, said: “While there is a clear understanding of the need for change, many individuals and firms could struggle to find a practical way of articulating, incentivising and demonstrating how they pursue high standards of conduct. This is not an easy area for those who are used to working with clear cut compliance rules. That is where professional bodies such as the Chartered Insurance Institute can play a vital role.

    “As the independent chairman of the CII’s Professional Standards Board, I think the work of the CII in recent years to promote high standards of conduct is just as important as their work to promote high standards of technical competence.

    “That is why I welcome the CII series of ethical guidance, of which this publication is the first, as another practical tool to help guide the profession – whether for individuals on their own or through their firm – and to drive a step-change in the culture of financial services for the long-term benefit of the public.”

    The guides are not intended as a compliance tool, but to provide support for individuals and their firms in meeting the challenge to raise standards in the public interest, he added.

  • ‘Poor funding stifling SMEs’

    The President, Association of Microentrepreneurs of Nigeria (AMEN), Prince Saviour Iche, said micro enterprises are not creating new jobs because business conditions have deteriorated in the last 12 months.

    He said many firms are still struggling as a result. According to him, funding remains a major obstacle to firms wishing to consolidate and grow .

    He explained that the general business conditions are considered tough are caused by the inability to raise capital and lack of government’s support.

    According to him, optimism for the future among small and medium scale enterprises(SMEs) yearly is still a concern.

    He said small businesses are adapting and responding to the changing business environment with determination and inventiveness – launching new products or services that put them ahead of the competition.

    He said access to finance remains a problem encountered by small business owners. The other is access to markets. In fact, even those who make it struggle with cash flows as a result of bank management or poor debtors’ control.

    According to him, the high level of uncertainty is beginning to have a negative effect on the failure rate for small businesses, adding that micro enterprises which seemed to be in healthy positions and flourishing a year ago, are now experiencing difficulties and even collapsing as a result of the economic pressure. “This raises a red flag in terms of job creation,” he said.

    However, as a result of the slowing economy, deals have begun to fail, which combined with slower or negative growth in core operations, have left many business owners with high levels of debts which they are unable to service.

    He said most businesses face significant cash flow and operational challenges at the moment, noting that as economic constraints seem to be more systemic than sector specific, government and big business need to co-operate more to get the economy moving in the right direction.

    “There is still an appetite from SMEs to invest in the country, but they are looking for funding for new projects or opportunities,”she added.

     

    He said the aim of the organisation is to stimulate economic growth, while fast tracking entrepreneurial businesses at the same time.

    The association’s philosophy,Iche maintained is to create an entrepreneurial ecosystem, where different role players come together to create the support networks and the mentoring needed to uplift entrepreneurs.

    He said entrepreneurship is greatly needed and should be the key focus area of the government.

     

  • Improved banking regulation creates quality loans for SMEs

    Improved banking regulation creates quality loans for SMEs

    Enhanced banking regulation by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has sharpened banks’ loan assessment skills, making the lenders to create better loan options for Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs).

    The SMEs sub-sector currently faces constraints which tend to limit its ability to realise its full growth potentials. These constraints have been identified to include competition, infrastructure, taxes, accounting, management, marketing, economic planning and poor funding. Poor economic conditions, which also implie poor finance and inadequate infrastructure, have been identified as the most crucial factors.

    This position was corroborated by other studies which identified financial support as one of the main factors responsible for small business failures in Nigeria.

    Speaking during a Small and Medium Scale (SMEs) seminar organised by Skye Bank in Lagos, it’s General Manager, Retail Banking, Mrs. Arinola Kola-Daisi, said reforms in the banking sector have also put higher risk management systems in place, ensuring that SMEs get loans and repay them as at when due.

    She said the banking sector is well regulated now than before, making loan approval process strict, as banks no longer experiment with depositors’ funds, adding that banks now look at ways of improving customer services and helping emerging businesses to grow.

    Mrs. Kola-Daisi, said SMEs constitute an important vehicle for national development as they have the capacity to integrate a large segment of the populace in productive economic activities. Specifically, she said the economies of the Asian Tigers or Asian Dragons of the highly free and developed Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan, owe their rise to economic pre-eminence to an extent, to the existence of well-organised and efficiently run SMEs.

    She noted that the Tiger Club Economies of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand, follow the same export-driven model of economic development pursued by the four dominant Asian Tigers where SMEs constitute a sizeable vehicle of bringing about development and have remained so till this day.

    She said SMEs remain a tool for employment generation and providing opportunities for entrepreneurial sourcing, training, development and empowerment. Developing nations such as Nigeria characterized as low income earners by the World Bank, value SMEs for several reasons.

    She said SMEs have generally achieved decent levels of productivity, especially of capital and factors taken together while also generating relatively large amount of socio-economic development. The SMEs sector is viewed as being populated by firms most of which have considerable growth potential.

    The Skye Bank SME seminar tagged: ‘It is Possible’ was meant to tackle financing challenges being faced by the subsector headlong. It was attended by young business owners and entrepreneurs who are bogged down by the constraints of finance and other stifling conditions to chart a success path for their growing businesses.

    The seminar was one of the bank’s contributions to support and promote the growth of SMEs as the growth engine of the Nigerian economy. The well attended seminar was not only rich in content but the experience sharing was also pivotal as it helped boost the resolve of those present to continue to work hard for success to beckon.

    It had in attendance many operators in the SMEs sector who came to gain fresh and new insights and trends into the operations, financing and management of SMEs.

    Declaring the seminar open, the bank’s Managing Director, Kehinde Durosinmi-Etti, represented by Executive Director, Corporate and Investment Banking, Timothy Oguntayo explained that the lender organised the seminar as part of its contributions to the development of SMEs in the country.

    He said the SMEs sector was an important sector as it provides more opportunities and employment than the mining, oil and gas sectors. Indeed, the sector can increase economic opportunities for those who have not been able to participate directly in large-scale projects.

    “‘Without doubt, the SMEs sector has the capacity to drive and encourage indigenous business and rural economic development that help people create wealth and contribute to national development’”, he said.

    Durosinmi-Etti said the SMEs sector has the capacity to solve Nigeria’s rising unemployment challenge adding that the lender would continue to play the role of a facilitator and development partner to help young businesses grow and realize their full potentials to the benefit of the nation, the people and the economy.

    Managing Director of the Wedding Store, Mrs. Bolanle Koya, advised start up enterprises to shun ostentatious life style but to work on improving their offerings until their services or products have become successful and embraced in the market.

    The entrepreneur took the audience down memory lane about how she started small, shunned a life of flamboyance at the beginning and how she overcame the initial challenges of access to funding. According to her, small enterprises should grow organically and be mindful of cost.

    Another entrepreneur, Chinedu Nwobi who is the Managing Director of Everrise Wire and Cable Limited, told participants that the business which started as a trading concern some years ago is now into manufacturing of cable and wires. According to him, after leaving school and serving his apprenticeship, he chose to deal in original cable products.

    This, he said, set him apart from the others who were selling sub standard materials. Before long, his fame and acceptance became widespread and opened flood gate of opportunities for him. He urged the participants to build their businesses on honesty, integrity, and trust.

    He said ideas are also key in starting up a successful business. He said entrepreneurs also need to be creative to succeed. He said customer service is a key factor that determines whether a business succeeds or not. “When customers are well treated, they see you as a friend. When you allow customers to know that as your business is growing, they too, will be growing, they will give you their support,” he said.

    Nwobi said small businesses also need to address the issue of succession plan. He regretted that in many small businesses, once the owner dies, the business also dies. He said building an investors’ team that will spell out succession plan, ensures that business continues when the owner dies. He also advised small business owners to run their firms with integrity. He said, doing so pays, not only in the short run, but in the long run.

    Skye Bank officials said the SMEs seminar series would continue and many entrepreneurs would be supported to grow their business from small enterprises to large manufacturing outfits that would in near future attain the status of global brands.

     

    Role of leasing in project financing

     

    Leasing has also been identified as a significant financing alternative for projects and businesses that would create wealth for the economy, Executive Secretary, Equipment Leasing Association of Nigeria (ELAN), Andrew Efurhiewe, has said.

    He explained that globally, leasing has been used to facilitate the sale of vendors’ goods, enhance lessors’ profits and grant lessees the access to productive assets.

    He said the lessor, vendor and lessee, need to collaborate for them to achieve set objectives. “There exists a communication gap between the lessor and vendor which must be adequately bridged to produce a more robust leasing environment.

    He said the potential of leasing is high, considering the low lease penetration in Nigeria in comparison with other countries, stressing that there is need to regulate the activities of vendors in order to check the unscrupulous acts of some that are detrimental to the growth of the industry,” he said.

    Efurhiewe said professionals should facilitate accurate valuation of leased assets and create a strong secondary market for used assets. He said improved synergy between lessors and vendors will create growth and employment for the economy.

    He said ELAN is going to liaise with vendors and other stakeholders to create an efficient leasing industry that will continue to build wealth for the economy. He said the body will continue its proactive initiative by bringing to the membership fold reputable vendors and work towards setting standards for their dealings with lessors.

    Lessors should know their vendors very well and ensure they understand their products to enable them educate the final users of the assets, he said, stressing that Vendors should support efforts of ELAN, in its pursuit of establishing the leasing law aimed at improving the regulatory framework for the leasing industry that will invariably create more businesses for vendors.

     

    DMO

     

    The Debt Management Office (DMO), said it is looking for an international bank and a local lender to act as co-arrangers for N80 billion depository note to be issued this year.

    The debt office in a notice, said it has appointed a sole depository bank and an arranger for the offering, but did not give any names. Hoever, a source at DMO said Nigeria has mandated Citibank to act as the depository bank. Bids for co-arrangers are due on October 3. Nigeria is increasing the amount it borrows from overseas to around 40 per cent of all debt over the next three to five years, from 12 per cent, seeking lower funding costs.

    The debt office in May said it would issue N80 billion in global depository notes this year, after a $1 billion Eurobond, to deepen its footprint in international debt markets.

    Citibank and Deutsche Bank acted as advisers on the $1 billion Eurobond issued in July, which was four times oversubscribed. Nigeria also plans to issue $100 million in Diaspora bonds this year and is seeking advisers. The DMO said the depository note will be documented under U.S. rules and listed in Europe.

     

    Money market review

     

    Rates across all tenors moved higher by an average 230 basis points (bps) last week. The call rates gained 262 bps, while the 180-days rates gained 216 bps. Week-on-Week however, rates jumped by an average 600bps across all tenors. The call and seven-day rates both climbed the highest week-on-week by 730 bps to 19 per cent, and 19.3 per cent respectively. The Nigeria Interbank Offered Rate (NIBOR) is expected to re-stabilize back in the coming weeks.

    In the Treasury Bills market, liquidity eased following the maturity and repayment of N97.2 billion Open Market Operation (OMO) bills by the CBN. The apex bank subsequently mopped up excess liquidity selling N84 billion in OMO bills.

     

    Forex market review

     

    The CBN last week, offered $600 million at the Wholesale Dutch Auction System (WDAS), while a total of $525.1 million was sold, $266.6 million on Monday and $258.5 million on Wednesday’s auction respectively. The Marginal rate at both auctions remained at N155.76 to a dollar.

    The Naira however lost 50 kobo Week-on-Week at the inter-bank market, to close at N163.60 to a dollar from N163.10 to a dollar previously.

     

  • ATMs, SMEs threatened as Microsoft closes Windows XP

    UNITED States technology giant Microsoft Incorporated has said it will withdraw security cover for its ‘legacy’ operating systems, Windows XP and Office 2003 to pave way for Windows 8 and Office 365.

    The firm said April 8, 2014 will mark “end of support” for Windows XP and Office 2003 globally.

    So many individuals, Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and big businesses, including banks’ Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) run on Windows XP and Office 2003. This implies that with the withdrawal of its cover, users of the device, will become vunerable to attacks from malware, virus, pishing and other dangers that may arise from the Internet.

    Specialist Sales Manager, Ade Famoti, Microsoft Anglophone West Africa, who spoke in Lagos over the weekend, warned that time was fast running out for individuals, big corporations and SMEs to start taking steps to migrate from what it called, the firm’s “legacy technology” to modern technology.

    Famoti dismissed insinuations that the firm’s engineers will unleash a massive virus attack on people whose sytems were still running on Windows XP and Office 2003 at the expiration of the deadline, saying the firm is “ethical company listed on the US Stock Exchange and would not engage in anything unethical.”

    He described this year as a year of transformation for Microsoft as it embarks on a ”paradigm shift from being a core software and services company, to devices and solutions company.

    “Without sounding hysterical, the ATMs deployed by the banks in the country still run on Windows XP. Office 365 is the innovation that is at the vanguard of the “transfromation,” which will reduce capital cost and increase productivity, he said.

    According to him, customers will have an experience that will be completely different from what they are used to, saying that everything will now be in the cloud.

    Datacenter Solution Specialist, Microsoft Anglophone West Africa, Oluyomi Alarape, said 12 years ago when Windows XP was introduced into the market, it was a great product, adding that change in technology has necessitated the development of new products.

     

     

     

     

  • SMEs for training

    The Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) has concluded plans to train small and medium entrepreneurs involved in food exports on quality and packaging.

    NEPC board chairperson, Mrs Grace Clark, who said this at the just- concluded Food Labelling and Food Expo held in the U.S, said there is need for the Nigerian entrepreneurs in the sector to explore opportunities in the U.S. and other global markets.

    She said the training would expose the entrepreneurs to modern trends and technology involved in the export of food to these markets given the global concern on food safety.

    “Given Nigerian population, the market has a tremendous potential for partnership with U.S.  firms in food processing, handling and distribution.

    “It is in fulfillment of the Federal Government Transformation Agenda to diversify the economy from oil to non-oil that the council facilitated the participation of some Nigerian SMEs to the expo,” She added.

  • ‘How SMEs can reduce operating costs’

    MTN Nigeria has said one of the ways small and medium scale enterprises (SMEs) can reduce operating costs is through the cloud technology services.

    Speaking at the launch of the services in Lagos, MTN Chief Enterprise Solutions Officer Babatunde Osho, said the technology has become a key differentiator and enabler for businesses.

    He said with the cloud service offer, there was a critical success factor for SMEs due to its flexibility and pay-as-you-go cost structure.

    The services, he said, would enable SMEs to increase productivity and by implication, profitability.

    Osho said MTN was the first telecoms operator to offer cloud services to small businesses in the Nigerian market.

    According to him, the services are designed to cut costs for SMEs. He said: “It is a range of prepaid cloud-based services designed to offer human resource management, customer relationship management and other enterprise software over a secure internet connection. And this without any of the associated IT infrastructure costs.”

    Osho said with the launch of the services, SMEs would be able to enjoy enterprise solutions without the usual attendant cost.

    “No matter what you need, MTN Cloud Services can help take your business to new heights. These services are available on the MTN Business Nigeria online portal, providing a one-stop shop for a range of services such as Human Resource Management, Customer Relationship Management, Sales Force Automation, Accounting and Finance, Virus and Spyware Protection, Firewall Protection, Browser Protection, and Email Protection, among others,” he said.

    He pledged that the telco will continue to add value to the lives and businesses of Nigerians through delivery of tailor-made, productivity-enhancing solutions to various segments of the market across the country.

  • Jobs: SMEs to the rescue

    With a projected five million jobs in 2015 under the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), the Federal Government is set to tackle graduate unemployment. TOBA AGBOOLA reports.

     

     

     

    For the many graduates leaving school every year, there is good news from the Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Dr. Olusegun Aganga and the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN).

    They may not all have to pound the streets in search of jobs as five million jobs will be created under the Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) before 2015.

    Aganga said to create jobs for youths, particularly graduates, the Federal Government has adopted some measures through the SMEs, with no fewer than 4000 Corps members trained in SMEs. The measure, he said, is meant to make the NYSC members self-reliant and become employers through entrepreneurial engagements after completing their one year compulsory service.

    Records showed the impressive impacts of SMEs on the economic performance index. For instance, the SME sector is said to have employed more than 31 million people, thereby significantly contributing 46.54 per cent to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    According to information from the Federal Ministry of Youth Development, the population of youths is put at about 67 million. Of this number, about 30 million, representing 46 per cent, is said to be unemployed. The report showed that of the number seeking paid jobs, the number of those with certificates outweighs the number of those who have no certificates.

    There are two variants of the National Youth Service Corpos (NYSC)/SMEs concept. One involves the government taking the entrepreneurial campaign to the universities nationwide by establishing ‘’Enterprise Centres’’.

    The idea, Aganga explained, is to make the students entrepreneurs instead of job seekers when they graduate. The other is a SMEDAN programme called ‘’One Local Government, One Product (OLOP)’’, which entails taking the programme to the rural communities. Some local governments have been selected for the pilot scheme.

    Aganga told The Nation that the government is set to crash the cost of accessing funds for the intending entrepreneurs.

    “With the Presidential directive that the Bank of Industry (BoI), which lends at single digit interest rate, be recapitalised, many more SMEs will be able to access cheap funds at minimal costs when the cost-reduction process is completed,” he said.

    He said all over the world, SMEs empowerment has become the main economic growth strategy, considering the high employment generation capacity of SMEs, adding that with about 17 million SMEs in Nigeria, the creation of five million jobs was very possible.

    “Recent data provided by SMEDAN and the National Bureau of Statistics, put the number of MSMEs in Nigeria at 17,284,671, with total employment put at 32,414,884. If each of these SMEs is empowered to create one job each, that makes about 17 million jobs. If 50 per cent of this figure create one job each, that means 8.5 million jobs will be created.

    He said if a quarter of the total is empowered, and they create one job each, over four million jobs will be created.

    Aganga said the figure could go up, adding that he has directed the parastatals to work out a job creation profile around the model, so it can serve as a key performance index for the country. “Our job is to put structures in place to make it happen,” he said.

    While encouraging more entrepreneurs to come up with ideas that could create quality jobs and enhance inclusive economic growth, he said the Federal Government is committed to providing the enabling environment for businesses to thrive.

    He stressed that all the factors needed for profitable and sustainable business were abundant in Nigeria, citing market and raw materials as critical success factors of business/investment.

    SMEDAN’s Alhaji Bature Masari says the agency is set to create five million jobs through SMEs before 2015, adding that the agency had mapped out strategies to achieve the goal.

    Masari said the strategies include the implementation of the National Enterprise Development Programme (NEDEP) and OLOP scheme across the federation.

    He added that NEDEP was developed with the objective of harnessing the opportunities in the MSME sector to drive inclusive economic growth through skills training and development, job creation and wealth generation.

    “Our objective is that within the few years of implementing NEDEP and other programmes to be initiated, we will generate an estimated five million direct and indirect jobs,’’ he said.

    Masari said the agency would work with BoI and the Industrial Training Fund (ITF) on MSMEs development, skills training and acquisition as well as business services development.

    “Part of our strategy is to create new clusters of businesses based on competitive and comparative advantages already identified through the OLOP initiative and raw materials mapping in the 774 Local Governments,” he added.

    He said the government would set up an SME Council, comprising the federal, state and local governments to streamline and harmonise all SMEs development activities across the country to achieve maximum impact.

    ”If we are going to develop our economy and turn our quantity advantage into productive advantage, one of the most important sectors that we have to focus on is the MSME sector.”

    Masari said the development of the sector would help in job and wealth creation, and address the problem of unemployment and youth restiveness in the country.

    He said the government was restructuring the organisation to achieve its mandate and added that SMEDAN had just opened new offices in 11 states.

    Also, with the introduction of the over-the-counter (OTC) market by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), two weeks ago, SMEs seeking long-term funds no longer have to fear.

    OTC is a decentralised market of securities not listed on an exchange, where operators trade over the telephone or electronic network, instead of a physical trading floor, or central exchange. The OTC is designed to provide a platform for the companies to access funds from the market.

    The Managing Director, NASD, Bola Ajomale, said the initiative means a lot to the SMEs.

    “Though the market is meant for any firm with signs of growth and good corporate governance, prominence is given to SMEs because they are the bedrock of any economy and not the blue chips. It will go a long way in providing funds for them to grow their business and enhance their potential,” he said.

    According to Ajomale, all that an interested company needs to do is to apply to raise funds through an initial public offer (IPO), before it is admitted as a security for trading on the platform through any of the 40 stockbrokers that have been registered by Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the apex regulator of the market and NASD.

    But it does not end there. SEC and NASD will conduct a thorough check on the security to verify the growth and corporate governance status of the company to determine whether it is good for the consumption of the public.

    “We are encouraging small companies that want to get bigger, and by having this market in place, it means we are giving them a place to grow,” he stated.

  • Lagos trade fair to promote SMEs

    The Lagos State Government has concluded plans to host the year 2013 Domestic trade fair tagged Eko Expo, aimed at promoting Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) and locally made products in the country.

    Special Adviser to Governor Babatunde Fashola on Commerce and Industry, Mr. Oluseye Oladejo, who disclosed this in Ikeja, said foreign exhibitors from Indonesia and China were among the various organisations that have indicated interest to participate in the fair billed to hold at Lekki Free Trade Zone.

    Oladejo explained that the government is organising the coming expo in collaboration with the Lekki Free Zone Development Company, as a result of the successes recorded with last year’s fair, where a total of 175 investors participated. He said the fair would further promote investment opportunities available at the zone, as well as provide platform for operators in small and medium scale industries to showcase what they do.

    According to him, “the choice of Lekki Free Zone as the venue for this year’s fair is to familiarise the business community with the peculiar incentives offered by the zone and the need to invest therein.”

    He listed such incentives to include, complete tax holiday from all federal, State and Local governments, taxes, rates, customs duties and levies; one-stop approval for all permits, operating license and incorporation papers.

  • SMEs bemoan lack of access to credit facility

    SMEs bemoan lack of access to credit facility

    The Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) and busi-nessmen under the umbrella of Market Leaders Association of Nigeria have urged banks to assist them in growing their businesses.

    In a statement after a meeting in Lagos, the group said the sector had been neglected despite all the noise about availability of funds to assist them.

    The association’s President, Deacon C.F.C. Obih, said over the years, SMEs had been catalysts for economic growth and national development.

    SMEs, according to him, also play critical roles in employment generation, facilitates economic recovery and national development.

    He explained that the sector had been experiencing retarded growth because of poor access to funding/credit as banks are always reluctant to lend to the sector.

    The banks’ reluctance is informed by inadequate documentation of business proposals, lack of appropriate and adequate collateral, high cost of administration and management of small loans and high interest rates.

    He said: “We have approached banks individually and collectively to assist us with loans but most of us are usually disqualified due to lack of knowledge of the process. Moreover, banks do not have enough personnel to train all SMEs on the rudiments. That is why we have come together to be educated on how we can access loans to improve on our businesses.”

    The Managing Director of Mayakorp Nigeria Limited, Mr Martins Ndigwe, said the sector had the most need for financial loans to boost businesses. He emphasised that they also need to be educated on the process of obtaining such loans.

    Unfortunately, the banks are not helping much to enlighten the sector on how to grow their businesses perhaps due to inadequate human capacity.

    He said the Annual Business Empowerment Summit holding tomorrow at the Sports Hall of Teslim Balogun Stadium, Lagos was designed to bridge the gap.

    This inaugural edition will bring together over 5,000 SMEs and dealers on automobile, telecommunications, information technology, agriculture, food and beverages, building materials and household wares sectors in an interactive business forum with their product and service providers. He said the conference will assist the subsector overcome its challenges.

     

  • BoI’s credit to SMEs hits N238b

    BoI’s credit to SMEs hits N238b

    The Bank of Industry (BoI) has disbursed about N238 billion as loans to Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) for re-financing and recapitalisation, its Managing Director Ms Evelyn Oputu has said.

    The bank has brought down the level of bad loans to 15 per cent from 70 per cent.

    The BoI boss to reporters at a workshop in Lekki Ajah, Lagos at the weekend.

    She said more than N60 billion  of the Cotton and Textile Garment (CTG) fund, which represents 60 per cent of the total fund, had also been disbursed.

    She said: “Bad loans have come down to 15 per cent from the initial 70 per cent. We met it at 70 per cent when I took over. Meanwhile, it was 10 per cent few months back, but because of the insecurity across the country, it recently hit 15 per cent.”

    Oputu enjoined owners of SMEs to have bankable proposals before seeking funding supports from development finance institutions.

    Besides, she said SMEs should equip themselves with enough information about any funding agency they intend to approach for support so that they are armed and abreast with questions that may follow suit.

    One of the beneficiaries of the fund, former Speaker of House Representatives,  Alhaji Salisu Buhari, said BoI  had, indeed, saved many firms in the norh from collapse.

    He said most of the commercial banks were running away from the north because of the security situation there.

    “The commercial banks are not ready to give us loan in the north. In fact, they are running away. Initially, we reluctantly gave BoI a chance, but the bank has saved many of us from total collapse. Some that have shut down are springing up again. BoI sat down with us and understood our plight and they have come to our rescue,” he said.

    General Manager, Operations, BoI, Mr Babatunde Joseph, said the bank would lend the SMEs.