African Development Bank approves US $100-million Trade Finance Facility in Angola

African Development Bank approves US $100-million Trade Finance Facility in Angola

The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank has approved a US $100-million Trade Finance Line of Credit to Angola’s Investment Bank (Banco Angolano de Investimentos, BAI). The funding will support international trade transactions of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and local corporates in identified transformative sectors in Angola.

In addition, a number of indirect benefits from this facility are expected to accrue to BAI’s subsidiaries in Cabo Verde and São Tomé and Príncipe through the strengthening of correspondent banking relationships by providing guarantees on their international trade transactions.

This project comes at a time when banks in Angola are experiencing significant difficulties in securing foreign currency to finance the import of critical essential products and capital goods. As a counter-cyclical intervention, this facility is similar to other initiatives provided to local banks in Nigeria and Ghana in the recent past.

The Facility is expected to achieve the following main objectives: to enable BAI to provide foreign currency liquidity support to finance export/import activities of SMEs and corporates in the non-oil sectors of the Angolan economy; and to support efforts to diversify the economy from oil dependency through the “Angola Invest program” under which the government provides credit default risk cover to financial institutions like BAI to fund SMEs in the non-oil sectors. This will spur investment in agriculture, fisheries/livestock, manufacturing and extractive industries, through facilitating the importation of raw materials, intermediate goods and capital goods.

The Facility is expected to boost trade activities of at least 500 SMEs and local firms in the non-oil sectors, with a value expected to reach US $700 million in 3.5 years. The intervention will enhance BAI’s capacity to originate trade finance transactions in the country and effect timely settlement of trade finance obligations to various counterparties. This is crucial to restore confidence in international counterparties supplying essential goods, agricultural inputs and capital goods/equipment to Angolan corporates and SMEs on favourable trade terms.

This intervention is well aligned with the Bank’s Ten Year Strategy 2013-2022, as well as the High 5 strategic priorities, including, Light up and power Africa, Feed Africa, Industrialize Africa, and Integrate Africa. It will help to increase enterprise development and competitiveness through expansion of the economic base. This will be made possible by enhancing access to financial services and expanding access to social and economic infrastructure, which will boost inclusive growth.

Original source: AfDB
Published on 6 March 2018