Wednesday, 10 June 2026
Kenyan Digest

Equity Bank to Receive KSh 5 Billion IFC Loan to Support SMEs

1 min read
Published 29 June 2020

World Bank’s International Finance Corporation (IFC) will give Equity Bank a loan of KSh 5 billion to increase lending to small businesses. The institution revealed that Equity Bank will receive the senior loan with a renewable tenor of one year.

“The investment will help expand the Bank’s lending operations to the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) segment in Kenya, especially to companies whose cash flows have been disrupted by the outbreak of the Coronavirus pandemic,” reads an IFC disclosure approved on June 26, 2020.

IFC hopes that the loan will help promote the resilience and stability of trade finance markets. This will only happen if private sector players like MSMEs access finances necessary to support their operation during the pandemic, and therefore fuel economic recovery.

The loan will benefit small businesses with an employee base of between 10 and 300 and with total assets below Ksh 1.5 billion. The loan limits for micro-businesses is Ksh 1 million, Ksh 10 million for small businesses, and Ksh 100 million for enterprises.

Interventions to curb the Coronavirus spread have taken a toll on the country’s SMEs. An earlier survey by the Kenya Private Sector Alliance (KEPSA) revealed that close to 45% of SMEs and MSMEs had to close operations by May to limit the impact of the Coronavirus.

SEE ALSO: SMEs worst hit by pandemic – KEPSA Survey 

The pandemic has forced banks to restructure 23% of their loan books, making them less willing to lend to small businesses. Last month, Central Bank Governor Patrick Njoroge warned of the possible collapse of small businesses due to lack of credit line necessary to weather the pandemic.