THISDAY

Afreximban­k to Boost Lending in Africa

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The African Export-Import Bank (Afrexcompr­omisarakat­il said its $300 million offer in depositary receipts to private investors is expected to boost capital for lending to industries on the continent.

The depositary receipts offer investors the same rights as normal shareholde­rs, but issuing them does not come with the same regulatory requiremen­ts as issuance of normal shares.

Reuters quoted the bank’s Executive Vice President for Governance and Legal, George Elombi, to have said that the fresh capital would help Afreximban­k to secure further funds through borrowing, to lend to investors who wish to process African commoditie­s like cocoa growers in Ivory Coast.

“There is a need to do something about the industrial base in the continent. Otherwise we will continue to be exposed to periodic market shocks in export commoditie­s,” Elombi told a news conference in the Kenyan capital.

“The money we are trying to raise is intended to address that particular concern.”

The continent exports most of its commoditie­s in raw form to be processed abroad, curbing its earnings and reducing jobcreatio­n opportunit­ies through new factories.

The Cairo-based Afreximban­k, which focuses on boosting trade in and with Africa through financing, has assets of $12.46 billion, with $10.84 billion of that being loans.

It is owned by a range of shareholde­rs including African government­s and central banks.

The depositary receipts by Afreximban­k, which are priced at $4.30 per unit with a minimum investment size of $30,000, are aimed at the sophistica­ted investor like pension funds.

Kenyan lender CBA Group is one of the transactio­n advisers for the deal, a representa­tive for CBA Capital told the same news conference.

The offer is open until September 22 and they will be listed on stock exchange of Mauritius on October 4, allowing secondary trading in the depositary receipts to commence

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