The National - News

Mohammed Bin Rashid Innovation Fund to offer loans to start-ups for first time

- SARAH TOWNSEND

A Dh2 billion government-backed fund to support start-ups in the UAE will begin offering direct, Sharia-compliant loans to recipients from this year, as it looks to bridge a gap in bank financing to entreprene­urs.

The Mohammed Bin Rashid Innovation Fund (MBRIF), an initiative of the Ministry of Finance that is operated by Emirates Developmen­t Bank, issues bank guarantees to help finance entreprene­urs in the creative sector, but it does not currently offer start-up loans.

“Things were slow last year [when it came to making awards through the fund],” EDB chief executive Haytham Kamhiyah said.

“Banks find it risky to lend to SMEs on their own, so we want to move things along.

“We are reviewing our business plan and products for 2018 and are introducin­g a sharia-compliant loan from this year. We are hopeful that 2018 will be a very successful year,” he said

The fund’s committee has yet to agree how much of the fund’s total Dh2bn capacity it will contribute to direct loans. Mr Kamhiyah told The National that EDB will aim to finalise that detail at its next board meeting in March.

The UAE wants the contributi­on of the SME sector to reach 70 per cent by 2021, to help fuel the country’s non-oil GDP growth through a more diversifie­d economy. SMEs have been hit hard by the country’s economic slowdown in the past two years, as banks consider it increasing­ly risky to lend to less establishe­d operations.

The Central Bank of the UAE is devising initiative­s to help SMEs gain extra access to financing at more accessible rates, together with revised rules and operating procedures for banks dealing with SMEs.

Under plans discussed at a committee meeting yesterday, EDB will offer loans of up to seven years to MBRIF participan­ts, at interest rates ranging between 7 to 9 per cent.

This is almost half the typical 12 to 14 per cent market rates offered by commercial banks to SMEs at present, according to Mr Kamhiyah.

MBRIF launched in 2016 but began operations at the beginning of last year. It has supported three start-up projects to date, totalling around Dh15 million, through bank guarantees with the UAE’s RAKBank.

Its first disburseme­nt in October was to InternsME, an online portal connecting students and recent graduates to employers across the Middle East.

MBRIF is open to companies that are already operationa­l and beyond the “ideation”, or concept stage, both globally and in the UAE – provided they have a base in the country.

They also must operate within industry sectors prioritise­d in the UAE’s National Innovation Strategy, including renewable and clean energy, transporta­tion, education, technology, health care, space and water. The fund will also consider other companies that contribute to the UAE’s social and economic progress.

The fund’s committee has identified around Dh22m of projects that it hopes to finance in the next two to three months through the existing bank guarantee scheme, Mr Kamhiyah said.

It is also in talks with “up to 10” financial institutio­ns other than RAKBank with a view to growing its roster of participat­ing banks and furthering support for start-ups.

The UAE wants the contributi­on of the SME sector to reach 70% by 2021, to help fuel the non-oil GDP growth

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates