Daily Tribune (Philippines)

UnionBank extends digital microcredi­t to ‘sari-sari’ store

Retail financing must be a digital product that processes transactio­ns in real time, and one that is integral to and seamlessly embedded into the user’s daily activities

- By Vernon Velasco

With the lack of investment capital perenniall­y hounding micro and small retailers, the Union Bank of the Philippine­s, in partnershi­p with True Money, rolled out a digital mobile end-to-end solution to power micro-working capital loans of sari-sari stores.

Under the retail-financing program, variety-store owners are given access to safe, convenient and affordable credit to expand their businesses.

“The whole point of this program is financial education for the sari-sari store owners,” John Cary Ong, executive vice president and center head for transactio­n banking center at Union Bank, told the Daily Tribune on “Straight Talk.” “A lot of them, when they hear about loans and credit, they’re very apprehensi­ve. They think it’s high-interest, etc. Actually, you can use credit to your advantage. For small entreprene­urs, they can purchase more goods from the distributo­r.”

He said clients don’t have to leave their stores to avail of a loan or queue at payment centers. Retail financing, Ong said, must be a digital product that processes transactio­ns in real time, and one that is integral to and seamlessly embedded into the user’s daily activities.

Availing yourself of a loan does not require one to have a smartphone nor an app. And the system runs on 2G, with minimal friction to the user.

Understand­ing that micro and small enterprise­s in the Philippine­s are part of a complex ecosystem that has unique needs, Ong said that, in this program, Union

Bank collaborat­es with distributo­rs who work with their clients to determine their credit scores.

“When you talk about stores, they wouldn’t have a typical financing account statements, they wouldn’t have an income statement or a balance sheet. They won’t have access to traditiona­l forms of credit. So what we’re trying to do is also learn from this experience to come up with a new credit-scoring algorithm, which can then help us to extend credit to other types of micro-institutio­ns in the future, Ong said.”

If not altogether discourage­d to avail themselves of a loan, currently, small retailers resort to borrowing from informal money lenders, who charge exorbitant fees.

“(Informal lenders) are there for a reason. Because the banks are not fulfilling that particular need,” Ong said. That’s where I say, with the fintech companies coming in, they’ve really shook things up; we really need to shake things up.”

 ?? AL PADILLA @tribunephl_al ?? WHILE the Asian stock markets are in a jittery state, the Pratunam market in Bangkok, Thailand appears t be ready for the Christmas rush.
AL PADILLA @tribunephl_al WHILE the Asian stock markets are in a jittery state, the Pratunam market in Bangkok, Thailand appears t be ready for the Christmas rush.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines