Business Day

Women’s co-op aims to be bank

- Agency Staff London

After more than a decade of SA’s biggest banks not having to face fresh competitio­n, new rivals are stacking up.

The latest entrant, the Young Women in Business Network Cooperativ­e Financial Institutio­n (YWBN), is now seeking to become the country’s first bank owned by women by converting from being a co-operative institutio­n, which can only offer services to its members, MD Nthabeleng Likotsi said.

It will target informal traders and black business owners who have been shunned by traditiona­l lenders, she said.

YWBN joins at least three other companies planning to challenge the nation’s five top lenders, including FirstRand and Standard Bank Group.

Between them, those five major banks control more than 90% of banking assets and dominate the local landscape, with ATMs and branches littered all over the country, offering everything from savings accounts and credit cards to business loans and private wealth management services.

“Competitio­n is healthy and we strongly believe this country needs to have more banks,” Likotsi said.

“Banks don’t understand black entreprene­urs. Power is sitting in the informal sector, which has not been fully activated, and banks are not giving it their full attention.”

YWBN is hoping to set itself apart by targeting individual­s who fall outside of the formal economy, such as selfemploy­ed hawkers and minibus taxi drivers, as well as stokvel savings pools, said Likotsi.

“If I want to raise a million quickly I can go to a million South Africans and ask them to each contribute,” she said. “That is the power. The power is sitting in the stokvels, the power is sitting in the hawkers, the power is sitting in the taxi drivers. We believe in that informal sector.”

The company will submit its licence applicatio­n on Friday by marching from the Presidency’s

IT JOINS AT LEAST THREE OTHER COMPANIES PLANNING TO CHALLENGE THE FIVE TOP LENDERS

offices at the Union Buildings in Pretoria to the South African Reserve Bank’s offices in a bid to raise awareness of the need to accelerate black economic empowermen­t, she said.

It is seeking to convert into a mutual bank, which can take money from depositors, who then become members with voting rights in the company.

Likotsi said that 60% of the co-operative financial institutio­n’s members were black women and the co-operative had 550 shareholde­rs with R40m in shared capital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa