Archive for: Credit
by Hannah Siedek: Tuesday, January 29, 2008
It is nothing new that access to credit to small businesses and low-income individuals is limited in many developing countries. One of the many reasons, besides lack of collateral, informal economic activity, and physical distance to credit providers, is the lack of a formal credit history in a local credit bureau.
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by Jim Rosenberg: Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Brazil’s ACSP Launches Global FICO Consumer Credit Scores
Fair Isaac and Associacao Comercial de Sao Paulo (ACSP), one of the largest credit bureaus in Brazil, have announced ACSP’s launch of Global FICO Score for Brazilian businesses - saying that “the launch of this innovative consumer credit-risk score makes Brazil the first South American nation to access Fair Isaac’s global-standard FICO credit risk scoring technology.”
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by Jim Rosenberg: Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Europe turns nose up at mobile banking
Mobile banking could be failing to capture the imagination of consumers, according to a
survey of 2,500 retail financial services customers across Europe. The research, conducted by TNS on behalf of Fujitsu Services, found 65 percent of respondents prefer to access banking services online. nly five percent of the sample said mobile banking is the channel of choice. Physically going to a branch is the second choice, at 53 percent. The findings differ from a UK-only survey which put face-to-face or voice interaction as the preferred method of accessing banks.
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by Lauren Reese: Thursday, November 1, 2007
The many in-store Mexican banks have only begun to scratch the surface of the unfulfilled demand for financial services among low-income Mexicans. Or so hope Banamex, Soriana, and Wal-Mart Mexico, the latest entrants into the consumer credit bonanza in Mexico. The success of Banco Azteca, Coppel and other retailers who opened financial services outlets in their branches has attracted a wave of new competitors.
Banamex and Soriana recently launched a partnership making Banamex services available in all 240 Soriana stores, which see an average of 25 million customers per month. “Mi Ahorro Banamex” offers two products: a prepaid MasterCard card, redeemable at all Soriana and affiliated stores, and a savings card. They plan to introduce additional products, such as remittances and savings, in the future.
Wal-Mart’s approach is slightly different. Instead of partnering with a bank, they’ve decided to do it themselves. Banco Wal-Mart de Mexico Adelante is set to begin operations before the end of the year. Wal-Mart is certainly known for its low-cost, high volume business model, but will this carry over into their banking services? With 964 stores covering nearly every region of Mexico, the potential impact on the estimated 80% of unbanked Mexicans is huge.
Without getting into the debate on whether or not consumer credit is better, worse, or in fact the same as what microfinance institutions are offering, the impact of these new entrants will certainly be felt by both the consumer outlets as well as the microfinance institutions. And perhaps that’s not a bad thing, especially if it finally brings about price competition in this notoriously expensive market.
by Jim Rosenberg: Wednesday, September 19, 2007

That was fun. What did we learn?
We reaffirmed that small, including micro, enterprises have proven themselves to be reliable and sustainable ways to help people out of poverty and that, in that context, we have abundant proof that microfinance is a workable idea.
MFIs, although having reached increasingly impressive numbers of people, must nonetheless recognize that more than two-thirds of the inhabitants of developing countries remain to be touched by the MFI mission of bringing the advantages of banking to the unbanked and under-banked.
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by Hannah Siedek: Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Since Monday, more than 300 people from 60 countries have gathered at our Next Generation Access to Finance Conference in Washington DC.
The opening sessions covered the opportunities that technology provides, but also helped identify the areas we jointly need to tackle to unleash the power of technology to deliver financial services to people who are too poor, live too far from a traditional bank branch, or do not have a formal credit history.
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by Jim Rosenberg: Monday, September 17, 2007
Happy Monday…this Monday is more auspicious than most because it’s the start of our three day conference looking at how technologies such as card-based networks and mobile phones could increase access to finance. IFC is a co-organizer, and Visa is a sponsor.
Want to know more? Visit here for the full agenda.
We’ll be posting presentations as we get them…and this link should take you to a live video stream of the event.
by Jim Rosenberg: Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Great news…several of CGAP’s publications have been released in Chinese and are now available online. Here are two of our favorites:
Using Technology to Build Inclusive Financial Systems
Focus Note No. 32, January 2006 (Chinese, pdf)
Some of the innovations commercial banks need to service poor clients may be found in information and communications technologies (ICTs).This Focus Note addresses the following questions: Can banking technologies, applied innovatively in developing countries, make microfinance profitable for formal financial institutions? Will they reduce costs to such an extent that banks could profitably serve even those whom MFIs have mostly excluded to date, such as very poor and remote rural customers? Will these customers be comfortable using technology?
Use of Agents in Branchless Banking for the Poor: Rewards, Risks, and Regulation
Focus Note No. 38, October 2006 (Chinese, pdf)
Use of Agents in Branchless Banking for the Poor: Rewards, Risks, and Regulation
This Focus Note examines the experience of five pioneering countries–Brazil, India, South Africa, the Philippines, and Kenya–where agent-assisted branchless banking that targets poor customers is already a reality. It introduces the main issues involved in regulating branchless banking, particularly regarding the use of retail agents.
by Hannah Siedek: Monday, September 10, 2007
Banking agents have helped increase access to finance in Brazil. But success seems to be bringing competition among partners. The Valor Economico reports that Correios, the Brazilian postal network and Banco Bradesco, the country’s largest private bank are fighting about the postal bank they operate together.
Banco Postal was born out of a joint venture between Branco Bradesco and Correios in 2001. Banco Bradesco bid US$90 million for the 10-year contract and beat Itaú and state bank Caixa Economica Federal.
“Before we arrived, people in São Francisco de Paula had to go 10 kilometers to the nearest town with a bank to withdraw salaries or pensions,” said André Rodrigues Cano, a former Banco Bradesco director.
This was in March 2002 when, Banco Postal’s first branch opened in remote Sao Francisco de Paula in the south of Brazil. Now it seems as if Banco Postal account holders in rural and remote Brazil may have to take the bus again to reach their branch.
Banco Bradesco did not plan on building branches; they decided to use the postal outlets as their correspondentes bancarios, banking agents that deliver financial services.
Within only five years, Banco Postal was able to turn 5,460 postal outlets into full-service banking agents at which clients could pay their bills and withdraw their salary, but also deposit money and transfer funds to a relative in for example Sao Paulo. Today, Banco Postal acquires 4,500 new clients per day, and as of May of this year had opened 5.5 million bank accounts.
But now, its existence seems to be in doubt. Early in 2007, the battle between Correios and Bradesco began in earnest. The government would like to launch its own bank through the postal network providing microcredit, pension plans, and other services. So it may cancel its agreement with Bradesco. The reason primarily being that Bradesco seems to be making too much money off the state’s distribution network. Of the newly planned financial institution, the Brazilian government would keep 51% and the other 49% would again be auctioned to banks such as Itaú, ABN Amro, and Bradesco that have shown interest.
What I’m wondering is what will happen to all the account holders? Will they be transferred to the new financial institution? Will Bradesco have to open outlets in some very remote locations to serve them? Banking agents have been so successful in Brazil…but would clients now be left behind?
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