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Unlocking SME growth

16 February 2010

James Prusky and Robert Klein, principals at Crecera Finance Company, discuss the role of trade finance in unlocking growth in the Latin American SME market.

Read more: [SME trade finance] [Latin America SMEs] [Crecera] [IADB SMEs] [SME trade finance fund]

The global financial crisis has made the economic environment challenging for all business sectors in Latin America, but none have been more acutely affected than the small and medium sized enterprises of the region, or SMEs. These businesses generally include companies that have less than 250 employees, and sales of $20 million to $100 million per year. Additionally, given Latin America’s natural proclivity towards commodity exports, many of these SMEs are commodity and agricultural producers who rely heavily on trade finance lines, and thus are even more vulnerable.

SMEs in Latin America, generally individual or family-owned businesses, have traditionally had a difficult time accessing regular and reliable trade finance lines. This is because they may lack the balance sheet and third-party auditing that allows banks to easily apply standard credit models to their lending decisions.

When liquidity is plentiful, these companies often receive financing from local and international banks,...


Poll

Credit insurers have withstood the crisis admirably settling a high number of claims during 2009. If you are actively involved in trade transactions what percentage of your deal book now enjoys some political or credit risk cover from private insurers?

75% to 100%
33%
50% to 75%
30%
25% to 50%
9%
25% or less
10%
I don’t use private credit insurers
18%

Quote

You ignore LCs at your peril as a trade bank.

Mark Evans, ANZ - Banks examine the bigger trade picture - April 2010