Press Release

IFC Partners with Deutsche Bank to Boost Trade Finance in Africa with a Focus on Small, Fragile and Conflict-Affected Countries

June 28, 2024

Washington, June 28, 2024 – To help provide vital financing to importers and exporters of essential goods in Africa, especially in small, fragile, and conflict-affected states, IFC announced a risk-sharing facility with Deutsche Bank of up to €215 million.

In 2022, African countries imported and exported $1.1 trillion worth of goods and services, equivalent to 54 percent of the continent's GDP. However, cashflow limitations restrict banks in Africa from meeting client demand for trade finance, IFC annual bank surveys and an IFC-WTO joint study of West Africa show.

The partnership with Deutsche Bank is expected to help meet this demand, enabling Deutsche Bank to continue providing trade financing to African countries at a time when many global banks are pulling back—ultimately supporting the ongoing flow of trade on the continent. Increased trade in Africa and in other regions can help countries adapt to climate change and strengthen food security, including by improving the availability and affordability of food supplies, according to the IMF.

Under the facility, IFC will provide risk participation in a portfolio of trade transactions originated by Deutsche Bank with local issuing banks in Africa. The initial portfolio will cover risk for 40 issuing banks across 18 countries on the continent, 14 of which are classified by the World Bank Group as small, fragile and/or conflict-affected.

"IFC's risk participation with Deutsche Bank leverages our issuing bank network to enable trade flows in Africa with our Global Hausbank clients and echoes a shared commitment to ongoing economic growth in emerging markets," said Borislav Ivanov-Blankenburg, Global Head of Documentary Trade Finance for Deutsche Bank.

"IFC's partnership with Deutsche Bank comes at a time when traders in Africa are finding it increasingly difficult to access credit, with demand for trade finance from banks on the continent greatly outstripping supply," said Mohamed Gouled, IFC Vice President for Industries. "This risk-sharing facility will help African importers and exporters participate in global value chains, creating jobs and driving economic growth."

IFC anticipates that its investment will encourage other financial institutions to deliver trade finance to credit-issuing banks in Africa, resulting in more support for trade in essential goods across the continent. The project is the first Global Trade Liquidity Program (GTLP) facility under the IFC Africa Trade and Supply Chain Recovery Initiative (ATRI) supported by the IDA Private Sector Window (PSW) Blended Finance Facility to help increase the amount of credit made available to emerging market issuing banks in Africa.

 

About IFC

IFC — a member of the World Bank Group — is the largest global development institution focused on the private sector in emerging markets. We work in more than 100 countries, using our capital, expertise, and influence to create markets and opportunities in developing countries. In fiscal year 2023, IFC committed a record $43.7 billion to private companies and financial institutions in developing countries, leveraging the power of the private sector to end extreme poverty and boost shared prosperity as economies grapple with the impacts of global compounding crises. For more information, visit  www.ifc.org.

About the IDA Private Sector Window

The International Development Association's (IDA) Private Sector Window was launched in 2017 to catalyze private sector investment in the poorest and most fragile countries. Recognizing the key role of the private sector in achieving IDA's objectives and the World Bank Group's vision to create a world free of poverty on a livable planet, the window provides a source of co-investment funding and guarantees to de-risk private investments supported by IFC and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA). The IDA PSW is an option when there is no commercial solution, and the World Bank Group's other tools and approaches are insufficient. For more information, visit: http://ida.worldbank.org/psw.

About Deutsche Bank

Deutsche Bank provides retail and private banking, corporate and transaction banking, lending, asset and wealth management products and services as well as focused investment banking to private individuals, small and medium-sized companies, corporations, governments and institutional investors. Deutsche Bank is the leading bank in Germany with strong European roots and a global network.

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Contacts

Laura Farrell Smith
For IFC
+1 202.355.3754