Microfinance Shows Strong Equity Valuations Despite Crisis

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4th March 2010, 07:50am - Views: 1410






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MEDIA RELEASE PR38573


Microfinance Shows Strong Equity Valuations Despite Crisis


WASHINGTON, Mar. 4 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --


    Sustained demand for microfinance equity, in the face of the worst financial

crisis in decades, continued to propel valuations in this sector higher throughout

2009 and the medium-term outlook remains positive, according to a new report by CGAP,

a microfinance group based at the World Bank, and J.P. Morgan.


    "Microfinance institutions encountered the harshest market conditions in

more than a decade during 2009, with most showing a clear deterioration in

asset quality and profitability," said Xavier Reille of CGAP, co-author of

the report. "And yet most MFIs continued to maintain strong reserve and

capitalization levels, and investors continued to show faith in the sector."


    The CGAP/J.P. Morgan report shows that equity valuations continued to

rise across all regions in 2009, with MFIs in the private equity market

trading at a median of 2.1 times book value - a 62 percent increase since

2007. Public investors significantly increased their commitments to

microfinance last year, and the private sector continued to establish new

microfinance equity vehicles, including new funds from Blue Orchard, Triodos,

and Developing World Markets.


    "The investor community, both public and private, continues to be

interested in microfinance, though we think that they are becoming more

selective," said Nick O'Donohoe, Global Head of Research for J.P. Morgan and

co-author of the report.


    The relative youth of the microfinance equity market means there are few

established performance benchmarks, making assessments difficult. However,

the CGAP/J.P. Morgan report is bridging this gap by drawing on analysis of

200 private equity transactions between 2005 and 2009 and trading information

on eight publicly-listed low-income financial institutions to assess the

strong performance of the microfinance equity market.


    Indian MFIs are continuing to attract the strongest investor interest,

comprising 30% of all microfinance equity transactions in 2009. Indeed,

equity valuations for Indian MFIs are trading at nearly six times their book

value, or three times the global median, a performance the CGAP/J.P. Morgan

analysis suggests is not sustainable over the longer term.


    The strength of MFI equity valuations masks the impact of the global

financial crisis on the sector. The CGAP/J.P. Morgan report shows that loan

portfolio quality began to deteriorate rapidly after January 2009, with past

due loans over 30 days jumping to a median of 4.7 percent from 2.2 percent

over the first five months of 2009 although it has moderated since then and

thus far remained stable in 2010. The effects of the downturn were far from

uniform however, with MFIs in South Asia and South America showing few signs

of impact, while others in Eastern Europe and Central Asia particularly were

more affected. However, very few MFI failures have been reported and most

institutions remain well capitalized with equity ratio unchanged in the 18 to

20% range.


    Judging by the performance of listed low-income financial institutions,

Business Finance CGAP 3 image

the most comparable listed vehicles to MFIs, investors believe the sector

will emerge from the crisis in good shape. These stocks have strongly

outperformed emerging market banks (as measured by the MSCI Emerging Markets

Bank Index) and by the end of 2009, had rebounded to pre-crisis levels or new

historical peaks.


    The CGAP/J.P. Morgan report argues that the decline in asset quality at

MFIs will likely slow, but not curb, growth in their asset base, while

placing a focus on improved risk management. Valuations likely will continue

to be underpinned by continuing public and commercial sector demand in the

medium-term, further buoyed by local bank acquisitions of MFIs and an

expected initial public offering by SKS, India's largest MFI - in 2010.


    About CGAP

    CGAP (The Consultative Group to Assist the Poor) is the world's leading

resource for the advancement of microfinance. CGAP provides the financial

industry, governments and investors with objective information, expert

opinion, and innovative solutions to effectively expand access to finance for



    About J.P. Morgan

    J.P. Morgan is the investment banking arm of JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:

JPM), a leading global financial services firm with assets of $2.0 trillion

and operations in more than 60 countries. JPMorgan Chase is a leader in

investment banking, financial services for consumers, small business and

commercial banking, financial transaction processing, asset management and

private equity. The firm serves millions of consumers in the United States

and many of the world's most prominent corporate, institutional and

government clients under its J.P. Morgan and Chase brands. Information about

J.P. Morgan is available at www.jpmorgan.com.


     Source: CGAP


    CONTACT: Una Gallagher Pulizzi of CGAP,

             upulizzi@worldbank.org,

             +1-202-473-8869; 


             Tasha Pelio of J.P. Morgan, 

             tasha.pelio@jpmorgan.com,

             +1-212-270-7441


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