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On Site Training and Mentoring OTM

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Beg. No. of Active MF Clients. 2. Growth in Loan Portfolio. STANDARD: 5% Ending MF Loan Outstanding Beg. MF Loan Outstanding. Beg. MF Loan Outstanding ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: On Site Training and Mentoring OTM


1
On Site Training and Mentoring (OTM)
Building on Capacity and Education to Expand
Microfinance Access A Presentation of Results and
Experiences from the Technical Assistance in
Enhancing Access of the Poor to Microfinance
Services in Frontier Areas (TA 4544) Implemented
by the NATIONAL ANTI-POVERTY COMMISSION Funded
by the ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK
  • Presented by
  • Eduardo N. De Castro, Domestic Microfinance
    Specialist
  • SEAMEO-Innotech, Quezon City
  • 22 September 2006

2
(On Site Training and Mentoring OTM) Pearl
Hall, SEAMEO-INNOTECH Commonwealth Ave., Diliman,
Quezon City September 22, 2006 Presented
by Eduardo N. de Castro Domestic Microfinance
Specialist
NAPC-ADB Technical Assistance 4544 Enhancing
Access of the Poor to Microfinance Services in
Frontier Areas"
3
Module Overview
  • Phase 3 Background
  • Selection Criteria
  • OTM Point of Entry
  • Approach to OTM
  • PESO Standard
  • General Findings
  • Conclusion
  • General Recommendations

4
1. BACKGROUND
  • There were 53 MFIs that participated in the
    nationwide survey on phase 1.
  • From among them, NAPC selected 15 MFIs/branches
    for the OTM

5
SELECTION CRITERIA
  • The criteria were solely based on the information
    provided in the MFI survey results
  • Acceptable level of outreach
  • Portfolio quality
  • Number of savers
  • Governance
  • Presence and potential to expand services in the
    frontier areas

6
2. OTM POINT OF ENTRY
  • PESO The uniform performance standards for all
    types of MFIs in the Philippines
  • Portfolio Quality
  • Efficiency
  • Sustainability
  • Outreach

7
APPROACH TO OTM
  • The selected MFIs were rated purely for their MF
    activities
  • The results of the ratings determined the types
    of limited on site training and mentoring.
  • OTM included, but not limited to, training on the
    use of PESO instrument, workshops, consultations
    with management and the MFU, branch visits,
    limited operations review, and field visits.

8
PORTFOLIO QUALITY
1. Portfolio At Risk
STANDARD 5
2. Loan Loss Reserve Ratio
STANDARD 100 of the required
9
EFFICIENCY
1. Administrative Efficiency
STANDARD 10 and below
2. Operational Self-Sufficiency
STANDARD Greater than 120
STANDARD Group Greater than or equal to
300 Individual Greater than or equal to 150
3. Loan Officer Productivity
10
SUSTAINABILITY
1. Financial Self-Sufficiency
STANDARD Greater than 100
Adjusted Expenses Total Operating Expense
(Average Equity Average Fixed Asset x
Inflation Rate) (Market Interest Rate x
Average Total Liabilities) Actual Interest
Expense Other Implicit Costs. Other Implicit
Costs include those costs relevant to the conduct
of its business such as grants, rent free
building, donor paid technical advisor, or other
subsidized expenses
2. Loan Portfolio Profitability
STANDARD Greater than the inflation rate during
the period
11
OUTREACH
1. Growth in Number of Clients
STANDARD 5
2. Growth in Loan Portfolio
STANDARD 5
3. Depth of Outreach
STANDARD Not Exceeding 20
12
(No Transcript)
13
3. GENERAL FINDINGS
  • 1. Loan Portfolio Quality
  • Policies
  • Client Selection
  • CIBI
  • Repayment Capacity
  • Loan Terms Sizes
  • Repeat Loans
  • Outreach
  • Approving Authority
  • Loan Collection Monitoring
  • Delinquency Management
  • Supervision
  • Training
  • Natural Calamities
  • 2. Sustainability
  • Profitability
  • Expansion
  • Credit Pollution
  • Other Factors

14
Policies
  • Client Selection
  • For group loans under a modified grameen model,
    selection of borrowers lies solely on the
    recommendations of the members of the centers or
    groups.
  • Target clients are not limited to enterprises
    that can generate daily/weekly income to match
    with weekly repayment frequency.

15
Policies
  • Credit Investigation / Background Investigation
    (CIBI)
  • Reliance on the strong recommendations of centers
  • No independent CIBI conducted by the MFIs to
    gather first hand information to track
  • Multiple access to other borrowings
  • Non existent microenterprises or dwindling income
    due to low sales
  • Family problems that led to relocation,
    separation, close of businesses, etc.

16
Policies
  • Repayment Capacity
  • Absence or insufficient client assessment tools
    to determine the repayment capacity that can be
    normally measured through cash flow analysis

17
Policies
  • Loan Terms Sizes
  • Automatic step up lending
  • Loan sizes beyond capacity of borrowers to pay
  • Terms do not match with the size of the loan. Too
    long for smaller amounts, and possibly too short
    for higher amounts.

18
Policies
  • Repeat Loans
  • Conditions for repeat loans not strictly
    implemented that are based on
  • Repayment history
  • Attendance to weekly center meetings
  • Credit scoring
  • CIBI
  • Cash flow

19
Policies
  • Outreach
  • Rapid expansion in providing credit to as many
    borrowers in pursuit of mandated targets (
    internal external) sacrificing control and
    portfolio quality

20
Policies
  • Approving Authority
  • Too much dependence on the recommendations of the
    account/loan officers. Very rare that loan
    applications (new repeat) are disapproved or
    deferred for perceived risks.

21
Loan Collection
  • Loan collection not clearly established and
    enforced
  • Laxity in collection leading to the collapse of
    credit disciplines that are emphasized during
    clients training and orientations.

22
Loan Monitoring
  • No follow up activities to ensure that loans
    granted are not diverted that can be verified
    through random ocular visits and loan utilization
    checks.
  • Inadequate management information system (MIS) to
    track vital information of the loans ( loan list,
    loan delinquency, portfolio at risk, repayment
    history, etc.)
  • MIS not updated

23
Delinquency Management
  • Failure to monitor and immediately act on the
    earliest signs of delinquency
  • Group guarantees not enforced to the fullest
  • Absence of delinquency plan to address early
    signs of delinquency as well as remedial measures
    for long outstanding uncollected accounts

24
Supervision
  • Lack of focus on supervision and monitoring of
    account/loan officers due to lack of training on
    basic supervision.

25
Training
  • Absence or lack of adequate training of
    account/loan officers to properly implement the
    MF programs
  • Lack of understanding of MF best practices and
    principles to distinguish it from the other
    regular loan programs of the MFIs

26
Calamities Emergencies
  • Typhoons
  • Floods
  • Death or Sickness in the family
  • Policy changes of national and local governments
    leading to dislocation or permanent closures of
    businesses

27
Profitability
  • Factors affecting loan portfolio profitability
  • High PAR decreases income potential but increases
    loan loss provision
  • High costs (direct indirect) for some MFIs
    curtailing plans to expand

28
Expansion
  • Factors affecting expansion in frontier areas
  • Peace and order situation
  • Low business opportunities due to less economic
    activities
  • Lack of basic infrastructures (roads, bridges,
    transport, communication facilities, etc.)

29
Credit Pollution
High delinquency is also attributed to the
absence of any facility for the sharing of credit
information (negative list) for all financial
institutions to verify multiple credit exposures.
30
Other Factors
  • Absence of other measures to mitigate risks
  • Health insurance to address sickness not only to
    the borrower but also to other immediate members
    of the family
  • Other forms of savings designed to cover for
    unexpected expenses that affects repayment

31
4. CONCLUSION
  • Maintaining acceptable level of PAR remains
    elusive for most of the MFIs.
  • High PAR is mostly triggered by the lack or
    insufficient basic policies and procedures in
    measuring clients ability to repay the loan
  • In some cases, implementation of policies are
    disregarded and to some extent ignored.
  • Most MFIs have mixed clients that generate daily,
    weekly, monthly, and seasonal income but the
    frequency of repayment remains weekly.

32
4. CONCLUSION
  • The lack or poor CIBI, to capture first hand
    information for new and repeat loan borrowers,
    resulted to surprises when delinquency starts to
    appear. Reasons like closure or no business
    sickness family problems etc. became common
  • Close monitoring of accounts are not strictly
    adhered due to the absence of an MIS that do not
    track vital data to generate the required
    information.
  • For some MFIs, repayment records are not updated
    to ensure sufficient responses to address certain
    adverse conditions that affects portfolio quality.

33
4. CONCLUSION
  • Training and supervision play a significant role
    in the success of the program.
  • Supervisors are not equipped with essential tools
    of basic supervision in order to provide guidance
    and direction to their subordinates.
  • Standard trainings are not consistently
    maintained as additional account/loan officers
    are hired for expansion. The absence of a
    structured training allows the transfer of the
    technology to deteriorate, just like in a message
    relay exercise.

34
4. CONCLUSION
  • . High costs in managing the MF loan programs
    compared to the expected income (due to smaller
    loan size) prevented the MFIs from expanding to
    more remote areas
  • Others seem to be sustainable since the required
    loan loss provision to cover for risks are not
    adequately provided.

35
5. GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Review and revise the product manual to consider
    changes that will strengthen the resolve to
    maintain high portfolio quality
  • Match the loan size with loan term for the
    borrowers to be able to pay. Extending the loan
    term of smaller amount does not necessarily
    convert into affordability, but more on
    increasing the risk of not being paid at all.
  • Avoid granting loans to microenterprises that do
    not generate daily of weekly sales if repayment
    frequency is weekly.
  • Design a new product that will match repayment
    frequency with the sales or income that comes
    monthly or beyond so as not confuse the
    account/loan officers in treating the same with
    the original MF program.

36
5. GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
  • CIBI should be improved to be able to gain the
    upper hand in gathering first hand information
    that will validate the recommendations of the
    centers/groups (group lending), and/or the
    information disclosed in the application forms
    (individual lending).
  • Explore the possibility of measuring the
    repayment capacity through cash flow analysis.
    The analysis should be adequate enough to
    determine the amount of loan to be granted for
    the borrowers to afford to pay.

37
5. GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Institute varied delinquency management measures.
  • Delinquency strategy is different for early
    signs. For long outstanding delinquent accounts,
    a more rigid and aggressive remedial management
    measures are needed. The costs (revealed
    concealed) are far greater than the income that
    can be generated from the delinquent portfolio.
  • MIS plays a critical and very important role in
    making sure that the MFI can act in a swift and
    decisive manner.

38
5. GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Provide essential supervision courses for newly
    designated supervisors.
  • In most cases, especially for MFIs that are
    expanding farther from their servicing branches,
    the success of the program depends on the quality
    of supervision. It includes the ability of the
    supervisors to lead, plan, organize, monitor, and
    institute adequate controls.
  • As part of their supervisory functions, train
    them to become trainers of new account/loan
    officers to keep the MF program always at the
    highest level of implementation.

39
5. GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Design and provide a comprehensive training
    course that will contain the training syllabus,
    classroom training, on the job training, training
    checkpoints, and evaluation.
  • Exercise care and prudence in expanding to areas.
    The provision of MF credit services should always
    be market driven as opposed to supply driven.
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