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    • News
    • In partnership with Trust Women

    First women's bond from World Bank raises $165 million

    The World Bank on Wednesday said its private sector arm issued about $165 million in “women’s bonds” in the first debt sale by the development lender specifically aimed at raising money for businesses owned or run by women in emerging markets.

    By Devex Editor // 07 November 2013

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    A staff at the BCEL Bank in Vientiane, Laos, where the private sector creates opportunities for entrepreneurs, 30-40% of which are women. The World Bank's private sector arm issued about $165 million in "women's bonds" aimed at raising money for businesses owned or run by women in emerging markets. Photo by: Stanislas Fradelizi / World Bank / CC BY-NC-ND

    The World Bank on Wednesday said its private sector arm issued about $165 million in ‘women’s bonds’ in the first debt sale by the development lender specifically aimed at raising money for businesses owned or run by women in emerging markets.

    The International Finance Corp. issued the new five-year, triple-A rated bond to Japanese investors. It follows the World Bank’s sale of several billion dollars in “green bonds” over the past five years, whose proceeds go to help countries cut greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change.

    Bonds tied to social or environmental targets are part of a new trend of social finance, as a growing class of investors seek to bridge the gap between philanthropy and pure financial returns.

    Besides helping businesswomen, women’s bonds can help raise awareness about the importance of gender issues in development, said Jingdong Hua, vice president and treasurer at the IFC.

    “The gender issue … weaves so tightly into every social and development issue we’re facing today,” he told Reuters.

    Like the rest of the World Bank, the IFC focuses on fighting poverty, but targets its investments at the private sector instead of governments.

    Women make up roughly half the world’s population, but 70 percent of the world’s poor people. A third of small- and medium-sized businesses in emerging markets are owned by women, but they often face hurdles in accessing credit from banks, meaning their businesses cannot grow.

    A joint study by IFC and consulting firm McKinsey & Company found that women entrepreneurs face a $260 billion to $320 billion credit gap, meaning the difference between the desired and actual level of loans businesses are able to get.

    The money raised from the bond, which settles Nov. 21, will go to local banks and financial intermediaries who are required to commit it to businesses in which women own the majority stake, or where they own at least a fifth of the company and hold senior leadership positions.

    The World Bank committed to reducing extreme poverty to 3 percent of the world’s population by 2030, which is impossible without focusing on women, Hua said.

    To meet the poverty-reduction goal, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim launched a major reorganization of the bank’s divisions and designated gender as one of five cross-cutting “themes” that must tie in to everything the bank does. The other four themes are climate change, conflict and fragility, jobs, and public-private partnerships.

    Hua said IFC was also considering other thematic bonds in addition to green bonds and women’s bonds, but declined to specify what areas they would focus on.

    Daiwa Securities arranged and distributed the women’s bonds, which were available only in Japan, though the program could expand to other investors next year. Japanese retail and institutional investors are particularly open to innovative financial instruments focused on social issues, the IFC said.

    Edited for style and republished with permission from Trust Women. Read the original article.

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