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Perspective
26 August 2014

Nine-country assessment of WRF provides way forward

Region:
Middle East & Africa
Senior Reporter
A new study into warehouse receipts and collateral management was unveiled at the Fin4Ag conference in Nairobi.
A new study into warehouse receipts and collateral management was unveiled at the Fin4Ag conference in Nairobi.
 
The 200 page report dissects the experiences of nine countries examining lessons learned and highlighting potential ways forward in one of the most exciting fields of agricultural finance.
 
The interim report, entitled: ‘Study on appropriate warehousing and collateral management systems to promote access to finance through warehouse receipt finance (and other forms of asset based finance) in favour of smallholder farmers in sub Saharan Africa and Madagascar’, was commissioned by the Netherlands headquartered Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) and the African Rural and Agricultural Credit Association (AFRACA), and is a collaboration involving law firm Sullivan & Worcester and J Coulter Consulting.
 
It focuses on Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Ghana, Niger, Senegal, Uganda, Mozambique, Cote d’Ivoire and Madagascar. Madagascar’s community warehouse system under which farmers store produce under their own name in funder or communally owned storage facilities is one of the success stories highlighted in the report.
 
Two leading microfinance institutions (MFIs), refinanced by banks, have “built themselves around the product from the beginning”, leading to “wholehearted” adoption, said Jonathan Coulter, director at J Coulter Consulting, at the media roundtable launch at Fin4Ag. The system has had a positive impact on farmers’ livelihoods and also helped stabilise prices. Madagascar also demonstrates how community warehousing can be a springboard for private warehousing, with MFIs already moving towards collective warehouses to bring down monitoring costs, he said.
 
Challenges, however, include instances of risky behaviour, such as the financing of crops with a 100% loan to value rate. The national regulator needs to focus on regulating not just MFIs but the product, and more technical assistance is required, Coulter said.
 
Within public warehousing overall, another challenge is that sites with capacity of less than 1,500 tonnes can be economically unviable.
 
The report also examines the legal structures that support or inhibit warehouse financing in the nine countries, and proposes ways forward.
 
“The legal framework or the lack of it in any jurisdiction is going to have a massive impact on warehouse receipt finance,” whether you are a smallholder, collateral manager, MFI or bank, noted Sam Fowler- Holmes, associate at Sullivan & Worcester. Five of the countries in the report are part of the so-called OHADA group, which have a shared legal framework. “Trying to develop a warehouse law that could apply across all of them is incredibly difficult” and this means that there is “very limited regulation in place for some of the key participants in the warehousing chain,” said Fowler Holmes.
 
Of these, Cote d’Ivoire has perhaps made the most progress in creating a quasi system supporting warehouse finance. There is, for example, a law in place that requires collateral managers to be licensed by the government and to hold insurance cover against theft, fire and damage. There are also special regulations for collateral managers dealing in coffee, cocoa, cotton and cashew nuts as well as commodity specific standards that provide comfort to lenders, he said. There is however a question mark over when proposed warehouse financing legislation initially planned to be voted on by parliament in April 2014 will be pushed through.
 
The report also makes recommendations that could support warehouse receipt finance in many of the countries covered.
 
These include the licensing of warehouses, warehouse operators and collateral managers to improve confidence in the system, according to Geoffrey Wynne, director at Sullivan & Worcester. Countries are also advised to create negotiable warehouse receipts a move that would help with taking security of goods and transferring title.
 
Countries should abolish stamp duties and lower or remove registration fees to incentivise registration, he said. They should also introduce the legal right to enforce security by private sale and are advised to create electronic collateral registries that are accessible by the public, the report asserted.
 
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