Microfinance

Case Solution for SKS Microfinance: The Sour Taste of Success

Complete Case details are given below :
Case Name :      SKS Microfinance: The Sour Taste of Success
Authors :           Srinivasan Sunderasan
Source :             Ivey Publishing
Case ID :            W12906
Discipline :        Finance
Case Length :    12 pages
Solution Sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
In August 2010, SKS Microfinance (SKS) had become India’s (and South Asia’s) first stock-market listed and publicly traded microfinance institution (MFI). A share in the company was offered at INR 985 and it commenced trading at INR 1,036, a small premium to start with but eventually reaching INR 1,404 within a month. Unfortunately, that was the extent of the good news as far as the company and its shareholders were concerned. Things then began to unravel rapidly. The initial public offer (IPO) of shares was seen as the initiation of a conflict between the interests of the company’s shareholders and the poor rural borrowers it was expected to serve. Further, the company fired an arguably successful chief executive officer due to “inter-personal issues” within days from the end of the post-listing 40-day silent period. Matters were aggravated when 30 women who happened to be microfinance borrowers ended their lives within a span of 45 days, 13 of whom were reported to have been SKS members. The provincial government in the state of Andhra Pradesh, the hub of microfinance activity in the country, brought out an ordinance effectively curbing microfinance lending and recovery operations, and, by May 2011, the Reserve Bank of India, the country’s banking regulator, had issued a notification placing caps on interest rates, margins and specifying minimum tenures for relatively larger loan sizes. Was this the end of the road for the microfinance movement in India?
 
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Case Solution for Contrasting China’s Yunan Model with Bangladesh’s Yunus Model for Microfinance

Complete Case details are given below :
Case Name :      Contrasting China’s Yunan Model with Bangladesh’s Yunus Model for Microfinance
Authors :           Yuping Du, Randall O. Chang, Meng Wu, Chun Li
Source :             Ivey Publishing
Case ID :            W13266
Discipline :        Finance
Case Length :    09 pages
Solution Sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
In 2008, about the time when the Yunus Model of microfinancing was under attack in its home country of Bangladesh, the Yunan Model was begun in rural China. The original model suffered from inefficiencies, high interest rates and allegations of improprieties against the founder, Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus. By contrast, the Yunan Model relied on social capital and mechanism design theory to enlist the rural population, financial institutions and government in a cooperative effort to increase the financial stability and entrepreneurship level of one of the poorest areas of the country. Could “microfinance with Chinese characteristics” offer a plan to reduce poverty across China?
 
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Case Solution for Bandhan Microfinance: Is Transformation to Bank Status Required?

Complete Case details are given below :
Case Name :      Bandhan Microfinance: Is Transformation to Bank Status Required?
Authors :           Sujit Jagadale, Debasish Maitra
Source :             Ivey Publishing
Case ID :            W14280
Discipline :        Finance
Case Length :    19 pages
Solution Sample availability : YES
Plagiarism : NO (100% Original work)
Description for case is given below :
Bandhan, the largest microfinance institution in India, has 13,000 staff members and 2,016 branches in 22 states and union territories, 5.2 million borrowers and loans outstanding of INR 57.04 billion. However, its overdependence on external sources of funds along with recent steps by the country’s banking regulator have started worrying Bandhan’s management, from a profitability and sustainability perspective. The banking licence policy declared by India’s central bank in February 2013 came as an opportunity for Bandhan to resolve the predicament it had met. The founder chairman and managing director is now trying to address the question of transforming Bandhan into a bank. Does the present business require any change? As a bank, the cost of funds for Bandhan would come down, as it would be able to raise funds by drawing deposits from clients. But is Bandhan ready to become a bank? How will it meet the various challenges in achieving business transformation?
 
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