After more than three years, the microfinance industry is attracting new players. In six-eight months, at least six new microfinance institutions (MFIs) have got membership of industry body MFIN (Micro Finance Institutions Network).
The six are Kolkata-based Jagran Microfinance, Mumbai-based Svasti Microfinance and Jagdhan Investment Finance, Bhopal-based Sahayog Microfinance, Lucknow-based Margadarshak Microfinance and Bhubaneswar-based Annapoorna Microfinance.
MFIN, which had 49 members as of 2010, saw a fall in membership to 39 by 2011 due to adverse market conditions. With the new entrants, it is now a 44-member body.
“The MFI industry is expected to grow by at least 55 per cent this financial year due to a favourable business environment,” says Alok Prasad, chief executive officer, MFIN.
The gross loan portfolio of the MFI industry registered 30 per cent growth in 2013 till September over the same period of the previous year.
The amount of loans disbursed in the second quarter of this financial year increased by 50 per cent over the same period of the previous year, according to MFIN. Funding to the industry during the second quarter grew by close to 300 per cent compared to the first quarter, according to MFIN.
Annapoorna Microfinace, in its earlier avatar as People’s Forum, worked as a self-help group set up in 1995.
With a decline in the self-help group movement, the organisation decided to covert into an NBFC (non-banking financial company) in 2009-10. But it started full-fledged operations only after 2012.
An NBFC-MFI since October 2013, Annapoorna now has a gross loan portfolio of nearly Rs 142 crore (Rs 1.42 billion), making it one of the largest homegrown MFIs in Odisha, according to Satyajit Das, the company’s