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Rediff.com  » Business » Citi, IFC to launch $1.25 bn funding tie-up

Citi, IFC to launch $1.25 bn funding tie-up

Source: PTI
June 15, 2009 16:02 IST
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Citigroup and the International Finance Corporation will be launching a funding tie-up worth $1.25 billion, aimed at boosting global trade flows, says a media report.

"Moves to unblock world trade flows still jammed by the credit crunch have been backed by Citigroup, which on Monday unveils a $1.25 billion funding tie-up with the International Finance Corporation, the private sector arm of the World Bank," the Financial Times said.

As per the deal, Citi would provide $750 million to banks in Asia, West Asia, Africa and Latin America over a three-year period, it added.

According to the daily, IFC and other participating development organisations would invest up to $500 million in these transactions. The local banks would in turn, extend trade financing to their importer and exporter clients.

"While this is a lucrative business for Citi, our goal is, hopefully, that prices will go down (as more funds are made available)," head of trade finance at Citi John Ahearn told the Financial Times.

The publication noted that Citi estimates the $1.25 billion would support up to $7.5 billion in trade flows over the three years as the loans would be short-term and the funds would be reinvested once borrowers repay. 

Citi and the IFC are launching the initiative as part of a $50 billion global trade finance initiative announced by the World Bank in April, the report said.

The Financial Times reported that the tie-up -- the second the IFC has entered into with a bank since April -- marks a new willingness by banks to finance trade in emerging markets.

Quoting Georgina Baker, who is the IFC director of Global Financial Markets, the daily said these funding partnerships should ease banks' concerns over the risk of funding trade in emerging markets by reducing the amount of loans they keep on their books.

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