Difference between revisions of "SPIS Toolbox - Loan assessment: Adjust Repayment Plan to Cash Flow"
From energypedia
***** (***** | *****) m |
***** (***** | *****) m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | {{SPIS Finance}}{| cellpadding="1" | + | {{SPIS Finance}} |
+ | {| cellpadding="1" | ||
|- | |- | ||
| {{Back to SPIS Toolbox 2}} | | {{Back to SPIS Toolbox 2}} |
Revision as of 15:20, 13 November 2017
►Back to the Start Page | ►Back to the Module Page | ►Go to the Next Chapter |
6. Loan assessment: Adjust Repayment Plan to Cash Flow
SPIS, being based on agricultural activities, follows specific liquidity patterns, such as:
- irregularity, seasonality;
- farming-household mix;
- several cash generating activities (agricultural, non-agricultural);
- external shocks (climate, weather, pest, disease, prices).
Determining specific loan features (disbursement pattern, repayment rate, collateral, repayment frequency) should be based on cash flow projections of a particular case.
This means for the loan analysis process:
- in depth understanding of the farm and family economics;
- strong interaction with the potential borrower;
- networking with other sources of information in the sector and region;
- thorough understanding of the market and market trends;
- excellent staff with innovative attitudes.
SPIS goes along with high initial investment sums. These result in:
- long repayment periods (15-20 years);
- a need for high profitability of the SPIS;
- a need for a grace period at the beginning of the repayment plan.
Note: High installments resulting from very short loan repayment periods can create a threatening liquidity shortage – especially in the first years.
Outcome/Product
- Cash flow statement (current, projected);
- Tailor-made disbursement and repayment plan;
- Financial risk analysis/adjustment;
- Summarized risk analysis;
- Tailor-made loan details for decision.
Data Requirements
Collect, compute, prepare:
- total farm liquidity analysis (including household liquidity analysis (current + projected with SPIS));
- borrower’s own capital contribution;
- repayment potential;
- repayment plan;
- loan details.
People/Stakeholders
- Loan officers financing or planning to finance SPIS;
- Producer(s) / potential borrower;
- Management of financial service providers (operational level);
- Public entities promoting or/and subsidizing SPIS;
- Sponsors.
Important Issues
- Specific liquidity patterns need to be identified for every single case.
- Data collection process is challenging due to intermingled family-farm economy.
- High initial investment costs should ideally not lead to prohibitive transaction costs (consider bank-external subsidies);
- High initial investment costs should ideally not lead to liquidity shortages of the client due to high or very early installments (be flexible when defining installment plans).