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Afreximbank
President Jean-Louis Ekra (left) in an exchange with Executive Vice President
Dr. Benedict Oramah, during the seminar
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Deepened
business relationships and partnerships among African banks and other trade financiers,
resulting in credit information and risk sharing and in pooling of expertise to
structure complex trade and project finance deals, is enabling Africa to
address the trade and project finance challenges facing it, Jean-Louis Ekra,
President of the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) said today. In an
address at the opening of the annual Seminar/Workshop on Advanced Structured
Trade Finance organized by Afreximbank in Douala, Cameroon, Mr. Ekra said that
many bankers in Africa were beginning to use innovative structured trade
finance instruments and structures to support trade development on the
continent.
“We have
also observed, over the last decade, a steady improvement in quality of deals
being submitted to the Bank for financing by our trade and project finance
intermediaries spread across the continent,” said Mr. Ekra, who noted that
“Afreximbank introduced the annual seminar in 1999 to give African bankers and
other players in the financial sector the capacity to structure trade and
trade-related project finance deals under the difficult market conditions in
Africa.”
According to
the President, the seminar equips participants with the technical skills and
knowledge to structure bankable trade and project finance deals and provides
Afreximbank with a platform to strengthen business relationships with its
clients and partner institutions.
Presentations
covering various aspects of trade finance structuring were made on the opening
day by speakers, including Rajiv Shah of BNP Paribas, Dr. Benedict Oramah,
Executive Vice President of Afreximbank, David Franklin of the law firm of
Franklin and Franklin, and Anne-Marie Woolley of Standard Bank, U.K.
The seminar
participants consist of senior executives from African banks and financial
institutions, hedge funds, Africa country funds and venture capital
institutions, corporate entities engaged in trade, manufacturing and privatized
infrastructure projects, Afreximbank’s trade finance and project finance
intermediaries and African law firms.
In addition to a two-day four-session
seminar segment on 19 and 20 November, the event, which is being organized in
cooperation with the Central Bank of Central African States and the African
Capacity Building Foundation, includes a one-day workshop on credit risk
analysis on 21 November. They will be followed on 22 November by a one-day
workshop on factoring.
About Afreximbank:
The African
Export Import Bank was established in October 1993 by African governments,
African private and institutional investors, and non-African investors to
finance and promote intra- and extra-African trade. Its two basic constitutive
documents are the Establishment Agreement, which gives it the status of an
international organization, and the Charter, which governs its corporate
structure and operations. Since 1994,
the Bank has approved more than $25 billion in credit facilities in support of
African trade, including $3.71 billion in 2012.
Signed:
Manal Mounir Hendy
Associate
External Communications
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