Case Study

Confianza in Peru Overcomes Adversity by Diversifying Loan Portfolio

Can agricultural lending be profitable and sustainable?
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This case study describes how Confianza, a small MFI in Peru, reached sustainability by altering its lending methodology and diversifying its portfolio. The paper discuses:

  • The following three challenges that Confianza faced:
    • Portfolio concentration on women and restricted clientele;
    • Insufficient borrower information;
    • High cost of rural operations.
  • Its responses to the challenges, which included:
    • Portfolio diversification from poor women to low-income households;
    • Stricter lending requirements;
    • Rigorous loan monitoring;
    • Production based agricultural lending;
    • Trimming of its service area;
    • Upgradation of branches;
    • Establishing branches in ecologically varied zones to reduce climatic risk.

The author details the process of Confianza's growth towards sustainability with donor and investor support, and the following lessons learned:

  • A viable loan portfolio can be achieved by combining the agricultural finance approach of designing loan products with key microfinance tenets;
  • A diversified loan portfolio reduces an MFI's vulnerability to agricultural risk;
  • Agricultural lending can be profitable;
  • The risk on agricultural loans can be lowered by:
    • Lending to households with other sources of income;
    • Matching disbursements and repayments to agricultural expenditure and income cycles.
  • Gradual expansion is an effective rural finance strategy.

The paper concludes that this case study illustrates that agricultural lending can be sustainable even while starting with a negative loan portfolio. It also states that Confianza's success has reduced the proportion of highly impoverished people among its clients.

About this Publication

By Pearce, D. , Reinsch, M.
Published