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Metro launches R300-million Enterprise Development Partnership with National Empowerment Fund

Over the period each institution will contribute R150-m respectively, towards the partnership.

The much-anticipated Fetola Enterprise Development Fund, the supplier and enterprise partnership between the metro and the National Empowerment Fund (NEF), was launched last Friday.

The launch took place at the KwaThema Business Hub at an event attended by the minister of Small Business Development, Khumbudzo Ntshavheni, as well as 500 local entrepreneurs who are among the intended beneficiaries of the R300-million committed by the two institutions over the next few years.

Over the period each institution will contribute R150-m respectively towards the partnership.

Ntshavheni said, “Economic transformation is an imperative and SMMEs are key drivers and contributors to job creation and economic progression.

“We need to create an enabling environment for their growth and sustainability, through the right policies and targeted support mechanisms to ensure their participation.

“Availing information on funding, reducing the cost of funding and bringing business support services closer to communities are some of the measures to unlock funding bottlenecks”.

“Fetola is the SeTswana word for transformation and what we are seeking to achieve is inclusive growth so that black entrepreneurs in the townships, in the cities and in rural communities can also become integral to the country’s economy,” explained NEF CEO Philisiwe Mthethwa.

The Fetola Fund is one among four investment funds approved in October by the Ekurhuleni council to implement the Ekurhuleni Community Enterprise Development Fund Policy in line with the Municipal Finance Management Act (MFMA).

 

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“The purpose of the Ekurhuleni Community Enterprise Development Fund (ECEDF) is to support the development of community enterprises in the form of individual entrepreneurs, small, micro and medium enterprises, cooperatives, informal traders and formal businesses as prescribed.

“The ECEDF is anchored by the Ekurhuleni Ten Point Economic Plan, a deliberate programme to position the Gauteng Eastern Development Corridor as the anchor and footprint of the provincial economy.

“The City has prioritised the small medium enterprises (SMEs) sector as a job creation catalyst that must be fully supported,” said executive mayor Mzwandile Masina.

This fund is made up of three groups, as follows:

• The Phanda Fund aims to support the development of community enterprises in the form of individual entrepreneurs, small, micro and medium enterprises, cooperatives, and informal traders located within Ekurhuleni. This focuses on the township economy, industrialisation, business services, environmental services and human development. The thresholds for this fund are from R50 000 to R1.5-m.

• The Ximilani Fund is designed to syndicate with registered organisations, organised business formations, associations and/or chambers of commerce located within the metro. The funding thresholds for this fund range from R50 000 to R1.5-m.

• The Fetola A Fund seeks to partner on a 50-50 cost and risk sharing basis with development finance institutions, state-owned enterprises, corporate social investment partners, enterprise and supplier development, and private funds. Ideal partners are those organisations that exist for the sole purpose of developing black businesses. The funding range for this is from R100 000 to R6-m.

• The Fetola B Fund is a soft loan that is exclusively reserved for Ekurhuleni-based entrepreneurs. The minimum application is R250 000. This fund is aimed at black-owned businesses, individual entrepreneurs, small, micro and medium enterprises, as well as potential industrialists and will be administered by the NEF.

The Fetola Fund will provide financial support to black entrepreneurs conducting business within Ekurhuleni and those conducting business with the metro.

“The NEF has had a track-record of success as an implementing partner in enterprise and supplier development, having collaborated with various entities across the public and private sectors,” said Mthethwa.

“These partnerships have unlocked additional capital to fund black entrepreneurs, attracting well over R869-m to advance inclusive economic growth and create sustainable jobs.

“Simply put, it can be said that the NEF is a partner trusted by many, investors and investees alike.”

She said through its broader funding mandate the NEF has unlocked third-party funding of more than R8.8-billion from co-funding arrangements with private and public sector partners, and this has been invested for the benefit of black entrepreneurs countrywide.

“Under the Fetola Fund, entrepreneurs will receive 50 per cent of their funding requirement through the regular NEF funding criteria and the balance through the contributions received from the City of Ekurhuleni.

“Metro contributions will be priced at concessionary rates of between zero and five per cent fixed interest rate.

“Funding under the partnership will be provided to applicants qualifying for NEF financial support where commercial viability of the project has been proven,” added Masina.

The fund will focus specifically on majority black-owned enterprises that are commercially viable and sustainable, as guided by the NEF due diligence processes.

This partnership will further unlock investment support in key sectors for new and established small and medium enterprises.

“The NEF has a range of successes that ensures it is best placed for this partnership.

“In terms of the NEF’s own funding of black entrepreneurs, since operational inception in 2005 to date we have approved over 1 000 transactions worth more than R10-b across the country.

“Over the same period the NEF has disbursed over R6.8-b into the economy, benefiting the SME sector, businesses owned and managed by black women, rural-based enterprises, as well as black industrialist projects across the length and breadth of the country,” said Mthethwa.

“The development financier also provides innovative non-financial support inclusive of entrepreneurship training, business planning and incubation, investor education and mentorship support.”

 

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