Repairing a Tarnished Image: a Plea for Transparency in Indian Microfinance

MicrofinanceFocus, 28 March 2012

Last month, the headlines of the world’s papers read déjà vu.  “Suicides in India linked to microfinance debt.”  “SKS Microfinance implicated in farmer suicides.”  The headlines may have differed, but the article was one and the same, penned by Erika Kinetz of the Associated Press.  SKS was appalled, calling the report “libelous” and “scurrilous.”

For what it’s worth, the damage has been minimal.  SKS stock slid 4.25% on the day of the article, but recovered within a few days of trading.  The slide shows little distinction from its already volatile trading pattern (Figure 1).  Of course bad news can also cause lenders and investors to take a second look, or simply slow things down.  One MFI manager told me of exactly this very reaction on the part of an Indian bank in the immediate days after the AP article.  But the story got relatively little press in India, and no follow-up of significance.  By now it’s reasonable to say that the microfinance sector in India can breathe a sigh of relief. Seeing bad news get swept back under the carpet can be quite satisfying, even if the stink remains. more →

SKS Microfinance journey to IPO: An inside story

Co-authored with Vikash Kumar; MicrofinanceFocus, 12 May 2010

SKS Microfinance, India’s biggest lender to the poor, is soon to become the nation’s first microfinance company to list on the Stock Exchange. In the past 10 years, it has evolved from an NGO to a public limited company and has set many benchmarks for the industry to follow. Microfinance Focus presents a comprehensive look at this journey, tracing it from the company’s roots in the late 90s through the final months leading up to the IPO.

more →