Kenya has closed its first private-sector local currency agricultural securitisation, with Kaleidofin leading a KES 276 million (USD 2.1 million) transaction that mobilises private capital for smallholder farmers. The portfolio supports 23,839 smallholder farmers, of whom 51% are women and 22% are first-time borrowers.
The transaction brings together Apollo Agriculture, a leading agritech platform, and the IDH Farmfit Fund as cornerstone investors. The securitised portfolio received an investment-grade BBB- rating from Agusto & Co, a Nigerian rating agency, marking a significant step for Kenya’s capital markets development.
The deal structure demonstrates how emerging markets can leverage securitisation to bridge the agricultural financing gap. By pooling farmer loans into tradeable securities, the transaction creates a replicable model for channelling institutional capital into African agriculture. The investment-grade rating provides institutional investors with the credit assessment needed for portfolio allocation decisions.
Apollo Agriculture’s technology platform underpins the transaction by providing data-driven credit scoring and supply chain integration for smallholder farmers. The company’s digital approach enables precise risk assessment across diverse agricultural operations, from maize production to dairy farming across Kenya’s varied climatic zones.
The IDH Farmfit Fund’s participation signals growing institutional appetite for agricultural assets in East Africa. The fund’s involvement provides patient capital that can withstand seasonal agricultural cycles while delivering returns aligned with development finance objectives. This blended finance approach attracts commercial investors by reducing first-loss risk.
The transaction’s local currency denomination addresses a key challenge in African agricultural finance. Farmers earn revenues in Kenyan shillings but often face foreign exchange exposure through dollar-denominated funding. The local currency structure aligns investor returns with underlying cash flows while reducing currency mismatch risk.
Kenya’s regulatory framework supporting asset securitisation positions the country as a regional capital markets hub. The Capital Markets Authority has developed guidelines that enable structured finance transactions while maintaining investor protection standards. This regulatory clarity attracts international investors seeking African agricultural exposure.
The deal’s focus on women farmers and first-time borrowers addresses financial inclusion objectives while building credit histories for underserved segments. According to market analysis, this approach creates sustainable lending relationships that can scale across East Africa’s agricultural value chains.
The transaction establishes precedent for similar deals across the region, with Tanzania and Uganda developing comparable regulatory frameworks. Investors should monitor agricultural securitisation pipeline development as regional governments prioritise food security and rural development financing.
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