The Philippine Guarantee Corp. (PhilGuarantee) has granted cover for P1.47 billion in loans as of end-March for viable but pandemic-hit micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) under its credit guarantee program, the Department of Finance (DOF) said in a statement yesterday,
Alberto Pascual, PhilGuarantee president and chief executive officer, said in a report to the DOF the guaranteed loans represent a 612 percent increase from the P207 million pilot guarantee portfolio achieved at the launching of the MSME Credit Guarantee Program (MCGP) in December.
Pascual said the number of MSME beneficiaries grew by 312 percent to 12,122 enterprises in March 2021 from 2,948 that were reported to have availed of its guarantee program in December 2020.
He said the implementation of improved processing and evaluation parameters starting this year led to the increase in the number of beneficiaries under MCGP.
From the start of the MCGP’s implementation last year, the DOF said the PhilGuarantee Governing Board thus far approved P37.7 billion in credit guarantee facilities to 34 banks.
“Majority of the MSMEs covered were from the wholesale and retail sector which accounted for 67.26 percent of the total, or P503.5 million, with 9,113 MSMEs assisted,” Pascual said.
Pascual said the second biggest group with guarantee coverage was the manufacturing sector, which accounted for 7.77 percent or P58.17 million with 1,048 assisted MSMEs.
The agriculture sector was the third biggest sector that has benefited from the MCGP, with 158 MSMEs assisted through guarantees amounting to P33.91 million, which is 4.53 percent of the loans covered so far under this program, he said.
In the severely affected hotel and restaurant sector, Pascual said 573 MSMEs were assisted with guaranteed loans amounting to P28.45 million, while the personal services sector accounted for guarantees amounting to P31.82 million.
MCGP offers a 50-percent guarantee for working capital loans and a guarantee of up to 80 percent of the amount for term loans of up to seven years for capital expenditures.
The average loan size under the MCGP is less than P1 million, with the minimum loan amount set at P100,000, which can be availed mostly by micro businesses borrowing from thrift banks and rural banks.
“In terms of geographical distribution, all regions of the country had received assistance under the MCGP,” Pascual said.
The top three regions assisted in terms of guaranteed loan amounts were Calabarzon with P135.76 million, Central Luzon with P118.87 million and the Ilocos provinces with P65.82 million.
From three active banks in December 2020, Pascual said there are now 14 active banks participating in the MCGP as of March 31, 2021.
“Twelve more banks are expected to start submitting MSMEs for guarantee coverage as their facilities will be operational,” Pascual said.
Under Republic Act No. 11494 or the Bayanihan to Recover as One Act (Bayanihan 2), MSMEs account for P2 billion of the P5 billion appropriated for PhilGuarantee to aid pandemic-hit enterprises.
The Bayanihan 2 allocation for PhilGuarantee enabled it to further widen its guarantee headroom of economic activities and extend more assistance to viable but severely affected MSMEs, Pascual said.