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Showing posts from February, 2023

Wema Bank taps Kachasi Trade Finance to improve efficiency via automation

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Wema Bank has gone live on Kachasi Trade Finance Software to enable the achievement of full automation of trade finance operations. Trade finance is a phrase used to describe different strategies that are employed to make international trade easier. The market share is expected to increase by $12.20 billion from 2021 to 2026, and the market’s growth momentum will accelerate at a CAGR of 4.38 percent. Kachasi, owned by Union Systems, is the first indigenous trade finance software application built to automate the entire lifecycle of international and domestic trade finance operations, and it is the result of over 20 years of experience implementing and customising various international trade finance software applications for banks across Africa. Wema Bank’s journey with the software began in March 2022. As a first of its kind, Kachasi Trade Finance Software comes with intuitive design and functionalities. “We are pleased to be joining the league of banks around the world that re using t

African Development Bank Partners with Bank One on Trade Finance

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The African Development Bank Group is supporting the trade finance efforts of Bank One Limited.  The Group will provide a $40 million trade finance package that is meant to help Bank One of Mauritius increase its capacity to provide trade finance to small to medium-sized businesses (SMBs), local corporates and other key sectors in Mauritius and across Africa, the African Development Bank said in a Thursday (Dec. 22) press release.  The package includes a $25 million risk participation agreement and a $15 million transaction guarantee, the release said.  “Given the cross-sectoral nature of trade, the proposed facility, while leveraging Bank One’s footprint, is expected to enhance the African Development Bank’s efforts to integrate Africa and improve the quality of life for the African people,” African Development Bank Head of Trade Finance Lamin Drammeh said in the release.  Africa has an annual “trade finance gap” of $81 billion because SMBs and other domestic firms have greater diffic