The Development of microfinance industry depends upon the resilience and risk management: SECP Chairman Amir Khan

Islamabad : SECP Chairman, Aamir Khan emphasized that in these challenging times the development of microfinance industry depends upon the resilience and risk management, achieved through quintessential pillars of liquidity-tapped through private capital and technology embracement. Khan was addressing the Non-Bank Microfinance Companies Stakeholders Forum organized by SECP to devise a way forward and collaborate strategic response to cope the challenges posed by COVID-19 pandemic and ensuing lockdowns.

The SECP Chairman Amir Khan, along with Commissioner Specialized Companies Division, Farrukh Sabzwari chaired the session. Representatives of Pakistan Microfinance Network (PMN), State Bank of Pakistan (SBP), National Bank of Pakistan (NBP), Pakistan Poverty Alleviation Fund (PPAF), Pakistan Microfinance Investment Company Limited (PMIC), Karandaaz Pakistan and multilateral donor agencies including the World Bank, International Finance Corporation (IFC) and Department for International Development (DFID) attended the session.

 The Chairman SECP advised NBMFCs to go far product diversification to insurance solutions and saving products and build capacity of their workforce to attain business development and operational efficiency. He endorsed formation of a working group consisting of nominees from SECP, PMN, PMIC and NBMFCs to further analyze the situation. The working group will also take up the matters with relevant forums including ministry of finance, SBP and multilateral donor agencies for possible solutions.

Khan expressed SECP’s firm commitment to providing all possible support to industry not only during the current pandemic times but also in developing the industry on a strong footing. SECP Commissioner, Sabzwari highlighted the measures taken by SECP to provide relief and flexibility to the NBMFCs and their wholesale lender in managing funding requirements. He also talked about SECP’s advice to NBMFCs to defer and reschedule borrower loans.

Participants acknowledged SECP’s timely intervention to provide regulatory relief to NBMFCs in managing their credit lines and funding requirements. However, industry representatives expressed their concerns on potential defaults by borrower and liquidity crunch that may lead to capital crisis in the industry.

They raised the need of new money injection into the industry through collaborative efforts of microfinance regulators and the government. Representatives of international donor agencies attending the Forum expressed their resolve to extend fullest possible support to Pakistan’s microfinance sector.    

Abdul Rahman

Recent Posts

Nasdaq AI Stock Sell-Off: Tech Correction Masks Market Gains

The screen bled red across the trading floors of Lower Manhattan on Tuesday, pulling the…

6 hours ago

Trump BBC Defamation Lawsuit: Financial Records Withheld

The discovery phase of high-stakes corporate litigation is rarely a search for objective truth; it…

4 days ago

Four Republicans Join Democrats in House Vote to Rein In Trump’s Iran War Powers

The U.S. House of Representatives delivered a rare bipartisan rebuke to President Donald Trump on…

6 days ago

Iran Lacks ‘Trust’ in the US, Araghchi States: The Importanceof Tehran’s Message from Delhi

When Abbas Araghchi faced reporters in New Delhi on Friday, his message was unremarkable by…

4 weeks ago

Saudi Arabia’s Long Game for Managing OPEC in a Fractured Era

When Abu Dhabi dropped its geopolitical bombshell in late April 2026, formally exiting OPEC after…

1 month ago

The End of a Gold Rush: Why Wycombe Abbey’s China Campus Closure Signals the Retreat of British Elite Education

The shuttering of Wycombe Abbey School Nanjing is not simply a commercial setback for one…

1 month ago