Access to finance for those who need it most
We work with banks and non-bank financial institutions to extend finance to individuals and businesses that are often excluded from the formal financial system, particularly in frontier markets.
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, we committed financing to Rawbank to support lending to small and medium-sized enterprises. The investment strengthens access to finance in a highly constrained market and supports businesses that play a central role in job creation and economic activity.
We also backed Wave Mobile Money, a fast-growing fintech expanding affordable digital payments and wider financial services across West Africa, including into frontier markets such as Mali, Burkina Faso, The Gambia and Niger. By lowering the cost of transactions, Wave is helping make everyday financial services more accessible for millions of people.
Our portfolio continued to show progress in reaching underserved groups. In India, Shubham Housing Development Finance Company Limited (Shubham) is a specialist mortgage lender that provides home loans to lower-income families who are typically ignored by mainstream financial institutions. Leveraging tech-enabled solutions, such as data collection, predictive analytics and machine learning, Shubham helps applicants without formal documentation to establish their income and access loans. We first backed Shubham in 2021 and since then the company has significantly expanded its footprint, doubling its network to 200 branches and more than doubling the number of active customers to over 80,000. The share of sole women borrowers has also increased since our investment, alongside strong growth in women co‑borrowers, reflecting more inclusive access to housing finance for low‑income households.
Directed lending remains an important tool in ensuring capital reaches priority groups. In Pakistan, our facility with HBL is focused on food insecurity, directing half of the financing to smallholder farmers and supporting climate-resilient agricultural practices.
In 2025, the gross loan portfolio of our financial sector investments, converted to US dollars, stood at $166.8 billion. The rise in loans since 2024 reflects strengthened data coverage following the rollout of a new data collection platform – improving visibility of impact – alongside modest underlying portfolio growth.
The customers reached by our investments has risen to 213 million. This is primarily driven by the same improved coverage as seen in gross loans.