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Tracking Financial Performance Standards of ... - Sa-Dhan

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<strong>Tracking</strong> <strong>Financial</strong> <strong>Performance</strong> <strong>Standards</strong> <strong>of</strong> Micr<strong>of</strong>inance InstitutionsEach <strong>of</strong> these aspects are described below3.2.1.1 Operational IncomeIncome from loan Portfolio is income that an MFI derives from its lending operations (refer IS 4, Table 8 a).This would include interest and fee income. Interest income can be further divided into interest on current,past and re-structured loans outstanding.Interest Income on Current, Past-Due and Re-Structured Loans – consists <strong>of</strong> the amount collected fromclients on loans. The issues are:1. The interest rate is always stated as a percentage <strong>of</strong> the loan amount for a period (generally monthly orannually)2. It is the balance sheet accounts that are affected by the principal portion <strong>of</strong> the loan repayment, i.e., theLoan Outstanding decrease and Cash increases, until another loan is made and then the reverse is true.Apart from interest income, the MFI can also get income from fees/service charges. Fees could be <strong>of</strong> two types- stated as a percentage <strong>of</strong> the loan amount or as a flat fee, for loans provided by the organisation.Fees are however usually stated as a percentage <strong>of</strong> the loan disbursed (or loan outstanding) and they increasethe effective interest rate for the client. The impact <strong>of</strong> the fee however varies across loan terms, with fees havinga greater impact on the effective interest rate for loans with shorter rather than longer loan terms. Sometimes,an MFI charges late fees on the loans. This is the amount collected, as a penalty, from borrowers who have hadloans with payments in arrears.3.2.1.2 Investment IncomeA second income for an MFI is its investments (refer IS 5, Table 8 a). Investments are usually excess (idle) cashinvested by the MFI (into fixed deposits, savings bank accounts, marketable securities etc.) from its revolvingloan fund.Thus, the amount <strong>of</strong> interest earned by the organisation on its investments such as term deposits, securities,treasury bills, savings bank accounts etc. comprise its investment income.There are usually two forms <strong>of</strong> investments that can be made by MFIs1) Short-term investments (maturity date is less than a year)2) Long-Term Investments (maturity date is more than a year)Several aspects about investment income require clarification:1) They are getting be a legitimised source <strong>of</strong> income for MFIs2) However, only some legal forms have the scope for investing in a variety <strong>of</strong> investments3) Investment requires a special fund manager who can attend to the task <strong>of</strong> investing prudently - i.e. ensurethe right balance between safety, liquidity and returns30

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