The European Investment Bank Group (EIB Group) – consisting of the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the SME-focused European Investment Fund (EIF) – plays a role in improving access to finance for SMEs and midcaps in Europe and global partner countries. The EIB is the European Union’s bank, owned by and representing the interests of the European Union Member States. The EIF specialises in SME financing, and is majority owned by the EIB (58.5%), with the remaining equity held by the European Union (represented by the European Commission, 29.7%) and other European private and public bodies (11.8%).
Supporting access to finance for small business EIF’s sole mission and represents the EIB’s largest -of the four- primary policy priority in terms of volume. The two institutions act in strategic collaboration to provide a complementary offer of financial products to SMEs and midcaps. EIB support to SMEs is provided mainly through intermediated financing, both funded and unfunded risk sharing, including loan substitutes, as well as direct growth finance to midcaps. While still providing significant funding to micro enterprises, EIB’s products are focused on delivering support to more established enterprises. The EIF, meanwhile, offers risk finance for SMEs in all stages of their development via financial intermediaries, including equity, mezzanine, guarantees, microfinance, and securitisation. Support is provided to a wide constituency ranging from more fragile early-stage enterprises to maturing SMEs and from primary sectors (agriculture, forestry and fishing) to more capital-intensive activities such as manufacturing and services, including those with high innovative content. Financial instruments.
Additional information on the EIB Group’s SME activities can be found on the respective websites of the EIB (www.eib.org) and EIF (www.eif.org).
By relying on an extensive network of around 750 financial partners in 2017, the EIB Group profits from expertise of local actors to calibrate the varying financial challenges and needed support of SMEs throughout the EU.
Over the course of 2017, the EIB Group has financed EUR 29.6 billion in support of SMEs and midcaps, which leveraged at least EUR 125.2 billion of total investment. This was possible because financial intermediaries commit to complementing EIB Group financing with additional financial resources.
The benefit of working with a wide range of different financial intermediaries is therefore threefold:
EIB Group’s financial value added due to its AAA rating is transferred to SMEs and midcaps through advantageous conditions (longer tenures and reduced pricing);
Complementary funding is provided by intermediaries to multiply the resources available from the EIB Group; and
Acting jointly with market players the EIB Group can act in line with market needs and can reach out to a higher number of European SMEs.