FinDev Gateway, 13 March 2024
Back in 2019, the music mega-star Taylor Swift learned that the master recordings of her first six albums had been sold for $300m to an investor whom Swift regarded as an “incessant, manipulative bully” that put his own interests ahead of the artist whose work he now owned. This was a classic case of an irresponsible exit. The seller – Swift’s old manager, who had played an important part in building up her stardom during the first decade of her career – chose to maximize returns, paying no heed to whether the buyer was a reasonable fit.
Now, imagine a similar scenario in the financial inclusion sector:
Consider an NGO that spent decades incubating a strong social mission in a financial institution serving poor clients, ending its involvement by selling all of its shares to an investor focused entirely on maximizing profits. Following the purchase, the buyer steers the institution away from its poorest clients, refocusing entirely on profits and dispensing with the niceties of impact measurement or even basic client protection.
That’s an extract from the recent joint publication by CERISE+SPTF and e-MFP which I co-authored, Rethinking Responsible Equity Exits. And it happens to be particularly appropriate to Cambodia.
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