d.Light, a Nairobi-based solar firm has been financing its off-grid energy project in Kenya through a special purpose vehicle called Brighter Life Kenya 1 (BLK1), in conjunction with Solar Frontier Capital. Last year, it closed $65m in receivables financing from the United States International Development Finance Corporation(DFC). Now, d.Light’s Brighter Life Kenya 1 project has secured additional funding to take the total amount raised under the project so far to $127m. Norfund, the Norwegian government investment fund, partly provided USD 15 million of the newest financing.
“BLK1 provides us with the flexible local currency receivable financing we need to make our Kenyan business sustainably cash flow positive. Being cash flow positive is a key metric of business sustainability and will enable us to grow and to impact many more lives in Kenya for the long term,” d.light chief executive Ned Tozun said in a statement.
Here Is What You Need To Know
- The off-balance sheet financing vehicle is dedicated to acquiring pay-as-you-go solar home system accounts receivables from d.light’s Kenyan subsidiary to provide the company with flexible, working capital to finance its continued growth.
- BLK1 is expected to finance the provision of improved energy access to 1.2 million people in Kenya, coming on the heels of d.light celebrating its 100 millionth customer.
- Part of BLK1 is being financed by a Sh2 billion ($18.7 million)senior debt commitment from US International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).
- Solar Frontier Capital, a wholly-owned subsidiary of African Frontier Capital (AFC, Mauritius), acts as the subordinated lender and the master servicer under the transaction.
- The project has been structured to provide d.light Kenya with local currency financing over a two-year commitment period and is intended as the first in a series of vehicles designed to provide d.light with continuing access to sustainable and affordable local currency receivable financing.
“We look forward to continuing to support d.light with on-going access to affordable and sustainable financing for its mission to impact so many lives in Kenya and around the world,” said African Frontier Capital chief executive, Eric De Moudt.
d.Light At A Glance
- Although started by the Americans Sam Goldman and Ned Tozun, the Kenya-based startup provides solar-powered solutions — ranging from lights, phone chargers, radios, and even televisions — which are sold in over 60 countries.
- In April, it opened a regional office and service center in Eldoret, Kenya as part of the company’s expansion strategy to reach and impact 100 million lives globally by 2020.
- The center offers sales services and after-sales services for d.Light’s products including solar home systems and portable solar powered lanterns.
- In 2019, the startup received up to $18 million capital injection from a consortium of lenders to help accelerate its growth in Africa.
Read also: A List Of Over 500 Active Startup Investors In Africa In The Last 5 Years
What Does Receivable Financing Mean?
According to Velotrade, receivables financing takes place when a business receives funding based on purchases that have been made but haven’t been paid for by the clients (accounts receivable).
“A business sells kitchen equipment. They receive a big purchase order by a national restaurant chain (the client). The client is interested in buying equipment worth $400,000. However, even though the restaurant chain needs the equipment right now, it can only make the full payment in the next 4 months. The supplier accepts the terms, delivers the kitchen equipment, and issues an invoice for $400,000 due in 4 months.
Understandably, if this type of purchase is repeated by several other clients, the supplier might run into a cash flow shortage while waiting for payments to be made, jeopardising the company’s ability to function.
The supplier, who wants to avoid cash flow issues, decides to sell the invoice to an invoice factoring company. After checking, among other things, the creditworthiness of the debtor and the length of the commercial relationship, both parties agree terms. The invoice factoring company will advance them $316,000 on the same day the supplier sells the invoice. Then, when the client pays off the full amount due, the invoice factoring company will release the remaining $84,000 minus a factoring free.
By doing this, the supplier gets access to cash immediately after the purchase, the client gets the equipment it needs and gets to pay later, and the factoring company profits from the factoring fees. It’s a win-win situation,” Velotrade illustrates.
Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer who has advised startups across Africa on issues such as startup funding (Venture Capital, Debt financing, private equity, angel investing etc), taxation, strategies, etc. He also has special focus on the protection of business or brands’ intellectual property rights ( such as trademark, patent or design) across Africa and other foreign jurisdictions.
He is well versed on issues of ESG (sustainability), media and entertainment law, corporate finance and governance.
He is also an award-winning writer
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