Private capital mobilization Securitization IFC completed its inaugural securitization in September 2025 through the Emerging Markets Securitization Program (EMSP), formerly the Warehouse-Enabled Securitization Program (WESP). The transaction — IFC Emerging Markets Securitization 2025-1, Ltd — packaged loans to 57 companies across 28 countries into a $510 million
collateralized loan obligation arranged by
Goldman Sachs and listed on the
London Stock Exchange. The $320 million senior tranche, rated Aaa by Moody's, was priced at 130 basis points over SOFR; IFC retained the $130 million mezzanine and $60 million equity tranches, retaining at least 25% own-account risk per underlying loan. The sector mix spanned food and beverage (18.8%), telecommunications (13%), and construction (13%). The Financial Times described the transaction as "a template to boost flows into developing countries" and the first true-sale securitization by a multilateral development bank backed by emerging market corporate loans.
Trade and supply chain finance IFC's
Global Trade Finance Program (GTFP) had supported $130 billion in trade finance for approximately 200,000 firms in its first 20 years of operation, with 40% of activity concentrated in Africa and one-third in agriculture and food sectors. The global trade finance gap doubled between 2017 and 2025 to $2.5 trillion, with SMEs in high-potential markets bearing the majority of this shortfall. In October 2024, at the World Bank Group Annual Meetings, IFC tripled the limit on its Global Supply Chain Finance Program from $1 billion to $3 billion, alongside a joint commitment by six multilateral development banks and the
World Trade Organization to expand supply chain finance in emerging markets. The Global Trade Supplier Finance program disbursed $3.5 billion to more than 350 suppliers in FY2025, with 73% in sustainability-linked facilities and 60% to suppliers in the world's poorest countries; cumulative disbursements since 2012 total $18.6 billion to 2,500 suppliers across 33 countries.
Managed Co-Lending Portfolio Program The
Managed Co-Lending Portfolio Program (MCPP), IFC's flagship syndications platform, allows institutional investors —
pension funds,
insurance companies,
sovereign wealth funds — and credit insurers to invest alongside IFC on commercial terms in globally diversified loan portfolios. Launched in 2013, MCPP operates like an index fund for emerging market private sector lending: investors commit capital upfront and receive participations in IFC-originated loans meeting agreed eligibility criteria. As of February 2026, MCPP mobilization totals $25.5 billion across funds and credit risk capacity from 18 partners. The program's inaugural iteration, MCPP SAFE (2013), was a $3 billion trust fund co-investment by China's
State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) — the reserves manager of the
People's Bank of China — fully deployed over five years to 2018. In 2016, IFC launched MCPP Infrastructure with
Allianz Global Investors as anchor partner, committing $500 million toward a $5 billion target for senior emerging-market infrastructure debt; IFC provided a junior first-loss credit enhancement to improve investors' risk profile toward investment grade. In September 2017, the
Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) committed $1 billion to MCPP, doubling total MCPP financing available at the time to approximately $6 billion and covering cross-sectoral lending in over 100 countries. At COP26 in November 2021, IFC and partners established MCPP One Planet — a $3 billion platform combining private B-Loan and sovereign trust fund structures in a single cross-sectoral portfolio of Paris Agreement–aligned emerging-market loans, with Allianz Global Investors managing the B-Loan vehicle and HKMA the trust fund component. The credit insurance sub-program of MCPP, targeting financial institution lending, launched in 2017 at $1 billion with two insurers and expanded through successive iterations: MCPP FIG II ($2 billion, June 2020, six insurers, designed to enable up to $5 billion in IFC lending over four years), MCPP FIG III ($3.5 billion, September 2023, 13 insurers, designed to enable more than $7 billion in new IFC lending over six years), and MCPP Real Sector ($3 billion, December 2024, 14 insurers). The MCPP Real Sector iteration was IFC's first credit insurance facility targeting non-financial sectors — energy, transport, telecoms, agribusiness, and manufacturing — as all prior MCPP credit insurance iterations had covered financial institution lending exclusively. By December 2024, MCPP had supported 329 clients across 68 countries. In February 2026, IFC and 19 global insurance companies — including
AIG,
Swiss Re,
Allianz Trade,
AXA XL,
Chubb, and
Munich Re — signed a $6 billion credit insurance facility, the fifth iteration of the credit insurer program. Across all five iterations since 2017, total MCPP credit insurance mobilization reached $15.5 billion. Combined with the fund platforms, total MCPP mobilization across all instruments reached $25.5 billion.
B-loan syndications IFC's
B-loan syndication program — created by IFC in 1959 as the world's oldest development finance syndication structure — recorded $14.256 billion in syndication commitments in FY2025, a 76% increase from $8.079 billion in FY2024 and the largest single-year increase in program history; the outstanding syndicated loan portfolio reached $20.735 billion. Over the program's full history, IFC has mobilized more than $130 billion in debt financing from more than 500 investment partners. IFC's Master Cooperation Agreement for parallel
development finance institution co-lending has more than 35 signatory institutions and has mobilized over $19 billion in loans to developing-country borrowers.
Bond program and capital markets IFC raised a record $21.4 billion through its bond program in FY2025 across 19 currencies — well above the initial target of $12–13 billion and the largest annual funding volume in its history. Notable issuances included a £650 million sterling bond in July 2025 — IFC's first sterling-denominated
social bond, later tapped to £1 billion — and a HKD 5 billion social bond in April 2025, the largest
Hong Kong dollar-denominated issuance by a
supranational organization to that date.
Significant risk transfers IFC has pioneered
significant risk transfer (SRT) transactions in emerging market and developing economies since the mid-2010s, the only multilateral development bank active globally in emerging market SRTs. Cumulative SRT commitments exceeded $1.1 billion through FY2025. In November 2025, IFC and
Crédit Agricole CIB closed an SRT covering a $2 billion trade finance portfolio, with IFC providing a $95 million financial guarantee to enable new emerging market trade finance commitments by Crédit Agricole CIB.
Partnership platforms In February 2026, IFC and 19 global insurance companies — including
AIG,
Swiss Re,
Allianz Trade,
AXA XL, AXIS Capital,
Chubb,
Munich Re, and Tokio Marine — signed a $6 billion credit insurance facility, the fifth iteration of IFC's MCPP for Credit Insurers program. The facility, IFC's largest single mobilization agreement, is designed to support up to $10 billion in new IFC lending, primarily to banks serving small and medium enterprises. With this facility, total Managed Co-Lending Portfolio Program (MCPP) mobilization reached $25.5 billion across funds and credit risk capacity. In April 2025, the
European Commission signed the Better Futures Programme with IFC — part of the
Global Gateway initiative — providing up to €291 million in guarantees from the
European Fund for Sustainable Development Plus (EFSD+) expected to mobilize more than $1 billion in private sector investments across
Southeast Europe,
Türkiye, Asia-Pacific, Sub-Saharan Africa,
MENA, Latin America, and the
Western Balkans through April 2028. In September 2025, IFC participated in the first close of Singapore's
Financing Asia's Transition Partnership (FAST-P) Green Investments Partnership, which reached $510 million in committed capital under fund manager
Pentagreen Capital — a sustainable infrastructure debt platform co-founded by
HSBC and
Temasek. Also in September 2025, IFC jointly launched a Blue Economy Bond strategy with
T. Rowe Price, raising more than $200 million in initial commitments from IFC, T. Rowe Price,
Xylem Inc., and
Builders Vision to invest in corporate bonds by financial institutions and companies engaged in marine ecosystem conservation, wastewater treatment, and coastal climate adaptation in emerging markets.
MSME and financial institutions MSME finance gap A March 2025 report by IFC and the
SME Finance Forum re-estimated the
MSME finance gap in 119
emerging market and developing economies at $5.7 trillion for formal enterprises, rising to $8 trillion when informal enterprises are included — a 27% increase from the $4.4 trillion gap estimated in 2017. Women-owned MSMEs account for 34% of the total gap. In May 2024, IFC launched a $4 billion MSME Finance Platform for financial institutions, paired with a Catalytic First Loss Guarantee designed to crowd in an additional $4 billion from eligible financial service providers. IFC's
Financial Institutions Group had 74 million loans to MSMEs and a committed portfolio of $18.2 billion as of October 2025. Through its financial institution clients, IFC reported 44 million loans to microenterprises totaling $50 billion, and 5.6 million loans to SMEs totaling $385 billion, as of 2024.
Financial institution lending IFC extends MSME financing through commercial banks and non-bank financial institutions across all emerging-market regions. In February 2026, IFC and
Banco Industrial of Guatemala closed an $850 million MSME financing package — a $100 million IFC subordinated loan paired with a $750 million bond placement in international capital markets — structured as the world's first "C/B Loan" issued by a financial institution and the largest subordinated debt placement by a financial institution in
Central America; investor orders exceeded $2.8 billion. In December 2025, IFC made its first long-term investment in the Argentine financial system in over seven years with a $150 million loan to
BBVA Argentina for long-tenor SME financing in a market where SMEs represent 98.6% of all firms and nearly 65% of private sector employment. In September 2025, IFC provided a $100 million loan to
FirstRand Bank of
South Africa — where approximately 5% of formal MSMEs have access to credit and SMEs account for around 60% of all jobs — to expand MSME lending through
FNB, its retail banking division. A separate risk-sharing facility with FirstRand, backed by the
European Fund for Sustainable Development, covers 50% of credit risk on up to ZAR 1.8 billion of SME loans with a targeted focus on women-owned businesses and climate-smart agriculture. In January 2026, IFC committed $166 million to Sri Lanka's financial sector — its first debt investment there since the country's 2022 economic crisis — comprising a $50 million loan to Nations Trust Bank, risk-sharing facilities totaling $80 million with Commercial Bank of Ceylon and National Development Bank, and a $36 million GTFP trade facility. In the
Philippines, IFC committed up to $130 million to
Asialink Finance Corporation in January 2025, with at least 60% of proceeds earmarked for women-owned or women-led MSMEs. In April 2023, IFC arranged a $77 million risk-sharing facility with the
Bank of Africa Group across ten Sub-Saharan countries — including several fragile and conflict-affected states — expected to generate 12,000 new loans, at least 2,000 to women-owned businesses.
Risk-sharing and guarantee facilities IFC's
Small Loan Guarantee Program (SLGP), backed by the
IDA Private Sector Window Blended Finance Facility, provides a programmatic risk-sharing structure that has been deployed across multiple markets. In February 2026, it supported a $40 million risk-sharing facility with
Habib Metropolitan Bank in Pakistan — where fewer than 200,000 of 3.2 million SMEs have formal credit access — and a $10 million facility with
Dashen Bank in
Ethiopia targeting agribusiness SMEs. IFC's SME Ventures Program, launched in 2010, invests in
private equity funds focused on SMEs in
IDA-eligible and fragile or conflict-affected states. As of August 2025, the program had invested $347 million across 18 fund managers, supporting more than 300 SMEs and more than 44,000 jobs in markets where conventional private equity capital is largely absent.
Digital financial services IFC and the
Mastercard Foundation conducted a seven-year joint initiative that reached 100 million adults through digital financial services in Sub-Saharan Africa, including a $37.4 million Partnership for Financial Inclusion that generated 7.2 million new digital finance users and $300 million in monthly transactions. In September 2025, IFC published the
MSME Banking in the Digital Era handbook, offering guidance for financial institutions in Africa and other emerging markets on using digital channels and data analytics to extend MSME lending without traditional collateral requirements.
Equity investments Portfolio overview IFC is the largest international equity investor in emerging markets, providing long-term equity capital that commercial investors are often unwilling to provide alone. As of June 30, 2025, IFC's disbursed equity portfolio totaled $11.44 billion — 17% of its $68.5 billion total disbursed investment portfolio — comprising $5.64 billion in direct share investments and $6.14 billion in equity interests in
private equity funds. IFC's Africa equity portfolio grew from $2.60 billion in FY2024 to $2.91 billion in FY2025, outpacing IFC's overall equity growth rate. The approach involves partnering with Africa's largest commercial banks to identify companies ready for equity investment and deploying first-loss positions to de-risk private equity investments by African fund managers, with the goal of creating continental-scale businesses.
Frontier Opportunities Fund In February 2025, the IFC board approved the Frontier Opportunities Fund, initially capitalized at $100 million from IFC's FY2024 net income, to provide concessional junior equity for investments in difficult or early-stage markets where standard commercial returns are insufficient to attract private capital. The SME Ventures Program, a related equity vehicle launched in 2010, targets first-time and local fund managers in IDA-eligible and fragile states; as of 2025 it had committed $347 million across 18 fund managers, supporting more than 300 SMEs and 44,000 jobs. Across all
venture capital activity, IFC had invested or committed $3 billion to more than 175 technology companies and more than 120 VC funds, seed funds, and accelerators as of mid-2024. The IFC Startup Catalyst program, launched in 2016, makes $4–6 million investments in accelerators and seed funds in markets with nascent VC ecosystems; as of March 2025, it had supported 25 or more such vehicles that collectively funded 768 startups across 55 emerging markets and achieved 26 successful exits. In November 2022, IFC launched a dedicated $225 million VC platform for Africa, the
Middle East,
Central Asia, and
Pakistan — regions that collectively received less than 2% of $643 billion in global VC funding in 2021 — backed by $50 million from the
IDA Private Sector Window Blended Finance Facility.
Private equity fund investments IFC is the largest investor in
private equity funds in emerging markets, having committed more than $9 billion to approximately 400 PE funds between 2013 and 2023. Research published in January 2026 by the
Independent Evaluation Group found that IFC's private equity investments outperformed the
MSCI Emerging Markets Index by an average of 16% over the period 1990 to 2023, driven in part by a small number of very high-return deals. A November 2025 IFC research note analyzing 266 direct equity investments in core
infrastructure between 1961 and 2020 found a
public market equivalent (PME) of 1.17 against the
S&P 500 — equivalent to 2.0 percentage points per year of excess return — and a PME of 5.07 for infrastructure investments in
Sub-Saharan Africa specifically.
Recent fund commitments Among recent PE fund commitments, IFC committed $100 million to
Brookfield Asset Management's Catalytic Transition Fund in November 2025, alongside a $75 million co-investment envelope, with the fund targeting business decarbonization, distributed energy systems, and sustainable solutions across Asia,
Latin America,
Eastern Europe, and the Middle East. In February 2026, IFC committed $25 million to anchor Seraya Partners Fund II's new Southeast Asia emerging markets sleeve, covering
Indonesia,
Malaysia, the
Philippines,
Thailand, and
Vietnam. Bloomberg reported in February 2026 that IFC was helping global private equity managers set up India-focused funds at an accelerating pace, with its South Asia Funds Group confirming fresh capital already allocated to one India-focused vehicle and a second investment in the process of closing. ==Notable projects, initiatives, and programs==