Welcome to the TTP Liquidity Brief | Issue 38

Inside: Bahrain’s SME lending experiment, our new trade credit insurance guide, and the latest across finance and payments

🌟 Editor's note

Editor’s Note | Week of 26 January 2025

By Carter Hoffman

Welcome back to another week in trade, treasury, and payments!

Our Slow Read this week is a look at how Bahrain is approaching boosting SME lending, and how shared digital infrastructure might finally help close the trust gap that keeps smaller businesses from accessing finance. It’s a simple recipe with potentially big implications.

It was also an exciting week because, we launched our new trade credit insurance guide with ICISA, which gives a beginner-friendly overview of all things TCI. We also covered some interesting developments in lending and payments trends shaping the year ahead, and tracked progress on everything from tokenised assets at Swift to new trade ambitions between India and the UAE.

Plenty to catch up on, whether you’re skimming headlines or settling in for a deeper read. Keep your eyes peeled this week for the launch of our magazine, which I’m pretty sure our design team has been working on for like 78 hours straight with no sleep at this point… Hats off to them for some excellent work. We’re all pretty proud of this one!

Until next time — get some sleep!

— The TTP Editorial Team

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Slow Read

The missing ingredient in SME lending and what Bahrain is trying instead

Every good recipe does two main things. It tells you what you’re trying to make, and it tells you how not to mess it up. Plus, it keeps you honest. If you cut corners, it won’t be long until everyone can taste it.

Big economic plans have their own taste test, though the feedback is far less instant. These kinds of nationwide visions earn their strength when they can be considered as a series of small, actionable steps that can actually be used consistently at scale. You can see this most clearly when a country is trying to turn its long-term, sometimes abstract, vision into a set of actionable steps that banks and businesses can follow. Bahrain is a good example.

Bahrain’s Economic Vision 2030 sets out that kind of ambition. The goal that the Gulf country of 1.6 million is trying to achieve is a more productive, diverse economy, led more by private business and less by oil, which has historically been the foundation of its economy, particularly in the 1980s, when it comprised nearly 70% of the Kingdom’s GDP.

For that shift to happen, however, Bahrain’s small firms need to be able to grow in perfectly ordinary ways. Unfortunately, that isn’t always possible.

The SME bottleneck behind Vision 2030

Small businesses are everywhere in the Gulf, yet far too many of them struggle to get bank credit. A World Bank note on GCC SME lending estimates that only 11 per cent of GCC SMEs have access to credit, which leaves an estimated credit gap of $250 billion. The same note points to very low SME lending in several GCC banking systems, with this group representing only a small share of total loans in some markets.

This is not only a Bahrain problem, as the pattern is consistent across the region and much of the world. SMEs sit at the heart of private-sector development, but they are often treated as too hard to finance at scale, which can leave a bad taste in the real economy.

The WTO has reported that over half of trade finance requests by SMEs are rejected globally, compared with just 7 per cent for multinational companies. IFC has pointed to similar survey evidence, stating that over 40 per cent of SMEs’ trade finance requests are rejected, a figure that rises to 70 per cent for those that are women-owned. For these smaller businesses, having an application rejected can mean that they lose the ability to buy inputs, fulfil orders, and, for some, operate at all. Not the best situation for a category that comprises around 95% of all businesses in the country.

If only there were a way to fix this…

Well, Bahrain, with the help of shared digital public infrastructure, is hoping that there is. And the centrepiece of that hope is a shared registry.

“This is a fraud prevention registry to de-risk trade and trade finance,” says Neil Shonhard, CEO of technology provider MonetaGo. “Registries turn fraud risk into lender confidence and, by extension, SME inclusion. By having a single point of control, integrity, and reliable data, you can create a foundation of trust, both domestically and cross-border.”

That registry idea, however, only works if the documents and claims it tracks are legally recognised in the first place. That is why Bahrain started in the legal realm.

From legal validity to everyday use

In 2018, Bahrain was the first jurisdiction to enact the UNCITRAL Model Law on Electronic Transferable Records (MLETR). This much-discussed model law brings legal recognition to key trade documents when they are in electronic form, meaning that they can be used with the same degree of legal certainty as their paper counterparts.

While that legal update was a crucial first step that removed one big barrier, it was just that: a first step. It did not, on its own, change how trade works day to day within the country’s borders. “They’ve had MLETR in place for several years now,” Shonhard said. “What changed? Is everyone using digital documents? Of course they’re not.” A law can say electronic documents are valid, but businesses and banks still need a way to use them safely and consistently before they can become a staple.

This is where digital public infrastructure (DPI) comes in. The World Bank defines DPI as “an approach to digitalization focused on creating foundational, digital building blocks designed for the public benefit.” DPI is a broad idea, but it becomes easier to understand when you look at what one building block actually does in a real market. In trade and SME lending, a registry can be one of those building blocks. It gives lenders a fast way to check the basics, such as whether an invoice looks genuine and whether the same claim is being used more than once. Because it is a public, shared system that all lenders in a market can access, it builds a single record over time, so an invoice can be checked against what has already been submitted elsewhere.

In short, while legal reform may set the rules and is certainly a vital foundational step, it does not change behaviour on its own. The key ingredient for changing behaviour in a market is providing a shared way to confidently use electronic documents, so lenders can consistently run the same basic checks that they are used to, only now with the automation capabilities and scale of digital tools. That is the role the registry is meant to play in Bahrain’s broader DPI effort, turning legal recognition into something banks and businesses can rely on in making their day-to-day financing decisions.

A shared system only works when everyone uses it

At this point, you might be wondering, even if the tool exists, what is going to make the market adopt it? A registry only works when many lenders use it, because its value comes from being shared. If only one bank is on it, that’s no different from the bank creating its own isolated digital registry. If only a few are on it, there will still be too many gaps where duplicate invoicing and other fraud efforts can sneak through undetected, which effectively undermines the entire endeavour. The real question should not be around what the tool can do, but who can bring everyone around the same table and into the same system.

In this case, that “who” is Bahrain’s Electronic Network For Financial Transactions (more commonly known as “BENEFIT”). “BENEFIT is the national infrastructure provider for payments and messaging,” Shonhard said. “It’s a bit like a ‘SWIFT Bahrain’. It is part of the government, and its ownership is shared by a consortium of the 17 commercial banks in Bahrain.” That shared ownership structure is one reason why BENEFIT has been chosen to run the registry as the national operator, with MonetaGo providing the technology behind it. When the operator already sits at the centre of the banking ecosystem, banks have a clearer reason to treat the registry as common market infrastructure rather than someone else’s product.

With that structure in place, adoption becomes less about persuading banks one by one and more about getting the key players to move together from the start. In Bahrain, once that process began, BENEFIT brought the main decision-makers into the same process early, including the central bank and the main domestic banks, so the system could be designed with them and used by them from day one. “Bahrain knew what they wanted, saw that we ticked all the boxes, and effected change literally within a matter of six months,” Shonhard said.

That pace helps, but speed alone does not guarantee adoption. The registry still needs to start with the institutions that will put enough activity through it to make the shared record meaningful. “International banks operating in Bahrain will have access to this system, but the roll-out is starting with the domestic banks first and then non-bank lenders,” Shonhard said. Once the core banks are using the same registry, the shared record becomes stronger, and other lenders have a far clearer reason to join.

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Did You Know? 

Less than 15% of SMEs globally that use trade receivables as collateral actually access bank financing through them not because the assets lack value but because lenders struggle to verify ownership duplication risk and enforceability in real time.

As a result the same invoices are often financed informally discounted heavily or left unused altogether while banks remain cautious despite clear demand. Shared registries digital public infrastructure and legally recognised electronic records are increasingly seen as the missing link between available liquidity and deployable liquidity.

In markets where these foundations are in place SME credit expansion is no longer constrained by capital but enabled by trust.

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