Grace Wambui Muthui


Status: Ended with Loss - Defaulted

$700.00   Loan Request
$502.02   Paid Back

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Grace Wambui Muthui
Location: Nyandarwa, Kenya
Activity: Agriculture

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $700.00
Loan Use: To expand her farming business
Repayment Term: 18 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: N/A
Date Listed: Feb 2, 2007
Date Disbursed: Feb 17, 2007
Date Funded:Feb 3, 2007

About the Country

Country:Kenya
Avg Annual Income:$1,445.00
Currency:United States Dollars (USD)



Grace Wambui Muthui is a 27 year old married farmer. She has three children who are all in school. She lives in the Ngorika settlements in the Rift valley with her husband. She is a member of the Wendani Self Help Group. Her husband is ailing and depends on Grace. Grace farms potatoes on their three-acre plot to meet the family’s daily needs and to educate her children. Unfortunately her husband needs special medical care and the family has used most of the little savings they had. Yet Grace still has to educate and cater for to her family’s upkeep. She would like to expand her farming but lacks the funds. She requests a US $700 loan. Her budget is as follows:

US $200 to lease two extra acres of land,
US $200 to buy potato seeds, and
US $300 to buy herbicides and insecticides.



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Lenders to this entrepreneur

Roxanne
St Andrews, Fife

Oliver
Zürich,
Switzerland

eiming
san francisco, CA
United States



Journal entries for Grace Wambui Muthui


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Grace Wambui Muthui
Location: Nyandarwa, Kenya

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to GRACE WAMBUI MUTHUI by Ebony Foundation (Eb-F) in Kenya. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 16 - 18 months, Ebony Foundation (Eb-F) will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by Irene Mwangi from Nyandarwa, Kenya
Feb 9, 2007
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Meet Grace's family
 
Entrepreneur: Grace Wambui Muthui
Location: Nyandarwa, Kenya

Grace lives in the Ngorika farming settlement/village about 40 minutes outside Nakuru town, the fourth largest urban area in Kenya. Ebony Foundation’s main office is located in Nakuru. Henry, an Eb-F Business Development Officer, and I have traveled to Ngorika twice in the past week. Both times we were unable to track down Grace because she was actually in Nakuru at the hospital. She was there attending to her ailing husband and also to her 17-year-old daughter Mary. Apparently both the husband and daughter are ready to be discharged but cannot leave until the hospital fees are fully paid. Henry and I decided to interview Grace’s eldest daughter, Mercy Wambui.

Mercy informed us that her mother was able to rent only one additional acre with her loan, not the two she had originally planned. She used the leftover money to buy additional farming inputs such as fertilizer, herbicides, insecticides and seeds. Grace grows potatoes on her fields. She will be harvesting in December. Because she will not yield a very large crop, she cannot sell direct to the markets in Nakuru town but rather must use brokers. Luckily for Grace, one of her eldest sons is a broker and thus she is ensured a fair deal. She will receive about 700 Kenyan shillings (~ $10) per bag of potatoes. The good news is that the family expects a much higher yield of potatoes than what they have grown in the past because before they could not afford fertilizers, insecticides and herbicides.

The money from the farming enterprise will help Grace cover her family’s medical expenses and also care for her many dependants. On her small plot live seven of Grace’s children and six grandchildren. Some of those family members are pictured here with Eb-F officer Henry.


Posted by Tanuj Parikh from Nyandarwa, Kenya
Jul 19, 2007
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Update from Ebony Foundation (EbF) - Kenya
 
Entrepreneur: Grace Wambui Muthui
Location: Nyandarwa, Kenya

Dear Kiva lender,

As a recent Kiva blog post (http://www.kiva.org/about/inside) discussed, the situation unfolding in Kenya has disrupted the day-to-day operations of many of Kiva’s microfinance partners, like Ebony Foundation.

James Maina, Director of Ebony Foundation (EbF) (http://www.kiva.org/about/aboutPartner?id=25), has provided the update below for you. Due to the exceptional circumstances (including lack of reliable internet) where James is working in Kenya right now, Kiva is posting this update on his behalf.

Thank you,

Kiva Team

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Dear Kiva Lenders,

I wish to thank you for your continued concern and support during this very difficult moment in Kenya’s history. We have been a peaceful Country in a generally troubled region and people sort of took the peace for granted.

The country is now battered almost to a pulp and blood spilt with vengeance, senseless killings and wanton destruction. Markets, food stores and shops have been looted. Hospitals are dysfunctional and health centers incapacitated by riots and barricades. The violence, death and destruction witnessed in the Country for the last couple weeks has jolted the Nation into conscience and every body is now craving normalcy.

While peace is slowly returning to all affected parts of the Country, the impact of the riots has been devastating. Hundreds of people have been killed turning thousands of innocent children into helpless orphans and over one million people have been displaced, becoming internal refugees over night.

The impact of the riots is most felt in the micro and small business sector. Over 1 million small businesses were looted and or burnt down destroying the only source of income to millions of Kenyans. Most of the fighting and destruction occurred in slum areas in Nairobi, Mombasa, Nakuru and Kericho in Rift Valley. These regions are home to over 70% of Ebony Foundation’s clients and as you can imagine almost all of our clients in these regions have been affected by the riots. Only one region- (Mount Kenya) which is home to about 20% of EbF’s clients was spared the violence. The economy in this safe region is now getting stretched as the residents have to now house the displaced population.

We have recently completed auditing the riot’s impact on our clients and as of yesterday about 4,900 of our clients had been badly affected by the riots:

-- About 1,532 of our clients were displaced and both their homes and business premises burnt down. This population is currently housed in church compounds and police stations.

-- Another 2,479 clients had their business premises burnt down or looted leaving them with no source of income at all.

-- 833 clients had their homes looted or burnt down and about 56 clients are missing and feared dead or critically injured.

We arrived at these figures through a survey being administered at holding grounds, police stations, and through reliable reports from groups and community leaders. Our staff and local group officials have also been committed to conducting field assessments. I am sending a photo today which you may share with the lenders. The biggest tasks at the moment are to feed and house the displaced people, and to finance the reconstruction of the small businesses that were affected in order to enable the people to reclaim their source of income. In addition, Ebony Foundation is now helping other MFI’s audit their clients.

Eb-F has formed the following committees to address the above issues:

-- A humanitarian committee that is working with the International Red Cross to provide food, shelter and medical care to the victims.

-- A business reconstruction committee that is working with the affected clients to re finance and rebuild the small businesses that were looted and/or burnt down.

-- A compliance committee that is studying the legal and contractual aspects of the affected loans to arrive at the best policy action.

Thus, we ask for your continued patience as many loan repayments will be late, and it even may be impossible for some loans to be repaid in full at all. Thank you for your patience as we work hard to address all of these difficult issues, to serve our borrowers and help them recover, and to repay loans as quickly and as much as is possible in the coming months.

Sincerely,

James Maina

Executive Director

Ebony Foundation

Kenya


Posted by Jessica Flannery, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jan 14, 2008
Comments (653)

Default of Your Loan to an Entrepreneur with Ebony Foundation
 
Entrepreneur: Grace Wambui Muthui
Location: Nyandarwa, Kenya

After continuing non-payment to Kiva, all active Ebony Foundation loans have now been defaulted. Kiva will continue to pursue recovery of funds on these loans and apply funds proportionally to lenders if and as funds are received. However, Kiva staff have judged the likelihood of recovery on these loans to be sufficiently low such as to update the loan status of these loans to “defaulted”.



For further details on this default, please see Ebony Foundation’s Field Partner page


Posted by Benjamin Elberger, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Oct 16, 2009
Comments (103)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Grace Wambui Muthui

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
May 2007 $43.75 $0.00 Repayment Received
June 2007 $43.75 $88.00 Repayment Received
July 2007 $43.75 $0.00 Repayment Received
August 2007 $43.75 $88.00 Repayment Received
September 2007 $43.75 $44.00 Repayment Received
October 2007 $43.75 $44.00 Repayment Received
November 2007 $43.75 $44.00 Repayment Received
December 2007 $43.75 $44.00 Repayment Received
January 2008 $43.75 $44.00 Repayment Received
February 2008 $43.75 $44.00 Repayment Received
March 2008 $43.75 $0.00 Repayment Received
April 2008 $43.75 $0.00 Delinquent
May 2008 $43.75 $0.00 Delinquent
June 2008 $43.75 $22.96 Delinquent
July 2008 $43.75 $0.00 Delinquent
August 2008 $43.75 $11.78 Delinquent
August 2009 $0.00 $26.61  
December 2009 $0.00 $0.67