Glory Gbeaye


Status: Paid Back

$875.00   Loan Request
$875.00   Paid Back

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Glory Gbeaye
Location: Benin City, Nigeria
Activity: Animal Sales

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $875.00
Loan Use: To buy more goats to sell
Repayment Term: 10 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Mar 12, 2008
Date Disbursed: Mar 27, 2008
Date Funded:Mar 13, 2008
Loan Ended:Dec 15, 2008

About the Country

Country:Nigeria
Avg Annual Income:$1,188.00
Currency:Nigeria Nairas (NGN)
Exchange Rate:116.9150 NGN = 1 USD



Glory Gbeaye is married with six children. She is 43 years old and hails from Edo State, Nigeria. She has been in business selling goats since 1988. She needs a loan of $875 to buy more goats to sell.

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Lenders to this entrepreneur

Anonymous
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Elizabeth
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Ken & Art
Cornwall, VT
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Becki
Capitola, CA
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Steph
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Celina
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The Soliven Family
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Cleo
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Tegwyn
Through the looking glass.,

Nathan
Brooklyn, NY
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Christine
Langley, WA
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Veronica Hoffman
Studio City, CA
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Olivier
Paris,
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Jonny
Nottingham, Nottinghamshire
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Neil and family
Maynard, MA
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Greta Galeazzi
GALEAZZI GRETA, EUROPEAN CITIZEN
Italy

Chris M.
London, Middlesex
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Jean
Round Rock, TX
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Carolina
Aguda, Vila Nova de Gaia
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Rui
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Robby
Windsor, VA
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Wayne & Betsy
Tullahoma, TN
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Howard & Jillian
Vence,
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Carl
Burnaby, B. C.
Canada

Melissa
Anaheim, CA
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Journal entries for Glory Gbeaye


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Glory Gbeaye
Location: Benin City, Nigeria

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Glory Gbeaye by Lift Above Poverty Organization (LAPO) in Nigeria. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 8 months, Lift Above Poverty Organization (LAPO) will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Benin City, Nigeria
Mar 27, 2008
Comment on this entry

Kiva Update on Glory Gbeaye
 
Entrepreneur: Glory Gbeaye
Location: Benin City, Nigeria

Glory is a butcher and runs her business with her daughter, Joy. They specialize in selling goat meat. They had a strong business and were doing well until 6 months ago thieves stole all of their money. Without capital to purchase live goats to butcher and sell, they could not run their business. They were shut down for 2 months. Kiva lenders gave them the chance to get their business up and running again. Now they are back to selling 120 to 160 goats per week!

Every week Glory and her daughter each make a trip to Kano, a city in the north of Nigeria. The trip takes 3 days. They purchase 60 to 80 goats and put them on a lorry to be transported back to Benin City. While one is on a purchasing trip, the other tends the market stall and makes the sales.

Glory’s profits go to supporting her family of children and grandchildren (the most recent, Favor, who came 5 days before our visit and is pictured with Glory who was taking a break from the butchering business to enjoy her new grandson).

Glory is grateful to her Kiva lenders and says she is praying for their long life and prosperity. She also prays that they should never lack and will continue to give support to those in need.


Posted by Jessica Heinzelman from Benin City, Nigeria
Jul 17, 2008
Comments (1)

Kiva Field Update - News From Nigeria
 
Entrepreneur: Glory Gbeaye
Location: Benin City, Nigeria

I’m excited to be writing you as the Kiva Fellow in Benin City, Nigeria. Over the next 3 months I will be witnessing firsthand the impact and realities of microfinance while working with Kiva’s Field Partner, Lift Above Poverty Organization (LAPO). As you may know, all entrepreneur profiles on Kiva's website are posted by local Field Partners (microfinance institutions), which are organizations that lend to the poor for poverty alleviation. The role of a Field Partner is to screen each entrepreneur, upload his/her loan request on the Kiva website, disburse the loan, and collect loan repayments.

In my role, I will be visiting many Kiva entrepreneurs and businesses and training LAPO staff in writing updates for Kiva lenders. As a result, many of you will receive an update on an entrepreneur who received a loan contribution from you. Unfortunately, due to the logistical and administrative constraints, reaching every entrepreneur for an update is not possible, even with the team of 8 people at LAPO who are dedicated to providing Kiva with photos and other content. Whether or not we provide an update on an entrepreneur to whom you loaned, I hope that you will enjoy the story of one Kiva borrower in Benin City that, to me, illustrates the “togetherness” and “unity” that is the inspiration for Kiva’s Swahili name. It is the story of Cookey Nosayana.

Cookey owns a 24-hour Internet café and computer training center. He took a Kiva loan to purchase a more efficient generator that has cut his fuel costs by more than half. It supplies his business with power despite the frequent and extended power outages that are common in Nigeria (in order to stay open for business, he must run a generator an average of 15 hours every day).

Cookey is unique among LAPO (and likely Kiva) clients – he has access to the Internet. He is one of the few clients has been able to explore Kiva.org and experience the partnership that lenders have access to every time they sign on to their portfolio page. When I arrived to write his update, he was holding a printout of his borrower page. As a lender myself, I was excited to hear his perspective. He was gracious enough to answer my myriad of questions.

Cookey first found his profile on Kiva.org by accident. He was Googling “Cookey Nosayana” to see if he could find the meaning of his name. Up came Kiva.org. First he read what had been written in his business description. It was basic, but he was grateful that it had helped him get the capital to purchase a new generator. Then he started clicking around. He viewed his lenders – from the United States, Canada and the UK. They were working people, just like him. I asked him what he thought. Was he surprised that someone would lend him money from across the globe? He was grateful, but not surprised.

“We live in a humanitarian world,” he said. “It’s just like the head of LAPO [Godwin Ehigiamusoe],” Cookey continued. “When he first started LAPO people laughed. Now everyone is running to him for loans. It’s because it is a good idea.” Note: LAPO was started in 1987 when microfinance was still in its infancy and primarily limited to Asia. Those who believed in microfinance were still unsure about it’s promise in Nigeria. Godwin Ehigiamusoe blocked out the negativity, moved forward as he says, “with his heart and his head.” Today LAPO has 137 branches throughout Southern Nigeria and Sierra Leone, provides over $36,126,579 in loans each year and served 135,975 clients in 2007.

Now with LAPO partnering with Kiva, Cookey says that he would love to continue being part of this international web-based financial community. He has expansion plans for his business and will need additional capital to double the number of computers he has connected to the web. He hopes that LAPO will select him as a Kiva client a second time (His first Kiva loan will be paid off in 4 months so keep an eye out for him on the LAPO client lending page).

“Kiva is worthwhile,” says Cookey, “and will continue to be if both sides keep up their part.” As he explored the site, he browsed the businesses of his fellow borrowers from Indonesia to Azerbaijan and appreciated the widespread impact Kiva lenders were having. He believes that it is critical that Kiva entrepreneurs keep making payments and showing improvement and that lenders keep reinvesting their Kiva credit into new businesses as they are repaid.

From Kiva, LAPO and its family of borrowers, we thank you for your continued support of our work. To see all currently fundraising loans from LAPO on Kiva.org, please click here:

View fundraising LAPO entrepreneurs

Sincerely,

Jessica Heinzelman


Posted by Casey Albert from Benin City, Nigeria
Aug 6, 2008
Comments (40)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Glory Gbeaye

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
June 2008 $109.38 $110.00 Repayment Received
July 2008 $109.38 $110.00 Repayment Received
August 2008 $109.38 $110.00 Repayment Received
September 2008 $109.38 $110.00 Repayment Received
October 2008 $109.38 $110.00 Repayment Received
November 2008 $109.38 $110.00 Repayment Received
December 2008 $109.38 $0.00 Repayment Received
January 2009 $109.34 $215.00 Repayment Received