Sok Un


Status: Paid Back

$600.00   Loan Request
$600.00   Paid Back

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Sok Un
Location: Pon-nhea Leu District, Cambodia
Activity: Food Production/Sales

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $600.00
Loan Use: To purchase firewood and rice for producing vermicelli.
Repayment Term: 15 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Irregularly
Currency Exchange Loss: N/A
Date Listed: Dec 8, 2008
Date Disbursed: Nov 27, 2008
Date Funded:Dec 10, 2008
Loan Ended:Jul 27, 2009

About the Country

Country:Cambodia
Avg Annual Income:$2,600.00
Currency:United States Dollars (USD)



Mrs. Sok Un, 58, is a widow with three daughters. Two of them are married and live outside the family house, and the youngest daughter assists her mother in producing vermicelli. The family lives in a small village off of National Road 5, about seventeen kilometers from Phnom Penh.

Mrs. Un has been producing vermicelli (Khmer noodle) for forty years; it’s a skill she learned from her parents. She sells her Khmer fresh noodles from one village to another. In addition, the family also has a plot of land in which they are planting corn, other food crops, vegetables, and rice.

Mrs. Un is requesting a loan of $600 US to purchase firewood and rice for producing vermicelli for selling.


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Journal entries for Sok Un


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Sok Un
Location: Pon-nhea Leu District, Cambodia

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Sok Un by MAXIMA Mikroheranhvatho Co., Ltd. in Cambodia. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 12 months, MAXIMA Mikroheranhvatho Co., Ltd. will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Pon-nhea Leu District, Cambodia
Dec 11, 2008
Comments (4)

Kiva Message: Happy Year of the Ox from Maxima!
 
Entrepreneur: Sok Un
Location: Pon-nhea Leu District, Cambodia

Dear Lender,

Happy Year of the Ox! Thank you for supporting a Kiva entrepreneur in Cambodia.

It is the first day back in the Maxima office after Khmer New Year, and the office is abuzz with discussions of people describing their vacations. Our Kiva Coordinator, Sophal, a bright, 22-year-old Khmer girl and one of my closest friends in the office, asks me where I went.

“Battambong,” I reply, trying to pronounce the name correctly. After a few feeble attempts, Sophal at last can understand the city I mean.

“Did you dance, Julie?” She asks.

“Yes! We danced at the pagoda all three nights!” I exclaim.

“S’bai, at? Was it happy?”

“S’bai s’bai! Very happy!”

My name is Julie Picquet, and I am a Kiva Fellow working with Maxima Mikroheranhvatho, a Kiva Field Partner based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. With two-thirds of my fellowship complete, I can hardly believe that I have less than one month left with this beautiful country and its inspiring citizens.

Kiva’s Partnership with Maxima

As a Kiva Fellow, I was placed with one of Kiva’s Field Partners to provide support and transparency into the money lending process. In the past nine weeks, I have visited Kiva entrepreneurs and worked closely with Maxima staff to write borrower updates, streamline our upload processes, and help with translation. As you may know, all entrepreneurs on Kiva’s web site are supported by local Field Partners, or microfinance institutions (MFIs) like Maxima, who are Kiva’s liaison between Kiva lenders and Kiva borrowers. They choose which of their clients are eligible to receive Kiva support, write and upload business profiles, disburse loans, collect payments, write journal updates, and respond to lender comments. Currently, Maxima is the only Field Partner to be completely owned and operated by Cambodians.

Despite the prominence of microfinance institutions in Cambodia (more than eighteen major banks and counting), Maxima stands apart from the rest as a boutique firm. As the smallest of Kiva’s four field partners in Cambodia, Maxima has the flexibility to tailor its loan products to best fit client demands. For example, some loan products include flexible interest rates, allowing clients to choose a lower interest rate if they can come to the Maxima office to make their payments, rather than have the loan officer drive to the clients’ residences. This cuts down on significant costs for the MFI, who can in turn pass the savings on to the client.

Riding on the back of a Maxima motorbike, interviewing borrowers and hearing about their business operations, I am impressed by the enthusiasm villages show when a loan officer and I drive past their houses. Sothea, a loan officer whose territory is the Koh Dach Island on the Mekong river, where she was raised and her parents still live, teaches me about customer service. “I always smile, the whole time I’m here,” she says, “My clients are everywhere, I want them to see me happy!”

Client Profile: The Um Family’s Mushrooms

Maxima’s clients seem happy, indeed. In the past nine years, Maxima has disbursed over $6 million dollars of loans and reached over 10,000 families. Maxima gives not only business loans, but also loans to build houses or to send children to school. In the homes I visit, I see the signs of development – children’s homework on the bamboo bed, taxi driving certificates pinned to the wall of a humble, wooden house. Piece by piece, Maxima’s loans help Cambodians improve their standard of living through sustainable business growth.

One example of this forward movement through small business entrepreneurship is exemplified through Sotheany Um and her family. When a credit offer and I approached the Um household, Sotheany’s father proudly told me that he could speak some French (which he learned when Cambodia was a French colony), so I said “Je m'appelle Julie.” He laughed and pulled up some chairs for Sothea and I to sit, while his daughter finished some work. During our interview, Sotheany’s young daughter ran around in pigtails and holding a balloon while we talked.

Sotheany is a hardworking businesswoman. This is her first microfinance loan, and she used all $700 of her loan to start up a mushroom business near the home she shares with her parents. She learned the mushroom growing trade from her brother-in-law, who had learned it from his uncle. She started the business about 6 months ago upon receiving the loan.

In this business, large, dark rooms are filled with vertical lines of segmented plastic bags, each filled with a mushroom fertilizer. The bags hang from floor-to-ceiling, and after a few weeks, wide, white mushrooms begin to sprout from the bottoms of each segment. The Ums built two buildings to grow mushrooms, each with over 5000 segmented bags. Sotheany’s father and brother-in-law enthusiastically showed us their mushroom huts and the mushrooms that are beginning to grow.

Sotheany sells her mushrooms on the island for 6000/kg for regular consumers, and 4000 or 5000/kg for wholesalers. One problem she faces is the lack of wholesalers to purchase her mushrooms. She may need to sell some of her mushrooms in Phnom Penh as well in order to increase her market. Sotheany is hopeful that she will be able to pay back her loan on time.

This video shows my interview with Sotheany, as well as her father and brother-in-law giving us a tour of the rooms where her mushrooms grow: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoHT7jC5tUw

I was deeply impressed with the hard work that the Um household had put into starting this business. Mr. Um had even painted signs to mark the entrance of the mushroom hut, in both Khmer and French. To me, it showed the care that they have taken to run their business successfully and increase their income. On the Koh Dach Island, most people are weavers, and I imagine that it must take courage and confidence to introduce a new product to the island.

Before leaving to visit more weavers on the island, I thanked the Um family for their time and wished her success: “Some nang lo’ah!” – “Good luck!” To Sotheany’s father I said, “Au revoir!”

Maxima Welcomes the New Year

Last week Maxima brought in monks to bless the staff for Khmer New Year and invited me to join. Upstairs in our office, desks were pushed aside, mats were spread, and shoes were removed. We sat down and listened to the monks chant, as they splashed us with water and showered us with flower petals. The following day at 7:30 am, I was picked up by Maxima’s driver and brought to our Khmer New Year Party, where we met up with our second branch and the 60 or so employees cooked together, ate together and danced together as a family. “S’bai at, Julie?” They ask. “Yes,” I say, “I am very happy. Are you?”

Cambodia’s recent history paints a very different picture than the one I have come to see in my time here. Development is underway, and in the wake of a genocide, social problems and political corruption, in the faces of my coworkers and the people they serve I see happiness and determination.

On behalf of Kiva, Maxima and its hardworking clients, I thank you for your continued support of our hard work. Together, we can bring sustainable solutions to poverty and facilitate development worldwide.

We wish you a happy and healthy Year of the Ox, and we hope to continue to partner with you in the future.

Very Sincerely Yours,

Julie Picquet

Maxima Mikroheranhvatho

Phnom Penh, Cambodia


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
May 1, 2009
Comments (103)

Update in July, 2009
 
Entrepreneur: Sok Un
Location: Pon-nhea Leu District, Cambodia

Mrs. Sok Un, a widow with three daughters, has been producing vermicelli (Khmer noodle) for four-year. In December 2008, she applied for a loan of $600 to purchase firewood and rice for producing vermicelli for sell.

In the past, Sok spent a lot of money to buy firewood and rice on credit; its price was so high and it was hard for her to manage income from selling vermicelli to support her living more easily. So, she decided to apply for a loan to help her.

Since using cash from the loan, she can save some money by not buying firewood and rice at high prices any more. Sok said that “If she did not get finance from loan she would be unable to manage income to support her family properly.” She had no problem to pay back the principal and interest and she paid off the loan already.

When the credit officers went to visit Sok’s family, she gave a talk and produced vermicelli at the same time.


Posted by Sophal Ros from Pon-nhea Leu District, Cambodia
Jul 10, 2009
Comments (2)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Sok Un

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
February 2009 $0.00 $60.00  
March 2009 $0.00 $60.00  
April 2009 $0.00 $60.00  
May 2009 $60.00 $60.00 Repayment Received
June 2009 $60.00 $60.00 Repayment Received
July 2009 $60.00 $60.00 Repayment Received
August 2009 $60.00 $240.00 Repayment Received
September 2009 $60.00 $0.00 Repayment Received
October 2009 $60.00 $0.00 Repayment Received
November 2009 $60.00 $0.00 Repayment Received
December 2009 $60.00 Available Dec 1 Repayment Received
January 2010 $60.00 Available Jan 1 Repayment Received
February 2010 $60.00 Available Feb 1 Repayment Received