CARIBBEAN-CDB is holding discussions with Canada to provide additional funding for the Caribbean.

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CDB seeks increased Canadian funding for Caribbean development
Regional bank in talks with Canada to boost financial support for Caribbean nations

PARIS, CMC – The Barbados-based Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) is advancing a US$200 million first-loss portfolio guarantee with the government of Canada, which, once finalized, is expected to unlock at least US$400 million in additional lending capacity by reducing credit risk on the bank’s balance sheet.

The announcement came as CDB President Daniel Best told an international conference about the ongoing efforts of the region’s premier financial institution to apply innovative financial approaches across Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs).

Best, addressing the FICS G7 special event here, outlined a suite of instruments designed to expand lending capacity, reduce borrowing costs, and unlock critical investment for climate resilience across the Caribbean.

Speaking on the theme “Instruments to Lower the Cost of Capital,” Best, in sharing perspectives from the Caribbean, highlighted how smaller multilateral development banks can use targeted balance-sheet measures to address structural constraints and expand their support to member countries.

A central highlight was CDB’s landmark Exposure Exchange Agreement (EEA), a US$450 million transaction executed with the Central American Bank for Economic Integration. The agreement, the first of its kind, significantly reduced concentration risk within CDB’s sovereign portfolio.

“In a single year, this transaction reduced our top five borrower concentration ratio from 61 to 38 percent, without any new shareholder capital injection,” Best said.

“For a small MDB like CDB, where concentration limits can constrain lending, this directly translated into increased capacity to serve our borrowing member countries,” he added.

The conference was also used to underscore the CDB’s leadership in collaborative MDB solutions, including the development of a multi-guarantor debt-for-resilience transaction alongside the Inter-American Development Bank, the World Bank, and the Development Bank of Latin America and the Caribbean (CAF).

He said this initiative seeks to address the Caribbean’s dual challenge of high debt and climate vulnerability.

“By leveraging guarantees from MDB partners and private investors, we are creating fiscal space for countries to invest in resilience before disasters strike and without increasing net debt. ” He said,” he said.

“The goal is to reduce borrowing costs, extend maturities, and enable proactive climate investment,” he added.

Further reinforcing its forward-looking strategy, CDB is designing a Contingent Capital Facility (CCF) – an innovative loss-absorbing instrument intended to qualify as Tier 2 capital. Under this mechanism, highly rated shareholders would commit capital that is only called upon under predefined stress scenarios.

“This facility ensures that capital support is contractually available precisely when it is needed most, strengthening financial resilience while safeguarding our credit rating,” the CDB said.

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