International Finance Corporation Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed International Finance Corporation stocks.

International Finance Corporation Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 2 ASIA Microsoft Commits $2.2B Investment In Malaysia's Cloud And AI Services, Largest In 32 Years
May 1 ASIA TikTok Ban: Is The US Government Taking A Page From China's Censorship Book?
May 1 ASIA South Korea's 5-Year Plan To Grow Its Console Gaming Market By 2028
May 1 ASIA Yum China Revs Up Restaurant Expansion, Share Repurchases
Apr 30 ASIA Top Tesla Rival BYD Recalls Over 16,000 Seagull EVs Over Faulty Reversing Cameras
Apr 30 ASIA Samsung Electronics Set To Mass Produce Groundbreaking 5Th Gen HBM3E Chip To Advance AI Innovation
Apr 30 ASIA Samsung Electronics Posts A Whopping 931.9% Profit Jump In Q1
Apr 29 ASIA Japanese Yen Shows Volatility Amid Speculation Of Intervention
Apr 29 ASIA Asia Up, Europe Mixed, While Yen Surges Against Dollar - Global Markets Today While US Slept
Apr 29 ASIA Amid Elon Musk's Visit To Beijing For FSD Push, China Is Eyeing 'Economical' Hydrogen-Powered Vehicles As Next Alternative For Green Energy Transition
Apr 29 ASIA China's Big Banks Halt Russia Transactions Over US Sanctions, Forcing Firms To Resort To 'Underground' Channels: Report
Apr 29 ASIA Musk's China Mission Pays Off? Tesla Reportedly Inks FSD Deal With Internet Giant Baidu (UPDATED)
Apr 29 ASIA Why Tesla Rival BYD Charges Up To 3x More For EVs In Europe While China Prices Remain Shockingly Low
Apr 25 VSHY Virtus Newfleet Short Duration High Yield Bond ETF declares monthly distribution of $0.1413
Apr 25 ASIA Is Baozun's Risky Leap Into Brand Management Starting To Pay Off?
International Finance Corporation

The International Finance Corporation (IFC) is an international financial institution that offers investment, advisory, and asset-management services to encourage private-sector development in developing countries. The IFC is a member of the World Bank Group and is headquartered in Washington, D.C.. It was established in 1956, as the private-sector arm of the World Bank Group, to advance economic development by investing in for-profit and commercial projects for poverty reduction and promoting development. The IFC's stated aim is to create opportunities for people to escape poverty and achieve better living standards by mobilizing financial resources for private enterprise, promoting accessible and competitive markets, supporting businesses and other private-sector entities, and creating jobs and delivering necessary services to those who are poverty stricken or otherwise vulnerable.Since 2009, the IFC has focused on a set of development goals that its projects are expected to target. Its goals are to increase sustainable agriculture opportunities, improve healthcare and education, increase access to financing for microfinance and business clients, advance infrastructure, help small businesses grow revenues, and invest in climate health.The IFC is owned and governed by its member countries but has its own executive leadership and staff that conduct its normal business operations. It is a corporation whose shareholders are member governments that provide paid-in capital and have the right to vote on its matters. Originally, it was more financially integrated with the World Bank Group, but later, the IFC was established separately and eventually became authorized to operate as a financially-autonomous entity and make independent investment decisions. It offers an array of debt and equity financing services and helps companies face their risk exposures while refraining from participating in a management capacity. The corporation also offers advice to companies on making decisions, evaluating their impact on the environment and society, and being responsible. It advises governments on building infrastructure and partnerships to further support private sector development.
The corporation is assessed by an independent evaluator each year. In 2011, its evaluation report recognized that its investments performed well and reduced poverty, but recommended that the corporation define poverty and expected outcomes more explicitly to better-understand its effectiveness and approach poverty reduction more strategically. The corporation's total investments in 2011 amounted to $18.66 billion. It committed $820 million to advisory services for 642 projects in 2011, and held $24.5 billion worth of liquid assets. The IFC is in good financial standing and received the highest ratings from two independent credit rating agencies in 2018.IFC comes under frequent criticism from NGOs that it is not able to track its money because of its use of financial intermediaries. For example, a report by Oxfam International and other NGOs in 2015, "The Suffering of Others," found the IFC was not performing enough due diligence and managing risk in many of its investments in third-party lenders.Other criticism focuses on IFC working excessively with large companies or wealthy individuals already able to finance their investments without help from public institutions such as IFC, and such investments do not have an adequate positive development impact. An example often cited by NGOs and critical journalists is IFC granting financing to a Saudi prince for a five-star hotel in Ghana.

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