Sidbi will use a part the remaining Rs 8,000 crore of the budgetary allocation to extend soft loans to micro, small and medium units at concessional rates, Sidbi chairman and managing director Kshatrapati Shivaji told reporters here.
"We will be utilising a part of the money allocated in the Budget for a fund-of-funds which will take equity interest in start-up enterprises while the rest (Rs 8,000 crore) will be for soft and term loans," Shivaji said.
Under the scheme, start-ups and MSMEs can get soft loans at 10-12 per cent interest, which is lower than what banks offer, he said.
The lending will be done to companies which are taking the 'Make in India' initiative ahead, he said, adding the lending scheme has been given the acronym 'SMILE' which centres around lending to small units.
On April 30, Parliament was informed that the Reserve Bank had allocated Rs 10,000 crore to Sidbi to set up a venture capital (VC) fund to attract private capital for start-ups, which was first announced in the budget.
The Budget had announced the setting up of the Mudra Bank, which is under Sidbi and aimed at refinancing the debt of micro-enterprises. Shivaji, who also heads Mudra Bank, said there is no issue of over-lap between the two institutions -- Sidbi and Mudra Bank.
"We will not be competing. In fact, they will be playing a complementary role to us," he said, adding given the large number of micro enterprises, there is a need to develop the entire ecosystem which will support to such companies.
The bank is mulling to raise funds through bond sales, Shivaji said, adding the Rs 20,000-crore initial corpus can be leveraged to raise the money.
The leverage can be of up to 10 times of the Rs 20,000 crore, he said, but declined details. Mudra Bank will be soon announcing the initiative, he added.
