ao link
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In

You are viewing 1 of your 1 free articles

Peabody borrows £75m from French bank to pay for childcare

London housing association Peabody has borrowed £75m from the French bank BNP Paribas to pay for an affordable childcare programme.

Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Picture: Getty
Picture: Getty
Sharelines

London housing association Peabody has borrowed £75m from the French bank BNP Paribas to pay for an affordable childcare programme #ukhousing

@PeabodyLDN borrows £75m as a five-year revolving credit facility, structured as a sustainability-linked loan #ukhousing

The 66,000-home social landlord borrowed the money as a five-year revolving credit facility, structured as a sustainability-linked loan.

This means that Peabody’s interest rate depends on whether it meets social impact-based criteria. It will pay a lower interest rate if it delivers an agreed number of accredited childcare qualifications under its childcare training programme.


READ MORE

Biggest lender from UAE enters UK social housing sectorBiggest lender from UAE enters UK social housing sector
Hyde borrows £350m in two loansHyde borrows £350m in two loans
L&Q agrees £100m ‘positive incentive’ loan with French lenderL&Q agrees £100m ‘positive incentive’ loan with French lender
What can housing associations do to help provide childcare for our residents?What can housing associations do to help provide childcare for our residents?

Its target for qualifications will increase incrementally over the five-year life of the loan.

Susan Hickey, chief financial officer at Peabody, said: “We know that the lack of flexible, affordable childcare in London is a major problem. It leads to lower rates of employment, disproportionately affecting mothers, and contributes to unacceptable levels of inequality and child poverty.

“Many working people find themselves burdened by debt from expensive childcare costs. Alongside BNP Paribas, we are determined help tackle this issue in our communities.”

David Reynolds, head of global markets at BNP Paribas, added: “BNP Paribas has had the privilege of working with three UK housing associations to provide liquidity through individually tailored sustainability-linked loans.

“Peabody is the first to use a childcare metric, while L&Q and Optivo were both linked to employment. For us, this is about partnering with housing associations for the long term and supporting their continued drive to improve residents’ and communities’ quality of life, health and well-being.”

Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Add New Comment
You must be logged in to comment.
By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to the use of cookies. Browsing is anonymised until you sign up. Click for more info.
Cookie Settings