Financial markets in 2025 were shaped by geopolitical uncertainty and rapid shifts in investor sentiment. In that context, microfinance continued to behave differently from traditional asset classes.
The reason is structural. Microfinance institutions serve micro-entrepreneurs in local, informal economies. Their borrowers are influenced by agricultural cycles, local commerce, and community-level dynamics, not by global interest rates or equity market moves. This insulates the asset class from the volatility and herd behavior that characterise public markets.
The risks in microfinance — weather shocks, local political shifts, borrower-level defaults — are geographically dispersed. They do not move with the systemic factors that drive equities or sovereign bonds.
Remo Oswald, Co-Founder of Enabling Qapital, joins Alain Beyeler on Geld & Pfeffer to discuss why microfinance remains a resilient model for institutional portfolios in 2026.