More than one in five (22 per cent) small and medium sized enterprises (“SMEs”) that needed external finance and/or capital over the last couple of years were unable to access it. Indeed, over a quarter (27 per cent) have had to stop or pause an area of their business because of a lack of finance. This is according to new research commissioned by Manx Financial Group PLC.
The research showed that the biggest barriers faced by SMEs in sourcing external finance/and or capital were that it was too expensive (23 per cent), the process took too long (19 per cent) and that there was a lack of flexibility with repayment terms (17 per cent). SMEs also cited other barriers such as the fact that the lender didn’t understand their business (16 per cent) and that they received poor customer care (10 per cent).
The research also revealed that SMEs have been forced to pause or stop activities such as expanding into new markets, hiring the right personnel and marketing, because of lack of financing. Manufacturing, Finance & Accounting, Retail and IT & Telecoms were the sectors that were affected the most because of a lack of external finance and/ or capital.
Over the next 12 months, nearly two in five (38 per cent) SMEs believe Sales will be the biggest areas of business that will see growth followed by recruitment (19 per cent), new product development (18 per cent) and new market expansion (17 per cent).
The research also highlighted that a third (34 per cent) of SMEs are concerned that their business will not grow in the next 12 months. However, with appropriate external finance, SMEs on average believe their business could grow by around 17 per cent.
Douglas Grant, CEO of Manx Financial Group PLC, commented: “The research sadly reveals what we have been observing for some time – that SMEs continue to struggle with accessing finance and that worryingly, this lack of availability will cost them and the UK economy in terms of growth at a time when it is needed the most. The amount of growth that is being sacrificed is however significant and will require new solutions which are designed to address this funding gap.”
On 6th April 2021 the Recovery Loan Scheme (“RLS”) was launched. A new Government-backed initiative designed to help facilitate businesses’ recovery and growth after the disruption caused by Covid-19, allowing firms of any size and sector to apply for funding of up to £10 million from accredited lenders. Conister was approved in August 2021 as a British Business Bank accredited lender for the RLS. It enabled Conister to extend the support it has provided to SMEs throughout the Covid-19 pandemic. The scheme deadline was on 30th June meaning capital-starved SMEs, still recovering and adapting to a post-pandemic landscape, will now need to source alternative forms of lending.
Some sectors of the economy are recovering more rapidly than others. For those still struggling sectors, they require an additional government intervention, but for the remainder, no further Government intervention is necessary.
Douglas Grant continues: “We were delighted to have been accredited for the RLS last year. The programme provided the necessary catalyst that many sectors required to thrive. However, this lifeline is now gone and demand for working capital is set to soar to new highs as more businesses desperately require liquidity provisions to counteract record inflation levels, rising interest rates, supply chain issues, increases in wages and additional pandemic-induced headwinds. With the cost of borrowing set to increase, many SMEs are facing their own cost of living crisis.
“A sector focused government-backed loan scheme which brings together both traditional and alternative lenders to guarantee the future of our SMEs in struggling sectors, is critical to ensure that opportunities for their growth are not missed. We very much hope this is something that becomes a reality. In the meantime, all SMEs would be well-advised to take stock of their current capital structures and, if appropriate, access fixed term, fixed rate loans to prevent additional exposure to an increasingly volatile lending market.”
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