º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

New £40m business succession fund for Wales

The fund's first deal has backed the management buyout of Tredegar firm Dragon Recycling Solutions.

left to right: Eluned Morgan, First Minister,Giles Thorley, chief Executive, Development Bank of Wales and Beth Bysouth, managing director, Dragon RS.

NEw £40m fund backing deals that keep businesses Welsh-owned has been launched. Nearly twice the size of the initial Wales Business Succession Fund, it is again being managed by the Development Bank of Wales.

It will back management buyouts and buy-ins of Welsh SMEs

Financed by the Welsh Government and the Clwyd Pension Fund, the fund offers structured equity and debt packages of between £500,000 and £5m with terms of up to seven years. It is forecasting to support more than 1,000 jobs across Wales.

It builds on the inaugural £25m succession fund which closes this year having supported 26 buyouts and safeguarded over 700 jobs since its launch in 2019. The new fund is expected to safeguard 1,000 jobs.

The first investment made through the new fund is a £5m package supporting a management buyout and the future of Tredegar-based Dragon Recycling Solutions (RS). The deal safeguards 120 skilled jobs and marks the third time the development bank has supported Dragon RS since 2016. The package includes £2.25m of equity and £2.75m of debt.

The management buyout team consists of Beth Bysouth, who has been appointed managing director alongside operations director Gerard Howard, financial controller Mikiko Minty, and compliance director Tracy Medlicott, with incoming chair Mark Pulman.

Dragon processes around three million smart meters annually, operating nationwide contracts with major energy suppliers.

Ms Bysouth said: “The smart meter market continues to expand rapidly, driven by technological upgrades and evolving energy infrastructure. With the phase-out of 2G and 3G networks, legacy meters must be replaced with 4G/5G-compatible models, and the natural degradation of lithium thionyl chloride batteries means replacements are inevitable.