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PRIVACY
Opinion

SMEs still have appetite to raise finance despite the pandemic

The latest SME Finance Monitor gives an insight into the health of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ SMEs

(Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

When I undertook the Access to Finance for SMEs review for the Welsh Government seven years ago, the most invaluable source of data for the investigation was the SME Finance Monitor.

The information gathered by the largest study of its kind in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ not only provided accurate and timely data on how SMEs were accessing funding from a range of different sources but was also a useful predictor of the state of the small firm community.

Given this, the latest report from the monitor on how SMEs have been impacted by Covid 19 is an invaluable indicator of what has been happening to entrepreneurs across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ during the recent pandemic with 4,511 interviews conducted between April and June 2020.

Not surprisingly, it found that 87% of SMEs had reported being negatively affected by Covid 19 with the biggest impact being a reduction in sales of more than 50%.

In fact, six out of ten SMEs were expecting this lower turnover to continue over the next few months with the biggest impact being on smaller SMEs, especially the self-employed. As expected, the sector that had been hit hardest were those businesses in the hotel and restaurant industry.

Whilst reported growth amongst SMEs was stable, the proportion planning to grow had halved from 52% in 2019 to 24% in Q2 2020. Instead, the majority of firms stated that their focus was on improving profit margins within their business and to achieve this, there has been more innovation by all size of businesses.

With the economy shrinking during the second quarter of this year, the use of external finance by SMEs fell to 30%, the lowest ever level recorded by the monitor with most of this decline being in the use of overdrafts and credit cards.

An increasing number of businesses were becoming concerned about their ability to repay borrowings, especially hotels and restaurants, although at the time of the study, government regulations meant that they remained closed during the period of the study.