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Opinionopinion

While the use of angel investors is growing in Wales it is still an underutilised route to funding

Investment in Welsh businesses by angel investors is growing, but it is still an underutilised funding route. Is this because Wales doesn’t believe in angels?

Transcend Packaging has diversified to produce millions of items of personal protective equipment.

Access to finance for businesses across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is inconsistent, with uneven national, regional and local distribution. For seemingly near-identical businesses, where they are based can have a significant impact on the type of finance and the finance providers they have access to.

Business angels are an important source of equity investment in start-up and early-stage businesses seeking to grow, providing ‘smart capital’. Alongside equity finance, angel investors also bring business experience, strategic advice and networking opportunities.

With this in mind we know that angels are vital for Welsh national, regional and local financial ecosystems to flourish. We also know that developing angel finance clusters and networks outside of London and the South East - regions well stocked with angel investors - is not easy and requires consistent work. This is something that for example the Development Bank of Wales’ Angels Invest Programme, the biggest angel network in Wales, helps to address by connecting experienced investors with Welsh businesses seeking private investment.

Government funds typically make important contributions to local equity markets. For example, the British Business Bank’s recent Small Business Equity Tracker states that 58% of all announced equity deals in Wales in 2020 involved a government fund.

The British Business Bank has its own £100m Regional Angels Programme, which is delivered through its commercial subsidiary, British Business Investments. The programme was established to help reduce regional imbalances in access to early stage equity finance for smaller businesses across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Since launching in October 2018, the Regional Angels Programme has made eight portfolio investments, totalling £100m of commitments. It has deployed over £25m into more than 250 businesses, including £1.4m through 12 deals across Wales, from Newport to Anglesey.

Underlying investments include Hengoed-based Transcend Packaging, which manufactures sustainable food and beverage packaging aimed at reducing use of single-use plastic. British Business Investments’ delivery partner SFC Capital participated in a £7.5m fundraise originally planned prior to Covid-19 and Transcend Packaging planned to use this funding to acquire new state-of-the-art equipment to support its growth.

Beyond our own Regional Angels Programme, it has been encouraging to see some high profile deals in priority sectors like green energy, including the investment in Swansea based Marine Power Systems led by a syndicate of Welsh angels, with match funding from the Development Bank of Wales. Further contributions from private investors brought the total of their latest equity fundraise to £1.7m.