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PRIVACY
Professional Services

British Business Bank on the performance of its £130m Investment Fund for Wales

The bank said £10m was deployed in the fund's first year and will now be accelerated with the £40m reserve also being utilised

The launch of the £130m Investment Fund for Wales last November.

The British Business Bank’s £130m Investment Fund for Wales (IFW) deployed £10m of capital to support the growth of indigenous firms in its maiden year as it looks to accelerate deal flow.

The economic development bank of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government launched the fund last November, alongside similar funds to back the scaling-up plans of businesses in Northern Ireland and Scotland. The bank also operates a number of established regional specific funds in England, including its Midlands Engine and Northern Powerhouse funds.

The IFW consists of £50m assigned for equity investments up to £5m per deal, which is funded managed by Foresight, a small loans fund from £25,000 to £100,000, managed by BCRS Business Loans, and a larger debt fund up to £2m, managed FW Capital - a subsidiary of the Development Bank of Wales.

Some £40m of the £130m was deliberately held back in reserve. However, British Business Bank director, with responsibility for funds in the devolved nations and regions, Mark Sterritt, said the intention is to start a phased release of the balance towards the end of the IFW’s just commenced second year. The fund has a five year deployment time frame and a further five year realisation period. Management fees are included in the £130m allocation.

On the performance of the IFW to date, Mr Sterritt said: “We are really pleased at the impact so far and are delighted that we have already reached the £10m investment milestone with all three elements on or ahead of target. When the fund was launched it was new to the marketplace so you would expect a little bit of a lead in time.

"Also BCRS (Midlands-based) didn’t have a footprint in Wales previously and similarly Foresight, although they had done deals in Wales before, didn’t have an office in Wales, which they now have in Cardiff, as well as a presence at M-Sparc in Anglesey. We are very comfortable and happy with the selections we have made in Wales across the full programme. And in years two and three we would expect an acceleration in deployment.”

On the yet to be deployed capital, Mr Sterritt said: “The reason why we held back £40m in what we call an investor reserve, which we have done across all our funds, is that one, it gives a bit of incentive for managers to perform very strongly. It also gives flexibility, so if market conditions change substantially we have a significant amount of reserve where we could potentially deploy a whole new fund if needed in the marketplace.

"However, that really hasn’t come around, so at this stage the plan is to deploy that capital amongst the three. What the split will be, it is difficult to say, but all three managers will be making their pitches to us. Conversations are beginning to happen now, as we have to be realistic and give enough time for it to be deployed over the remaining four years. So, now in the second year of the fund, I think we will be in a position to make an allocation towards the end of it and then the three years beyond that to deploy the remaining capital.”