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PRIVACY
Professional Services

Near £3bn high street bank funding gap to Welsh SMEs identified by report

Fintech Allica Bank said if deployed it would have had a huge economic impact

Tom Hine Allica Bank’s relationship manager for Wales.

A contraction of bank lending to SMEs has resulted in an estimated funding gap of nearly £3bn in Wales over the last thirty years, according to new research from business bank Allica Bank.

The analysis of lending to the SME sector from the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s six biggest high street banks identifies a gap for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ as a whole of £65bn - contributing to the lowest business investment rate in the G7.

For Wales’ 104,895 SME businesses the identified £2.92bn gap could otherwise have been directed toward investment, growth and productivity. The research estimates a negative impact of 3.2% on Welsh GDP.

The research also shows that the number of SMEs applying for external finance has fallen markedly from 65% in the late 1980s to just 25% between 2022-24. Likewise, SME loan rejections have risen from between 5% to 10% three decades ago to 40%.

Allica Bank is targeting lending £1bn to established SMEs this year alone.

The business bank is tripling the number of relationship managers it has in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ this year who can help local businesses find finance.

Allica is also aiming to turn around loan applications within just five days.

Tom Hine, Allica Bank’s relationship manager for Wales, said:“Wales is home to some fantastic businesses and a business community that wants to invest, grow and innovate. All too often, however, business owners struggle to find the finance they need to do so.