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Manufacturers and female founders flock to Northern Powerhouse fund as it prepares for its anniversary

Robot submarine firm among those backed by Northern Powerhouse Investment Fund II

Sue Barnard of the British Business Bank, left, with Shaun Sutton of Central Group, centre, and Laura Rees from FW Capital, right (Image: Jon Super/ UNP)

North West firms are defying the economic gloom to bid for investment from a £660m Northern fund a year into its life, the British Business Bank says.

And the bank’s senior investment manager Sue Barnard told BusinessLive that manufacturers and female founders are seeing particular success from the Northern Powerhouse Investment Fund II (NPIF II). The fund was launched last year to support small and medium businesses across the North with loans from £25,000 to £2m and equity investment up to £5m.

It followed on from an earlier Northern Powerhouse fund, which ran from 2017 and delivered more than £1.1bn to Northern businesses, supporting 8,500 jobs. The new fund is designed to be more flexible to support more businesses in more sectors, including retail and tourism.

It aims to back businesses that might otherwise struggle to get support – when it launched, one bank boss vowed: “The computer might say no but our fund managers may still say yes.” Sue told BusinessLive that companies are proving resilient and ambitious despite the tough economic backdrop.

“I think we're very surprised actually at the quality of the investments that are being undertaken at the moment,” she said. “Businesses are very resilient. We saw that with NPIF II, where when things happened, they could diversify quite quickly and they really understand the business that they're working in.

“The entrepreneurs we meet are constantly looking for something else to do outside of their normal work. They're always looking for that next big contract or that next new innovation. They do come across as being extremely ambitious with that drive and you do get the feel – because I do have the opportunity to meet many of the portfolio – that they just get on with it. It's something this week, something next week…

“They've got the support of our fund managers so it's not just about the investment that goes in on day one. Our fund managers actually work with that business, whether they want to do international trade, find new markets, bring in a non-exec… so the businesses are not left to worry about what to do next.”

In the North West, fund managers, River Capital and GC Business Finance, will provide businesses with smaller loans from £25,000 to £100,000. FW Capital will provide debt finance options from £100,000 to £2m, and Praetura Ventures will manage equity deals up to £5m.