- securing credit to grow is often a barrier for
small and medium sized businesses
- the Bank Referral Scheme has helped over 880
businesses to access the investment they need to grow
in the last 12 months
- funding through the scheme has increased by over a
third in the last year to £23 million
Since its creation in 2016, the Bank Referral Scheme
(BRS) has helped hundreds of small and medium-sized
businesses to access finance after they were turned
down by their bank. New figures out today show that
over the past 12 months, 889 businesses have raised
more than £23 million through the Scheme, which matches
them with alternative sources of finance such as
revolving credit and asset finance. This is a
significant increase on the previous year and the
initiative, introduced four years ago, has now raised
£56 million for businesses all over the UK.
The Economic Secretary to the Treasury, , said:
It’s great to see businesses across the UK getting
the investment they need to protect jobs and grow. By
matching small businesses with alternative finance
providers, this important scheme has delivered £23m
in funding since July 2019.
The scheme was launched in November 2016 in response to
evidence which suggested that after being turned down
for a loan by their bank, small and medium-sized
businesses rarely sought other options for financing.
It requires nine of Britain’s biggest banks to pass on
the details of businesses they have turned down for
loans to online credit brokers. These platforms are, in
turn, required to share their details, in anonymous
form, with alternative finance providers, helping to
facilitate a conversation between the business and any
provider who expresses an interest in supplying finance
to them.
- The British Business Bank administer the scheme on
behalf of HM Treasury. This involves collating the data
from platforms, as well as carrying out due diligence
for platforms that apply to be designated.
- Businesses which have their loan application turned
down by their bank are now automatically offered the
opportunity to be referred to three government
designated finance platforms: Alternative Business
Funding, Funding Options and Funding Xchange. Each
platform provides access to a range of lenders and
products, including business loans, revolving credit,
asset finance and invoice finance.
- Other finance providers with different business
models are often more willing to lend to these SMEs.
The Bank Referral Scheme helps to address this by
giving businesses that are viable, but do not fit the
risk appetite of the traditional banks, access to the
finance they need to grow and thrive.