New business bank to boost lending

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Business Secretary Vince Cable announces first steps in a government funded bank to help small and medium sized businesses.

The new bank will aim to attract private sector funding so that when fully operational, it could support up to £10 billion of new and additional business lending.

The Government will build a single institution that will address long-standing, structural gaps in the supply of finance, identified in Tim Breedon’s report on non-bank finance.

It will bring together in one place Government finance support for small and mid-sized businesses. It will also control the Government’s interests in a new wholesale funding mechanism which will be developed to unlock institutional investment to benefit small businesses.

Vince Cable said: 

“For decades British industry has lacked the sort of diverse, long-term finance that is quite normal elsewhere. We need a British business bank with a clean balance sheet and a mandate to expand lending rapidly and we are now going to get it.

“Alongside the private sector, the bank will get the market lending to manufacturers, exporters and growth companies that so desperately need support. It will be a lasting monument to our determination to reshape finance so it can finally serve industry the way it should. Its success will not be the scale of its own direct interventions but how far it shakes up the market in business finance and helps to ease constraints for high-growth firms.

“Having a functioning, diverse supply of finance is an integral part of the Government’s industrial strategy. It is all about making the right decisions now to secure our long-term industrial success.”

The bank will operate at arms-length from Government. It will be professionally run and commercially focused. It will facilitate the provision of loans, including long-term capital, to UK firms through banks and other financial institutions. By harnessing the power of capital markets, it has the potential to transform business finance in the UK.

The new institution will operate through the wholesale markets, it will not have any retail presence and will not displace or subsidise banks. Its role is to encourage the development of private sector solutions and enable the market to work properly, not compete with it.

More detail on the design of the bank and the types of interventions it will support will be provided in the autumn.

Philip George, Interim CEO of Shawbrook Bank said,

“Today’s announcement is a very positive step by the government in its efforts to support small businesses and increase growth. With every week that goes by, the number of credit-worthy businesses struggling to borrow from high street banks increases. Many thousands of SMEs in this country are being stifled by the lack of credit, and we hope the new business bank will help increase lending so these businesses can once again expand and grow.

“Banks are being criticised  for not lending to small businesses, but let’s not forget there are challenger banks like Shawbrook who are already working very hard to plug the gap left by the high street banks. Shawbrook launched in October 2011 with a commitment to making it easier and more straightforward for credit-worthy SMEs to borrow, and by the end of this year we hope to have £1 billion of assets on our balance sheet. We’re very proud of our growth since launch, and we believe it demonstrates the real demand among SMEs for a bank that is willing to lend.  We look forward to hearing more details of the government’s business bank in the chancellor’s autumn statement, and hope to play our part the scheme. In the meantime, we will continue to fulfil the promise we made when we launched last year and provide no-nonsense lending to hard-working businesses and individuals around the country.”