CreditPal: SMEs raise £22.6 billion from ‘alternative’ sources of finance in last 12 months

New research from CreditPal reveals in the last 24 months SMEs have sourced £45 billion from alternative sources of finance. SMEs owners and managers have been forced to sell private assets, or rely on friends and family for emergency finance, in place of funding from traditional financial institutions through bank loans and overdraft facilities. On average each SME utilising alternative forms of finance has raised capital totalling £66,624 in the last two years, the equivalent of £2,776 a month.

More SMEs turned to alternative sources of finance in the last two years (41%) to raise capital than applied for bank or building society loans and overdrafts (35%). This trend may be explained by SMEs being overly fearful of being declined for credit, which is discouraging them from making applications. CreditPal is advising SMEs seeking to make applications for bank or building society finance that they need to convince the lender they are an acceptable financial risk. Businesses can do this by taking proactive steps, such as producing accurate management accounts on a monthly basis to highlight the underlying health of the enterprise.

Business owners and managers have sacrificed family expenditure to help keep their companies afloat in the last two years. Family holidays have been sacrificed by 15% of those seeking alternative forms of finance. One-in-ten (11%) SME business owners and managers have been forced to go cap in hand to friends and family for funds to ensure they have sufficient cash flow to meet their commitments. Pension funds have been raided (3%) and children (1%) have been pulled out of private education as the recession has hit revenues.

Chris Poll, CEO of CreditPal, commented: “Thousands of SMEs have been forced to rely on credit to survive in the last two years as a result of disruptions to business cash flow. We believe we have identified an SME fear factor at play, with companies more likely to seek finance from non-traditional sources because they are scared of even applying for finance from banks and building societies. We desperately need to see a return to traditional lending if the economy is to return to an even keel. In the long term the sale of private assets is not sustainable and relying on friends and family for funding can prove a financial and emotional risk if there are problems with repayments.”

SMEs have even turned to private lenders (4%), including loan sharks that charge punitive rates of interest, to raise funds. One in twenty (4%) SME business owners have been forced to dilute or sacrifice equity stakes in their business to source additional finance. Some business owners have been forced to sell privately held assets (8%) such as cars or property to fund their businesses.

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