Fifth of Small UK Firms ‘Will Run Out of Cash’
Nearly a fifth of all small and medium-sized businesses in the UK are unlikely to get the cash they need to survive the next four weeks, in spite of unprecedented government support.
That’s according to research published today, which suggests that between 800,000 and a million businesses nationwide may soon have to close.
Many firms have told the BBC that banks have refused them emergency loans. Others can’t get through on the phone or were told the money will take weeks.
The banks say they are following the rules set out by the government.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak said two weeks ago that businesses would be able to walk into bank branches and discuss Coronavirus Business Interruption loans of up to £5m to help them survive the shutdown. The promise from the chancellor was that “any good business in financial difficulty who needs access to cash to pay their rent, the salaries of their employees, pay suppliers, or purchase stock, will be able to access a government-backed loan, on attractive terms”.
However, thousands of struggling firms can’t get through to their banks by phone or, when they do, are being told by the banks they’re not eligible.
And Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has told BBC Radio 5 Live that ‘banks have got to step up’ to help small and medium-sized businesses survive during the coronavirus pandemic.
Steve Lord runs Belgrave & Powell, a Nottingham-based engineering group employing 120 people and supplying services to customers such as BAE’s Samlesbury site, where the F-35 and Typhoon fighter jets are made.
Since Salmesbury halted production, his business, like millions of others is facing the prospect of cash drying up, threatening its ability to pay wages and stay afloat.
“I was heartened and astonished to see the unprecedented help that was announced by the government two weeks ago,” he said. “But we put one of our most senior people on it and as each day passed it was disappointment after disappointment.”
He said some of the approved lenders were demanding interest rates of up to 30%, which Mr Lord believes is “taking advantage of the situation”. Meanwhile, he said, High Street banks were charging around 7%, however he was told it could be as long as a month before his firm got the money.
Mr Lord thinks too much control has been handed to the banks and approved lenders: “The government needs to make it so everyone’s offering the same terms.”
“It seems to be that if you are lucky you are banking with the right party, if you’re not lucky you’ll end up having to close your business.”
Another business owner, Peter Jackson – who runs jewellery shops employing 40 people across the north-west of England – said his bank decided he was ineligible because the firm made a small loss in 2019. But Mr Jackson said his business was viable before the shutdown and expected to make a profit this year. It also owns valuable stock. “I thought the whole point of the loans was to help business like mine stay afloat,” he said. “But they’re not going to help.”
The figures identifying how many businesses would not be able to access cash come from a network of accountants serving more than 12,000 small and medium-sized businesses across the country.
After analysing the government help on offer, those accountants say that 18% of their clients were unlikely to get access to the cash they will need to survive a four-week lockdown.