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Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in the United Kingdom are undergoing a period of resurgence after the impact of Brexit and the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the Barclays SME Barometer, in Q2 2022, UK SMEs reported an 11.4% increase in revenues compared to the same period in 2021. At the same time, the segment has been undergoing a systemic transformation spurred by macroeconomic catalysts and a digital overhaul of industries on a global scale. The emergence of digital-first business models (like D2C, vertical SaaS, and niche marketplaces) and SME categories (like influencers, gig workers, freelancers, and remote businesses) has extended the long tail of small businesses striving for growth.
Traditional business financing is lagging this transformation by years. Prevalent underwriting methodologies have struggled to assimilate new business and revenue models. Importantly, they are not leveraging the potential for adaptive and ongoing risk assessment made possible by digital data flows. This is an important step towards lowering the barrier for thin-filed SMEs, or those with seasonal or cyclical variations in revenues.
This article looks into the imperatives for incumbent banks and financial institutions in the UK to lead the innovation in SME business financing.
Evolving SME Financing Landscape in the UK
Traditionally SME financing in the UK has been led by high street banks. Following the distress of the 2008 crisis, lending to SMEs, typically seen as a high-risk, high-cost effort, declined drastically.
Around the same time, a slow but steady undercurrent of fintech disruption started making its presence felt. Policy makers took note of SMEs’ declining access to traditional sources of funding, as well as the potential of fintech in addressing these challenges, and issued an important series of measures. The measures, including the Financial Services Act 2012 and the 2015 Small and Medium Sized Business (Finance Platforms) Regulations, sanctified challenger banks and alternative lending platforms, and enabled an alternative banking and financing market to be set up for SMEs in the UK.
As a result of these tailwinds, the contribution to SME financing of alternative lenders, challenger banks, and asset finance companies grew by 56% between 2014 and 2019. In comparison, the contribution of big banks fell by 14% during the same period. As per Innovate Finance, the market share of alternative lenders stood at about 9% pre-COVID, which grew to almost 20% during the pandemic spurred by government-backed financing schemes like CBILS (Exhibit 1). Following the initial high-demand quarters of the pandemic, gross lending to SMEs per quarter has stabilised around the GBP 4.9 billion mark from the second half of 2021.
Innovation Opportunities in SME Financing
Alternative lenders have targeted underserved niche businesses to lead the ‘unbundling’ of SME financing across the value chain and industry verticals (Exhibit 2). The ancillary providers play an important role in enabling the open data network that alternative lenders use. The enabling trends for SMEs act as tailwinds for solution providers and SME adoption.
Unbundling financing options across supply, operations, and sales makes sense considering the differences in the ticket size, duration and risk validating data points for each. When viewed from this lens, each link in the SME value chain offers opportunities to innovate targeted lending products. Importantly, this forms an organic approach to identifying opportunities to embed financing products at point of need.
1. Supply Chain Financing
Fintechs like Muse, Finverity, Sonovate, Hokodo and Tranch are addressing the vendor or supplier payments space with solutions like Purchase order financing, procurement financing, invoice discounting, and B2B buy now, pay later (BNPL). While most of these products exist in the market, fintechs are making them a lot more accessible to SMEs and significantly reducing the rejection rates.
2. Sales Based Financing
On the sales and distribution front, multiple financing options are available for SMEs catering to different needs. Providers like Uncapped, Vitt, Liberis, and Outfund use proprietary algorithms and multiple real-time data points to enable revenue-based financing, while big techs like Amazon and PayPal offer unsecured financing for e-commerce sellers.
3. Operations Financing
When it comes to sustaining business operations across functions such as employee payroll, employee spend management, working capital, and business capital, the needs of SMEs can vary depending on the nature of their business. In such instances, specialist solution providers offer small businesses targeted products. Companies like Soldo, Ben, and Expend provide physical and virtual cards for spend management and offer various value-add services to businesses. Hastee and Karma have built solutions to improve employees’ financial health by providing on-demand access to earned income and salary advance loans. Iwoca, Funding Xchange, and Outfund also offer various forms of unsecured business loans to SMEs looking for alternatives to collateral-backed loans.
Rebooting the Credit Risk Engine
Access to high-fidelity alternative data from public databases and enterprise digital platforms, and financial automation are transforming the speed and efficiency with which credit risk can be assessed. Banks can now:
Perform fully digital eligibility checks for requested credit products, reducing cost and turnaround time significantly for both, banks and businesses
Run automated models to identify business-specific credit limits and repayment tenures across different product types; this significantly enhances a bank’s potential to recommend and cross-sell across a diverse portfolio of lending products
Simulate price elasticity of demand for risk-based pricing and negotiation
Leverage flow-based underwriting models for creditworthiness, overriding some of of strongest barriers to moving beyond collateral-backed financing
Assess behavioural and commercial patterns for risk and fraud indicators
Analyse cash-flow situations for affinity and urgency indicators
Exhibit 3 illustrates some of these digital data sources and how they can help banks innovate credit products to contextually serve SMEs across business and revenue models.
The digital technology layer that helps banks to plug into SME business data is an essential building block for lending innovation. Adopting this opens up near-endless possibilities for banks to develop targeted, segment-specific lending products. Specifically, a business-data-led and unbundled approach to alternative lending will help banks innovate around some of the most entrenched challenges in SME lending:
Underwriting of unsecured loans: The effort-to-value ratio for SME loan sizes has been a major friction point for banks as well as businesses. SMEs find it daunting or impossible to put up high value collateral even for smaller loan sizes, whereas banks find it inefficient to execute such extensive risk assessments for small loans. Adopting automated risk assessment models based on accurate, current business data can help banks scale their unsecured lending portfolios in a risk-free manner.
Collateralisation of cash flows: While historical cash flows have been used as proof of business credibility, lenders have often overlooked the value of present and future cash flows as a means to granularly and accurately assess the business stability and future growth potential of SMEs. Doing this can enable lenders to introduce more innovative financing offerings such as revenue-based financing and merchant cash advance and expand the target addressable market significantly.
Flexible repayments: SME businesses are particularly vulnerable to fluctuations in revenue, whether based on seasonal, cyclical or macroeconomic factors, leading to high rejection rates. Financial automation capabilities can help banks innovate repayment models to accommodate this vulnerability, while ensuring adaptive and ongoing risk monitoring to flag any potential long term impact.
A Call for Innovation in SME Lending
The evolution in SME business models has increased the barriers to access financing from traditional lenders. A growing number of SMEs are asset-light and fast-growth enterprises that are not able to meet traditional thresholds of collateral or profitability. SMEs are also experimenting with newer revenue models, while existing revenue models are seeing greater fluctuations based on macro conditions.
Currently, fintechs are leading the charge by innovating and proving the use cases for unbundled, alternative lending solutions. While the long-term advantage in this highly regulated product space belongs to traditional lenders, they need to bridge the gap in leveraging SMEs’ digital data ecosystem and adapt their underwriting models to regain the lead.
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VP, Strategy & Growth
Open Financial Technologies
Member since
31 Jul 2009
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Bangalore
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