Assetz Capital applies for £10m BCR Pool E grant

Assetz Capital has applied for a Pool E Banking Competition Remedies (BCR) £10m grant as it continues to scale its small to medium enterprise (SME) lending.

Assetz Capital applies for £10m BCR Pool E grant

Assetz Capital has applied for a Pool E Banking Competition Remedies (BCR) £10m grant as it continues to scale its small to medium enterprise (SME) lending.

 

The £1bn peer-to-peer marketplace lender has submitted an application for Pool E that consists of £100m and is open to eligible bodies providing innovation financial services to UK SMEs.

The £100m was given back to BCR by Metro Bank (£50m) and Nationwide (£50m) for redistribution to new challengers to the banking sector, such as Assetz Capital, after the pair of lenders cancelled their growth plans in the SME funding sector.

In the seven years since its inception, Assetz Capital has lent over £1bn to UK SMEs, supporting more than 1,200 businesses and an estimated 100,000 jobs directly and indirectly.

It funded 3,000 new homes in both 2018 and 2019, equating to 1 in 100 of new home starts in England and around 1 in 10 of all SME-built housing for the two years.

Stuart Law (pictured), CEO at Assetz Capital, said: “We’ve established ourselves to be a leading SME lender, serving the many underserved SMEs seeking loan funding.

"We have achieved that and are now ready to scale even further from the current high levels of activity.

"By December 2022 we’re aiming to have lent a further £1bn to SMEs, supporting around another 25,000 jobs and funding the development of at least 3,500 further new homes.

“We have a market-leading lending capability – combining human and technology-based credit assessment, innovative loan application technology and regional relationship directors to meet customers.

"This BCR grant, combined with a further £10m matched contribution from ourselves, would enable us to build on these strong foundations and grow even faster, allowing us to provide even greater support for underserved UK SMEs.”