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Allica Bank Secures £26m Investment and Launches £100m Fundraise

Allica Bank Secures £26m Investment and Launches £100m Fundraise

Allica Bank is launching a £100m funding round to help it meet the current high levels of demand for finance it is experiencing from British businesses, and continue broadening services and product lines. The bank, which received full UK banking authorisation in late 2019, has had over £1bn of enquiries from businesses in the aftermath of the Covid-19 pandemic. The new funding round will allow Allica to accelerate its lending to British businesses and also position it for any M&A opportunities that materialise in the non-bank lending market, which has been severely disrupted by Covid-19.

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The announcement comes as Allica successfully completes a follow-on investment of £26m led by existing majority shareholder, Warwick Capital Partners.

Allica Bank’s CEO, Richard Davies, joined the organisation from Revolut in August 2020 with ambitions to accelerate Allica Bank’s growth trajectory and fill the fast-emerging SME funding gap. As the UK has come out of lockdown, substantial disruption has been seen in the supply of finance to established small and medium sized businesses outside of the government backed initiatives, such as the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CBILs). A recent survey of commercial finance brokers, conducted by Allica Bank, revealed that 63% had seen a significant reduction to the supply of business lending following on from the COVID pandemic. Additionally, 98% of commercial finance brokers are concerned about business lenders’ credit appetite and liquidity over the next two years.

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Allica Bank, which is focused on supporting small and medium sized businesses across the UK, has offices in Milton Keynes and London, alongside its regional Business Relationship Managers. Of the lending it has provided to date, the vast majority has been to businesses outside the capital (95% of loans by value, and 97% by volume). In recent years there has been a widening funding gap in the UK, with SMEs outside the capital finding it harder to secure funding and support from bank and non-bank lenders alike.

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