Tag Archive for Bounce Back Loans

MPs back call for ‘targeted’ extension of furlough scheme

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
MPs have urged Rishi Sunak to extend the taxpayer-funded furlough scheme businesses with a chance of surviving the coronavirus crisis.
The Chancellor should “show flexibility” and target companies that are still viable when the existing furlough scheme ends in October, members of the Treasury select committee said.
The committee said the Chancellor should “carefully consider” whether a targeted extension was needed for the furlough scheme, which has protected 9.6m jobs to date at a cost of £35bn. The scheme will be wound up at the end of October. Some 11 per cent of the British workforce were on partial or full furlough in mid-August, according to a survey published on Thursday by the Office for National Statistics.
>See also: Where to find your £1,000 small business lockdown grant
The cross-party select committee said in its report on the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, published today, that a large proportion of businesses in the sectors most affected by social distancing might have a long-term future.
“The key will be assisting those businesses who, with additional support, can come through the crisis as sustainable enterprises, rather than focusing on those that will unfortunately just not be viable in the

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Small businesses should ‘only repay coronavirus debt once back in profit’

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small businesses should only repay state-backed coronavirus debt once they are back in profit, a centre-right thinktank has argued.
The taxman could claw back emergency COVID-19 funding once businesses are back trading at a profit, argues Onward.
This would be through a surcharge on taxable profits and shareholder salaries, paying off your Bounce Back Loan or Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan.
>See also: Where to find your £1,000 small business lockdown grant
The issue is pressing because, according to the ONS, one in five small businesses are already “zombie” companies – meaning the annual cost of servicing their business debt equals their profits.
And nearly one in 20 firms (4.3 per cent) are technically insolvent with liabilities greater than their assets, due to the levels of debt they have already built up since March. These firms employ an estimated 1.8m workers.
Debt levels have leapt during this year’s lockdown as businesses tapped the government’s emergency loan schemes to meet costs, leaving many overburdened with debt. About £53bn has been loaned to small and medium-sized businesses finance industry lobby group The CityUK estimates that £35bn may not be repaid.
>See also: Lloyds rapped for forcing Bounce Back Loans borrowers to open accounts
The

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MPs back call for ‘targeted’ extension of furlough scheme

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
MPs have urged Rishi Sunak to extend the taxpayer-funded furlough scheme businesses with a chance of surviving the coronavirus crisis.
The Chancellor should “show flexibility” and target companies that are still viable when the existing furlough scheme ends in October, members of the Treasury select committee said.
The committee said the Chancellor should “carefully consider” whether a targeted extension was needed for the furlough scheme, which has protected 9.6m jobs to date at a cost of £35bn. The scheme will be wound up at the end of October. Some 11 per cent of the British workforce were on partial or full furlough in mid-August, according to a survey published on Thursday by the Office for National Statistics.
>See also: Where to find your £1,000 small business lockdown grant
The cross-party select committee said in its report on the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, published today, that a large proportion of businesses in the sectors most affected by social distancing might have a long-term future.
“The key will be assisting those businesses who, with additional support, can come through the crisis as sustainable enterprises, rather than focusing on those that will unfortunately just not be viable in the

Read more...

Small businesses should ‘only repay coronavirus debt once back in profit’

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Small businesses should only repay state-backed coronavirus debt once they are back in profit, a centre-right thinktank has argued.
The taxman could claw back emergency COVID-19 funding once businesses are back trading at a profit, argues Onward.
This would be through a surcharge on taxable profits and shareholder salaries, paying off your Bounce Back Loan or Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan.
>See also: Where to find your £1,000 small business lockdown grant
The issue is pressing because, according to the ONS, one in five small businesses are already “zombie” companies – meaning the annual cost of servicing their business debt equals their profits.
And nearly one in 20 firms (4.3 per cent) are technically insolvent with liabilities greater than their assets, due to the levels of debt they have already built up since March. These firms employ an estimated 1.8m workers.
Debt levels have leapt during this year’s lockdown as businesses tapped the government’s emergency loan schemes to meet costs, leaving many overburdened with debt. About £53bn has been loaned to small and medium-sized businesses finance industry lobby group The CityUK estimates that £35bn may not be repaid.
>See also: Lloyds rapped for forcing Bounce Back Loans borrowers to open accounts
The

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Lloyds rapped for forcing Bounce Back Loans borrowers to open accounts

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Lloyds has been named and shamed with for forcing small businesses to open paid-for business current accounts to access Bounce Back Loans.
The competition watchdog said that Lloyds, one of the largest in the small business market, treated small companies unfairly by requiring them to open an account to draw down state-backed Bounce Back Loans.
The Competition and Markets Authority that 30,000 customers who had been running their businesses using personal accounts were told by Lloyds and its Bank of Scotland arm that they must open a business account to access Bounce Back Loans.
>See also: Banks ‘will be pushed’ into closing down SMEs unable to repay Covid debt
The scheme, which has underwritten £35.5bn of credit, provides lenders with a 100-per-cent state guarantee on low-interest loans to qualifying small companies. High street banks, rather than the government, have to provide the working capital.
Back in 2002, Lloyds agreed not to ask personal account customers to open a separate account if they wanted to borrow money from the bank – a practice known as “bundling”.
But when it came to Bounce Back Loans, Lloyds asked existing customers operating their firms out of personal accounts to open fee-charging business accounts

Read more...

Lloyds rapped for forcing Bounce Back Loans borrowers to open accounts

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Lloyds has been named and shamed with for forcing small businesses to open paid-for business current accounts to access Bounce Back Loans.
The competition watchdog said that Lloyds, one of the largest in the small business market, treated small companies unfairly by requiring them to open an account to draw down state-backed Bounce Back Loans.
The Competition and Markets Authority that 30,000 customers who had been running their businesses using personal accounts were told by Lloyds and its Bank of Scotland arm that they must open a business account to access Bounce Back Loans.
>See also: Banks ‘will be pushed’ into closing down SMEs unable to repay Covid debt
The scheme, which has underwritten £35.5bn of credit, provides lenders with a 100-per-cent state guarantee on low-interest loans to qualifying small companies. High street banks, rather than the government, have to provide the working capital.
Back in 2002, Lloyds agreed not to ask personal account customers to open a separate account if they wanted to borrow money from the bank – a practice known as “bundling”.
But when it came to Bounce Back Loans, Lloyds asked existing customers operating their firms out of personal accounts to open fee-charging business accounts

Read more...

Banks ‘will be pushed’ into closing down SMEs unable to repay Covid debt

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Banks will be pushed into foreclosing on small businesses unable to repay Covid debt, a City insider has warned.
This is because foreclosing on SMEs unable to repay emergency coronavirus loans will be the only way banks can trigger the government’s guarantee to repay bad Covid debt. Banks would have to prove a loss before they can claim on the guarantee.
The government’s lending schemes have provided nearly £53bn to some 1.2m companies, including £35.5bn worth of bounce back loans — which include a 100 per cent guarantee for small business loans – and £13.7bn through the coronavirus business interruption loan scheme (CBILS).
The Office for Budget Responsibility has warned that in a worst-case scenario, £35bn of the Covid debt will never be repaid. The banks themselves believe that up to half of bounce back loans alone will never be repaid.
A Business Banking Resolution Service survey in May discovered that nearly half of small businesses that have taken out government emergency coronavirus loans do not intend to repay them.
The Treasury has turned a deaf ear to a City of London push for it to set up a bad COVID-19 debt bank, an idea proposed by Lord

Read more...

Banks ‘will be pushed’ into closing down SMEs unable to repay Covid debt

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
Banks will be pushed into foreclosing on small businesses unable to repay Covid debt, a City insider has warned.
This is because foreclosing on SMEs unable to repay emergency coronavirus loans will be the only way banks can trigger the government’s guarantee to repay bad Covid debt. Banks would have to prove a loss before they can claim on the guarantee.
The government’s lending schemes have provided nearly £53bn to some 1.2m companies, including £35.5bn worth of bounce back loans — which include a 100 per cent guarantee for small business loans – and £13.7bn through the coronavirus business interruption loan scheme (CBILS).
The Office for Budget Responsibility has warned that in a worst-case scenario, £35bn of the Covid debt will never be repaid. The banks themselves believe that up to half of bounce back loans alone will never be repaid.
A Business Banking Resolution Service survey in May discovered that nearly half of small businesses that have taken out government emergency coronavirus loans do not intend to repay them.
The Treasury has turned a deaf ear to a City of London push for it to set up a bad COVID-19 debt bank, an idea proposed by Lord

Read more...

Treasury pushes to double bounce back loan repayment period to 10 years

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
The Treasury is pushing for the bounce back loan repayment period to be doubled from five years to 10 years.
Both Government and banks that have jointly lent £33bn through the bounce back scheme are afraid of the looming wave of nonrepayment.
More than a million small companies have borrowed under the bounce back scheme, which offers loans of up to £50,000 and are covered by a 100-per-cent state guarantee.
The loans were launched in May after an outcry about the criteria attached to the coronavirus business interruption loans, which made it difficult for small businesses to qualify.
However, the Office for Budget Responsibility estimates that £53bn will eventually be handed to small firms in bounce back loans, with 40 per cent likely to default. This equates to costing the taxpayer £16bn in bad loans.
>See also: Half of small businesses will never repay Bounce Back Loans, warn banks
Bounce back loan repayment
Nearly half of small businesses that have taken out government emergency coronavirus loans do not intend to repay them. Forty-three per cent of businesses that have taken out either bounce back loans or coronavirus business interruption loans said they do not believe the Government will chase the

Read more...

Treasury pushes to double bounce back loan repayment period to 10 years

Originally written by Timothy Adler on Small Business
The Treasury is pushing for the bounce back loan repayment period to be doubled from five years to 10 years.
Both Government and banks that have jointly lent £33bn through the bounce back scheme are afraid of the looming wave of nonrepayment.
More than a million small companies have borrowed under the bounce back scheme, which offers loans of up to £50,000 and are covered by a 100-per-cent state guarantee.
The loans were launched in May after an outcry about the criteria attached to the coronavirus business interruption loans, which made it difficult for small businesses to qualify.
However, the Office for Budget Responsibility estimates that £53bn will eventually be handed to small firms in bounce back loans, with 40 per cent likely to default. This equates to costing the taxpayer £16bn in bad loans.
>See also: Half of small businesses will never repay Bounce Back Loans, warn banks
Bounce back loan repayment
Nearly half of small businesses that have taken out government emergency coronavirus loans do not intend to repay them. Forty-three per cent of businesses that have taken out either bounce back loans or coronavirus business interruption loans said they do not believe the Government will chase the

Read more...