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British Business Investments launches new £100m programme to support regional angel investment

British Business Investments, a commercial subsidiary of the British Business Bank, today launches a new £100m Regional Angels Programme designed to help reduce regional imbalances in access to early stage equity finance for smaller businesses across the UK. Such finance can play an important role in funding businesses with growth ambitions.

This new commercial programme aims to address this issue by increasing the availability, supply and awareness of angel and other early-stage equity investments across the country, particularly in areas where this type of finance is less readily available.

British Business Bank research published earlier this year in partnership with the UK Business Angels Association found that 57% of business angels are based in London and the South East, with 35% in London and 22% in the South East. Furthermore, nearly a third of business angels’ investments are made in London (31%), followed by the South East (12%).

In England, the South West has the largest number of business angels outside of London and the South East (6%), followed by the North West (5%) and the East of England (5%). In the devolved nations, 8% of UK business angels are based in Scotland, 4% in Wales and just 1% in Northern Ireland.

The new Regional Angels Programme will work by committing funds for investment alongside business angels and other early stage equity investors, acting as a catalyst to bring longer-term capital to smaller businesses with growth ambitions.

Catherine Lewis La Torre, CEO, British Business Investments, said:  “British Business Bank research shows that the UK’s high-growth smaller businesses suffer from regional imbalances in the supply of early stage finance. The new Regional Angels Programme will deploy £100m of new funding to help redress the balance.

“This programme will ensure that more ambitious smaller businesses can access the early stage equity finance they need to grow and succeed, wherever they are in the UK.”

Jenny Tooth, CEO of the UK Business Angels Association, said: “As the trade body for angel and early stage investing, we are delighted to   be working with British Business Investments to support the launch of this new £100m funding initiative, introduced following the Patient Capital Review. This new commercially-focused funding stream will bring a real boost to the finance ecosystem in the regions where angel capacity is currently uneven.

“This additional investment capital offers the opportunity to stimulate vital new sources of angel capital to back entrepreneurs with growth potential, many of whom currently have to seek the angel investment they need in London and the Southeast.”

The Regional Angel Programme is one of a series of measures put in place following last year’s Patient Capital Review. These measures, aimed at increasing the volume, diversity and accessibility of longer term finance so that smaller businesses can access the finance they need to achieve their growth ambitions, are expected to generate up to £13bn of new funding.

The programme was originally announced as part of the government’s modern Industrial Strategy in November 2017. Like all British Business Investments programmes, the new programme expects to generate a market rate of return on its investments.

The Request for Proposals (RfP) for the programme has today been published on the British Business Investments website at https://www.bbinv.co.uk/regional-angels-programme/

ENDS

British Business Investments

James Pignon, MHP Communications, +44 20 3128 8755, bbb@mhpc.com

Scott Shearer, British Business Investments, Scott.Shearer@british-business-bank.co.uk

 About British Business Investments

British Business Investments is the trading name of British Business Investments Ltd, a wholly-owned commercial subsidiary of British Business Bank plc, the UK government’s economic development bank. It forms part of the British Business Bank’s commercial arm.

British Business Investments aims to earn a commercial return by investing – through finance providers – in smaller businesses and small mid-caps, pursuing investments on a fully commercial basis without receiving any economic advantage from the government. Find out more at bbinv.co.uk.

British Business Bank plc and its subsidiary entities are not banking institutions and do not operate as such. Neither British Business Bank nor its principal operating subsidiaries are authorised or regulated by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) or the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). A complete legal structure chart for British Business Bank plc and its subsidiaries can be found on the British Business Bank plc website.