BoE to extend Funding for Lending Scheme

The Bank of England and HM Treasury have announced a two-year extension to the Funding for Lending Scheme.

Related topics:  Finance News
Rozi Jones
30th November 2015
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This extension aims to provide participants with additional flexibility to draw unused drawing allowances earned for positive net lending, with funding remaining available to support further improvements in credit conditions for SMEs. The extension will also ensure that the scheme is gradually phased out, with borrowing allowances reducing over time.

The government says the FLS has contributed to a substantial fall in bank funding costs since its launch in 2012. Reflecting these improvements, the scope of the scheme has been narrowed several times since it was launched. Most recently, the Scheme was re-focused towards lending to SMEs.

A variety of sources indicate that credit conditions for SMEs have been improving: SME lending volumes have increased by £2.1 billion in 2015 so far, and net lending to SMEs by FLS participants was positive in the first two quarters of 2015. However, credit conditions for SMEs remain tighter than for large corporations.

The extension will continue the tapering of the scheme, while ensuring a continuation of the temporary support provided so as not to risk hindering the recovery in SME credit conditions. This extension will also complement other initiatives undertaken by the Treasury and the Bank of England that tackle longer term structural constraints on SME lending. These include: the Bank’s work on widening access to credit data to improve the quality of credit scores provided to trade creditors; the joint Bank of England-ECB initiative to improve the functioning of the securitisation markets, including securitisation of SME loans; and the continued expansion of the activities of the British Business Bank to support access to finance for SMEs.

Following today’s announcement, the drawdown window for the FLS extension will remain open until 31 January 2018. Current participants in the FLS extension will remain part of the scheme and will continue to be able to draw against existing unused borrowing allowances beyond 31 January 2016, but will not generate additional allowances from lending beyond the end of 2015. From 1 February 2016, participants will initially retain full access to draw against their borrowing allowance. Allowances will reduce by 25% after six months, and by the same amount every six months thereafter until the end of January 2018 when the scheme will close. This will mean that funding will continue to remain available to support further improvements in SME credit conditions. The tapering of allowances will result in a smooth withdrawal of this support and bring the drawdown window to a natural close after two years.

There will be a separate part of the scheme that allows only new banks to generate and draw against new allowances over the two-year extension. This is to ensure that new banks, which may not otherwise have any borrowing allowances under this extension given the lack of a prior lending history, are not put at a disadvantage relative to other banks that have access to the scheme. New banks that have been authorised or had a significant change in control since 1 April 2013 and with a lending stock smaller than £50m at end-2015 will generate borrowing allowances through their net lending to households and businesses. Lending to SMEs will be incentivised through £5 of allowances generated for every £1 of net lending by these newer banks.

Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England, said:

“Since its launch in 2012, the FLS has provided an important source of funding support to banks, which has flowed through to improved credit conditions across the economy. As conditions have normalised for particular sectors over the life of the FLS, we have consistently reduced the scope of this temporary scheme and focussed support where it is needed most. The announcement today continues that tapering, supporting continued improvement in SME credit conditions as the economic recovery takes hold, while gradually withdrawing that support over the next two years.”

George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer, added:

“The Funding for Lending Scheme, which we launched with the Bank of England in 2012, has been a vital part of supporting the recovery, ensuring lending to households and businesses. It was due to expire in January but I am pleased to say that we are extending the scheme until 2018, supporting more loans. Given the improvement we’ve seen in credit conditions for households and large businesses, as our long-term economic plan moves from rescue to rebuild it is right that we continue to focus the scheme’s firepower on the small businesses that are the lifeblood of the economy. The Funding for Lending Scheme will be gradually wound down as the recovery strengthens, delivering a managed exit from the scheme.”

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