The UK’s 5.5 million small and medium-sized enterprises are the backbone of the economy, accounting for 61% of private sector employment and over half of all turnover. Yet access to growth capital has never been more challenging.
The Banking Retreat
Since the financial crisis, UK banks have systematically reduced their SME lending exposure. Regulatory capital requirements (Basel III/IV), increased compliance costs, and a strategic shift toward larger corporate clients have created a structural funding gap that shows no sign of closing.
The Alternative Finance Response
Into this gap have stepped alternative finance providers — from peer-to-peer lending platforms to private equity firms like The Matt Haycox Group. These providers offer what banks cannot: speed, flexibility, and a willingness to understand businesses on their own terms rather than through algorithmic credit scoring.
Why This Matters for Investors
The funding gap represents a structural opportunity for private capital. Returns in SME lending and equity investment remain attractive precisely because the competition from traditional lenders has diminished. For investors willing to accept illiquidity in exchange for yield, the UK SME market offers some of the most compelling risk-adjusted returns in private markets.


