Allica Bank is today exposing a hidden £7.5 billion a year savings penalty on the country’s hard-pressed SMEs – and is calling on the wider banking industry to give SMEs a better deal.
While the cost-of-living crisis has led to significant pressure on banks to pass interest rate rises on to personal savings customers, Allica’s research has revealed a hidden savings penalty of more than £7.5 billion a year for SME bank customers - who are facing an equally tough cost-of-business crisis.
The hidden savings penalty includes SMEs being denied the same higher savings rates that larger companies are routinely offered by the big banks.
There are approximately £275 billion of SME deposits in the UK. By analysing official Bank of England interest rates alongside interest rate data from individual banks, Allica’s new research has found that:
Overall, this means that SMEs are collectively being denied more than £7.5 billion in savings interest annually:
The variation in interest rates offered to companies of different sizes is driven by big banks exploiting the lack of transparency in the market.
These banks also take advantage of the fact that small business owners rarely have time to shop around to get a good deal, unlike the treasury departments of corporate customers.
Allica has written to the Chair of the Treasury Select Committee, Harriet Baldwin MP, and other Committee members, calling for the Committee to look in closer detail at the UK’s business savings market to ensure:
Allica is calling for there to be a much greater focus on savings rates for small businesses, in the same way there has been from politicians and regulators on savings rates for consumers.
“Allica’s mission is to transform banking for established SMEs. Sadly, despite these businesses being the engine room of the economy, contributing a third of GDP, they have been neglected for too long and business banking is increasingly impersonal, inconvenient and poor value.
“Our research shows this is particularly true for SME savings, where SMEs are getting a raw deal with the big banks – it’s a scandal they’re missing out on more than £7.5bn of interest on their hard-earned cash every year.
“We’re determined to drive change in the market – Britain’s established businesses deserve better."