ArchOver drives UK expansion in Hertfordshire & Bedfordshire

New regional hub in Hatfield will support growth of regional entrepreneurial SMEs with P2P loans

London, UK – 7 May 2019 – ArchOver, the P2P business lending platform, is expanding its presence in the UK with a new office in Hatfield. The regional hub will provide successful businesses in Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire with P2P loans to fund growth.

SMEs have received too little support from the Government, especially outside London – and ArchOver is pushing back. Its founders recognised the potential of the UK’s hard-working enterprises when it started trading back in 2014. Opening this regional office will enable ArchOver to position itself to connect local businesses with the funding they find difficult to access now.

ArchOver’s Hatfield office will cater specifically to businesses in the Hertfordshire-Bedfordshire area, facilitating finance that works for them with a deep understanding of their individual needs and local situation. In 2018, Grant Thornton said that Hertfordshire SMEs need to focus more on raising finance – ArchOver’s presence will help them do just that.

This expansion is the latest in a series for ArchOver’s growing network, with headquarters in London and a Midlands presence established in Birmingham in October 2018. The company has facilitated close to £100m in funding for UK businesses – and that figure will continue this momentum as it increases its presence across the UK.

Leading the office will be Dugald J. Carlean, an experienced corporate finance professional – who has lived in Harpenden for over 17 years. Prior to joining ArchOver, he held numerous senior positions across the UK SME investment banking space, providing funding services across various sectors. With over 25 years in finance, Carlean has a firm appreciation of the funding issues and wider challenges SMEs face. He brings a deep knowledge of the challenges and opportunities involved in SME funding in the area.

Commenting on the expansion, Carlean said: “The Government did little to support the SME sector in the Spring Budget Statement. It’s a tough time to be a smaller business, but the spirit of entrepreneurialism is rich in Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire. The region is a major hub for the UK SME economy, with 98,000 small-to-medium firms operating in sectors as diverse as pharma, fintech, construction, life sciences and advanced engineering.

“ArchOver’s new office is at the heart of commercial activity in the Hatfield Business Park and will provide a platform to inject much-needed finance into that already thriving landscape. I’m excited to be part my home region’s growth – and to lead this expansion of ArchOver’s existing successful business model.”

ArchOver CEO Angus Dent concluded: “Too many companies make the mistake of seeing the world through a ‘London-only’ lens. This country is full of fast-growing, sustainable businesses looking for supportive funding to help them grow – something that neither the Government nor the banks seem to understand. Our new office in Hatfield will help local companies get access to the cash they need to grow. While the banks continue to evacuate the SME space, we’re investing in the future of entrepreneurial business in Hertfordshire and Bedfordshire.”  [ENDS]

About ArchOver

 

ArchOver is a peer-to-peer (P2P) business lending platform, connecting businesses requiring finance with investors seeking an alternative asset class for their investment portfolio. ArchOver is approaching £100m of funding to UK businesses, having paid over £5.5m in interest and delivering lender returns of up to 11% p.a..

“We are helpful, focused and flexible. While technology sits at the core of what we do, we are a people business; we believe in building lasting relationships.”

Lending with ArchOver takes place over its secure online platform. Invest on a loan-by-loan basis in multiples of £1,000, or in increments of £250 via its automated Investment Plan. Loan-by-loan investments earn interest between 6% and 11% p.a., and up to 6.4% via their Investment Plan. Interest is paid monthly in arrears from loan draw down.

Borrowing companies are UK-based and seeking a loan of between £250,000 and £10m. They will have been trading for a minimum of two years, have an established management team and proven business model. Loans are for any business purpose, typically raising working capital, replacing invoice discounting or bank overdrafts. Loans are fixed term, for a fixed amount and at a fixed rate of interest.

ArchOver offers five lending services supporting UK businesses. Each service addresses security in different ways to suit the needs of the Borrowers and the appetite of the Lenders. ArchOver’s flagship ‘Secured & Insured’ (S&I) service allows lenders to invest in loans secured against a company’s Accounts Receivable, where those Accounts Receivable are insured. ‘Secured & Assigned’ (S&A) allows Lenders to invest in loans that are secured against a company’s contracted recurring revenue, with ArchOver taking assignment of the contracts. ‘Secured’ (S) loans are leveraged against either a company’s Accounts Receivable or contracted recurring revenue, with the main difference being that the Accounts Receivable are not insured and the recurring revenue is non-assignable. ‘Bespoke’ (B) loans are made on the same basis as S&I or S&A, with the sole exception being that the all-asset charge initially ranks second and will transition to a first charge during the loan term. ‘Research & Development Advance’ (RDA) is unsecured short-term lending against an identified Research & Development claim payable to a company by HMRC. ArchOver also has an IFISA.

ArchOver is a member of the long-established, privately-owned Hampden group.

ArchOver is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority 723755.

Lender capital is at risk and interest payments are not guaranteed if the borrower defaults.

Lending over the ArchOver platform is not covered by the Financial Services Compensation Scheme.

 

Dugald Carlean

Regional Director, Head of Hertfordshire & Bedfordshire Office

ArchOver

T. 01707 932 093

E. dugald.carlean@archover.com

archover.com/herts-beds

 

PR contact

LEWIS T. +44 20 7802 2626

E. archover@teamlewis.com

ArchOver marks the beginning of its UK expansion in Birmingham

ArchOver marks the beginning of its UK expansion in Birmingham

London, UK – 15 October 2018 – ArchOver, the P2P business lending platform connecting businesses requiring finance with individual and institutional investors, is expanding into the West Midlands and opening up new flows of capital for SMEs operating in the region.

As traditional banks divest from hubs outside London and further centralise their operations in the capital, ArchOver’s new Birmingham office will give the company a base to support clients across the Midlands offering a personalised service when it comes to alternative finance. Investors will also have access to the increased volume and quality of loans ArchOver is facilitating.

Leading the Birmingham office will be David Newton, who began his career as a Chartered Accountant at Ernst & Young before undertaking a corporate finance and investment banking career in London, specialising in the provision of finance for SMEs and growth companies. He was the CEO and CFO of an AIM-listed international mineral company with operations in the USA and Mexico before moving back to the West Midlands where he has held roles including as the Finance Director of a Software and SaaS business, and as a Corporate Finance Director for a Birmingham-based advisory firm.

Commenting on the expansion, Newton said: “Birmingham will soon be connected with 5G, will host the Commonwealth Games in 2022, and the city’s council has revealed that 2017 saw an 11% increase in new business openings. It is a hotbed of innovation and among the top cities in the UK for job creation. Enabling local SMEs to access the funding they need to grow through ArchOver will boost an already thriving business landscape. I’m excited to be part of that process, and am delighted to be supported by such a strong ArchOver team in London.”

ArchOver CEO Angus Dent said: “This is the first step on the road to national expansion for ArchOver. We have long supported Midlands SMEs that struggled to secure traditional finance, so opening our first regional office in Birmingham was a natural choice. The region’s many businesses in the manufacturing and supply chain sectors will also enable us to grow our strong portfolio of SMEs in these industries.”

Speaking about Newton’s appointment, Dent says: “David has extensive experience working in banking, regulation and financing both for PLCs and small to mid-cap companies. This means that companies looking to fund their ambitions will find David to be a tremendous asset and source of support, which will supplement their financing through ArchOver.”

Head of Birmingham Office: David Newton
Tel: 0121 752 1614
Email: birmingham@archover.com
Web: https://www.archover.com/birmingham/

– Ends –

Borrower Perspective: What do I need to consider when seeking funding for growth?

In times where there is a real appetite to lend among investors, ArchOver is clear on what they need to see from businesses seeking to grow, in order to benefit from their P2P services. Read Angus Dent’s Ask the Expert feature in the South East London Chamber of Commerce Magazine, The Masthead, page 24.

TURNING TO YOUR PEERS

Frustrated about the lack of finance available for their own businesses, Angus Dent and his colleagues created ArchOver, a peer-to-peer lending platform that helps innovative companies to borrow money at affordable rates.

IT’S a situation in which so many entrepreneurs will have found themselves – you’ve come up with a great idea to expand your business, offering a new product or service to your customers, or expanding into a fresh sector or location. All you need now is the money. And that’s where you hit a snag. While banks may be lending more cash than they were during the aftermath of the global financial crisis, that borrowing often comes at a high price, with unaffordable interest rates or unrealistic expectations about guarantees linked to the family home or other personal assets.

Step forward Angus Dent and his fellow founders at London-based ArchOver. While they were running their own businesses, they came up against that very same obstacle – so they decided to do something about it. They created ArchOver, a peer-to-peer (P2P) lending platform that allows firms that have been operating for more than two years to borrow money from lenders using its website. Companies borrow a minimum of £250,000, with interest rates starting at 7.7% a year. Since it launched in the autumn of 2014, ArchOver has helped its lenders to inject more than £65m into British businesses, bringing in more than £2.5m in interest at an average return of 7.3%. In an age when bank savings accounts are paying less than 0.5%, it’s easy to see the attraction for investors who understand the risks as well as the rewards.

“There’s no typical lender using our platform,” explains Dent. “We have a diverse group of individuals – the minimum amount that you can lend is £1,000 per project, so we have some people who simply have £1,000 to lend and then we have some other individuals who have each lent £2m in total.

“Between those two extremes, you have some people who put in £1,000 a month or £5,000 a month and some who put in £1,000 a quarter. What all of them have in common is that they’re investing on exactly the same basis – they all get the same information on the company and they all get exactly the same interest rate, which we believe is very important.

“As well as the individual lenders, we also have a small group of family offices, which tend to lend larger amounts to each project. We also have some funds that also use us to invest.

“Some larger small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) use us for treasury management. If they have spare cash on their balance sheet that they don’t need in their own business and want to earn a decent return on it then they can invest it with us.”

Dent and co-founders Brian Basham and Ian Anderson developed ArchOver during 2013 and then secured a £3m investment during the spring of 2014 from Hampden Group, which provides financial and business support services and manages insurance assets and underwriting capacity in excess of £2bn. As ArchOver’s parent company, Hampden has not only invested in the business itself but has also injected cash to the platform, putting its money where its mouth is and lending to other businesses.

The platform’s P2P lending has appealed to a wide variety of businesses. Autostop Leather – which has been making seat covers and floor mats for car companies such as Ford, Lexus and Toyota since 1991 – borrowed £300,000 via the platform to help it develop new products for its customers.

Ergowealth, which is based at Marlow in Buckinghamshire, was founded in 2013 by a group of financial planners. It borrowed £200,000 through ArchOver to fund the expansion of its mortgage advisory service by using its contracted revenues as security.

TLM Technologies – which offers electronic point-of-sale (EPOS), back office and head office systems – secured not one but two loans through ArchOver, injecting a combined £1.1m into the technology business. The first allowed it to replace its previous invoice finance facility with a 12-month, £600,000 loan secured against its accounts receivable, while the second 12-month loan for £500,000 was based on its contracted revenues from software licenses and service maintenance contracts.

“We started with what you might call ordinary manufacturing businesses, with factory units that produce a certain amount of goods each month,” Dent says. “We’ve then worked with a wider range of businesses, from suppliers to the construction industry through to professional services firms, such as accountants and lawyers.

“A little over a year ago, we realised that – if you look at the equity side of things – companies that have contracted, recurring revenues always attract a premium valuation because they’re predictable and stable. But there was no equivalent on the lending side of things – we thought that was a bit daft because you’re putting yourself in a position where you can’t lend to some of the most stable, cash-generative businesses.

“At the core of those businesses there is usually a very good idea, which you could say is intellectual property (IP). Those sorts of companies with strong IP tend to rent that IP in various forms, often as software or as services.

“So, we put together a service called ‘Secured & Assigned’, which takes that contracted, recurring revenue and wraps it up and almost makes it into an annuity type revenue and, in an intangible way, pops that revenue onto the balance sheet and allows us to lend against it. That extended our focus into another whole group of businesses, into software businesses, into serviced office businesses, into maintenance businesses, into wealth management firms.”

Between £10m and £12m of ArchOver’s lending in 2017 was based around that service, demonstrating the high demand for its financial products. Now, the platform’s latest step is allowing it to work even more closely with IP rich companies.

“Working in those areas led us down the road of looking at how we could help those companies fund their continuing investment in IP,” says Dent. “HM Revenue & Customs pays a research and development (R&D) tax credit, but it takes time even after the year-end to pull the numbers together, file the CT600 form to make the claim and then wait for the Revenue to cogitate.

“In the past few months, we’ve come up with a new service called ‘Research & Development Advance’, which – as the name implies – advances money against the R&D claim that’s due to the company. Two of the first companies to use it work in the security sector, with one developing facial recognition software and the other making body scanners for airports.”