Smaller firms in Scotland saw record levels of equity investment in 2022, despite difficult economic conditions.
The British Business Bank’s annual Small Business Equity Tracker showed that equity deals involving small businesses totalled £762m last year, up 37% on the previous year’s record of £557m.
While the overall value of investment activity rose, the number of announced equity deals fell by 22% against the previous 12 months to 190, suggesting a continued trend for higher value deals.
Between 2020 and 2022, 8.9% all announced equity deals went to businesses in Scotland.
UK-wide, the economic downturn had a significant impact on deal activity in the latter part of 2022, with total investment value declining by 11% to £16.7 billion compared to the previous year.
The total number of deals also dropped 7% to 2,702 – representing the first annual fall in equity deal volumes since the Beauhurst data series began in 2011.
The report also revealed that 2022 was a record year for university spin-outs.
Businesses stemming from academia received £2bn in funding – 12% of total equity investment. In 2021, Scotland ranked top in the UK for the number of announced equity deals in university spin-outs, with 47 of the total 243 deals coming from Scottish academic institutions.
After Oxford and Cambridge, the University of Edinburgh claimed the third highest number of spin-out deals last year, with 15 businesses securing equity investment.
The average deal size for university spin-outs across the UK was £8.9m, which is a third higher than the wider market.
Businesses in the tech sector continued to dominate the UK’s equity landscape, with smaller firms involved in cleantech in particular experiencing notable investment growth in 2022.
Tech sector investment in Scotland rose by 34% in 2022 to £333m.
Susan Nightingale, director for Scotland at the British Business Bank, said: “Scotland’s smaller businesses fared well in terms of equity investment last year, hitting a new record despite economic headwinds.
“University spin-outs and tech firms continue to perform well, and it is great to see the University of Edinburgh placing just behind Oxbridge as a stand-out success for academic-led businesses.
“It may be too early to see the full impact of higher inflation and rising interest rates on the financial ecosystem, but Scotland is so far bucking the trend for lower deal values that we have seen at a UK level,“ she continued.
“Further financial support for smaller businesses is set to be available next year, with the launch of our new £150m Investment Fund for Scotland, which will continue to help smaller firms access the finance they need to thrive and develop.”
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