Coronavirus Large Business Interruption Loan Scheme: Difference between revisions
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*[[Financial stability]] | *[[Financial stability]] | ||
*[[Liquidity management]] | *[[Liquidity management]] | ||
*[[Recovery Loan Scheme]] (RLS) | |||
*[[Stranded middle]] | *[[Stranded middle]] | ||
Revision as of 12:59, 28 December 2022
COVID-19 - business continuity - UK.
(CLBILS).
The CLBILS was designed to provide UK government guarantees of 80% to enable banks to make loans of up to £200m, offered to medium and large sized firms with a turnover of over £45m per annum that were impacted by COVID-19 and were unable to secure regular commercial financing.
To be eligible, a business must:
- Be UK-based in its business activity.
- Have an annual turnover over £45 million.
- Be unable to secure regular commercial financing.
- Have a borrowing proposal which the lender:
- (a) would consider viable, were it not for the COVID-19 pandemic; and
- (b) believes will enable the borrower to trade out of any short-term to medium-term difficulty.
For new borrowings from April 2021 onward, CLBILS is superseded by the Recovery Loan Scheme (RLS).
See also
- Bounce Back Loan Scheme
- British Business Bank
- Business continuity plan
- Contingency plan
- Coronavirus
- Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme
- Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme
- COVID-19
- COVID-19 Corporate Financing Facility
- Disaster recovery planning
- Financial stability
- Liquidity management
- Recovery Loan Scheme (RLS)
- Stranded middle