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Linkflow Capital: SME Borrowing Costs Ease to 8.18% in 2025 as Larger Loans Return, but Middle East Conflict Threatens 2026 Outlook
Rabu, 29 April 2026 | 09:54
Annual Linkflow Capital research finds SME credit
conditions thawed modestly in 2025, with SME borrowing rate declining to
an average of 8.18% from a high of 8.47% the preceding year. Bank
disbursement times stretched to 33 days on average, against just 7 days
for non-bank funders, reshaping where SMEs source credit.
SINGAPORE -
Media Outreach Newswire
- 29 April 2026 - Singapore's SMEs experienced their first easing in
borrowing costs in three years, with average unsecured lending rates
falling to
8.18% per annum in 2025 from a multi-year high of 8.47% in 2024,
according to Linkflow Capital's latest SME Financing Accessibility
Survey. Larger loan approvals above $500,000, which had disappeared
entirely in 2024, also returned to form 5% of approvals in 2025.
The recovery, however, was uneven. Bank loan processing times stretched
to 33 days on average, up from 22 days in 2024, while non-bank funders
disbursed approved cases in just 7 days. The widening gap reshaped
lender competition through the year.
Key findings from the 2025 survey:
-
- Borrowing costs eased modestly: Average SME loan interest
rate fell 29 basis points to 8.18% per annum but remain stubbornly high
against the backdrop of a significant decline in benchmark 3-month SORA
rate throughout 2025.
-
- Larger loans returned: Approvals above $500K returned to 5%
of approved loan dollar volume in 2025 after disappearing entirely in
2024. Loans in the $300Kâ$500K bracket also expanded from 3% to 7%.
-
- Loan approval rate recovered to 74%, up from 70% in 2024 (a 5-year low).
-
- Foreign banks extended their market share of loan origination within our platform:
Foreign lenders grew their share of approved loan dollar volume to 38%
in 2025, up from 26% in 2024 and 19% in 2023, while local banks fell to
46% (from 59%). Digital banks recovered modestly to 11% (from 8%).
-
- Credit-related rejections nearly tripled: Among unsuccessful
applicants, those rejected due to adverse personal credit records jumped
from 3% in 2024 to 11% in 2025, signalling rising personal credit
stress among SME owners.
"2025 was the year SME credit conditions began to thaw after the 2024
squeeze, but the recovery was uneven," said Benjamin Teo, spokesperson
for Linkflow Capital. "Banks gradually reopened to larger loans, yet
took meaningfully longer to process applications. Some SMEs facing
immediate cash flow pressure turned to non-bank funders for speed, even
at higher costs."
A new and more severe headwind for 2026
Linkflow Capital flagged the Middle East conflict which began in
February 2026 as the most consequential macroeconomic event facing
Singapore SMEs in the year ahead. The conflict has elevated freight,
energy and shipping costs through Iran's intermittent disruption of the
Strait of Hormuz.
"Singapore SMEs entered 2026 facing a potential macro shock with the
Middle East conflict," Teo said. "The inflationary price pressures feed
directly into SME operating costs through fuel, freight, and energy. We
expect credit conditions to re-tighten, and the modest 2025 thaw could
partially reverse if the conflict escalates."
The full survey findings and detailed charts are available at:
https://smeloan.sg/blog/2025-sme-finance-accessibility-survey/
Website: smeloan.sg
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BERITA LAINNYA
BERIKAN KOMENTAR