Unsecured Small Business Loans – Good News – Stimulus Bill Allows SBA 90 Percent Guarantee For Loans

Anyone remotely involved with small businesses, whether as a consultant, lender, supplier, leasing specialist, trade association, or simply as a consumer who is tired of driving by sections of town and wondering why your favorite business unceremoniously threw in the towel, would very much like to hear some good news. Not to mention the small business owner itself. After all, there are 27 million small businesses that deserve to be thriving in this nation, but too often were ignored by the Bush administration. Classically non-complainers by nature, they just want a scrap of hope thrown their way. And I’m not talking about wide-eyed idealists looking for handouts-in all due respect to Emily Dickinson, they’re not looking for the”thing with feathers that perches in the soul”. Just give us a few bucks and we will run with it. This is a continuing article (20 in all) on the subject: Help. Is anyone out there loaning to small businesses anymore?

Fortunately there is a loan program out there and SBA lenders are actually making loans currently: the Community Express Loan Program. This gives unsecured small business loans between $5,000 and $50,000 with very little paperwork, answers typically in two days, interest rates presently at 7.75%, funding and two weeks, and monies wired directly to your business account. There are still lenders participating in this program, although Congress has failed to make the program permanent and still has a 10% cap on the number of loans.

Enter the Obama stimulus bill. Let us look how it affects this program and small business lending as a whole.

If you have tried to wade through the 1,100 or so pages of the new stimulus bill (American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009), you know its like chipping through granite. But let me pull out a little gem. It now allows the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA to you) to guarantee up to 90% of loans made by private lenders under their program. Let me explain. This is great for Community Express.

When the Small Business Act was enacted in 1958, it had a very simple mission. Find a way to get loans to small businesses that couldn’t get them through traditional channels. It did this in an ingenious way. They knew banks where reluctant to loan to small businesses, especially startups, because of fear of failure. So the SBA collected a fee on each loan and used this as a fund to pay banks if there was a default. Bingo, there was invented the SBA guarantee fee. It doesn’t take a degree in rocket science from MIT and an MBA from Harvard to know this gives incentives to the banks to make more loans.

SBA loan programs have guarantees from 50% to 85%. Specifically, the SBA currently has an 85% guarantee on loans up to $150,000 and up to 75% on loans above $150,000. On the other hand, there are some programs that only go as high as 50%, including the Express Loan program (for those types of loans the new guarantee will not change). With the new stimulus bill, the SBA has the right to increase these fees to 90%.

Think about this for a moment. Simple math tells us more guarantee, the greater the likelihood of the bank making the loan. For goodness sakes, 90% is tapping on the door of a 100% guarantee! Also note the guaranteed portion is typically sold on the secondary market (which has recently shut down to almost nothing) so there is more chance for loans to be sold and more money to go back into the coffers of the banks for further lending.

Notice I said the SBA has the right to increase it to 90%. It can pick which program. And it has not occurred yet. But if I was a betting person, I would say they would be seriously looking at most of the programs because everyone is scraping for ideas to revive the economy.

For those addicted to primary source documents, this is what the new statute, in relevant part (my attorney wanted me to add that) says:

SEC. 502. ECONOMIC STIMULUS LENDING PROGRAM FOR SMALL BUSINESSES. (a) PURPOSE- The purpose of this section is to permit the Small Business Administration to guarantee up to 90 percent of qualifying small business loans made by eligible lenders.

(b) DEFINITIONS- For purposes of this section:

(1) The term ‘Administrator’ means the Administrator of the Small Business Administration.

(2) The term ‘qualifying small business loan’ means any loan to a small business concern pursuant to section 7(a) of the Small Business Act (15 U.S.C. 636) or title V of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 695 and following) except for such loans made under section 7(a)(31).

There is also a sunset provision under Subparagraph (f) that the guarantees are only good for one year after enactment of the bill, unless extended by Congress.

So what does it do for me now as a small business owner? Well now the not so good news. I predict the SBA will be increasing many of its programs to 90%. But to get the banks in the lending mood again, there has to be a secondary market. There is also new legislation on that, which we will discuss in another article. But once we have a secondary market, I predict that they banks will not only loan, but do so in a big way. For three reasons:

First, history tells us when there is economic inactivity due primarily to depressed conditions, when the cycle changes for the better, like a sling shot affect, it changes dramatically. Remember when people were unable to refinance or purchase their homes because of tight markets and high interest rates? The rates went down and many jumped at the chance to refinance, improve their homes, and purchase (some say too precipitously) with abundance. Although this is an overstatement and also depends upon other factors such as employment, standards of living, etc., the analogy holds that when things loosen up, there will be a substantial number of business loans.

Secondly, banks are in large part in the business of making loans and they have not been doing so for some time. They will be anxious to make profits again.

Lastly, simple economics tells us when there is a vacuum in the market; capital will rush in and take advantage of that open market and initial lack of competition. Large banks are not making business loans so small community banks are starting to rush in to take over the arena. Give them a secondary market and they will explode.

So for the small business owner, I think this news of 90 % guarantees is favorable. Why did it take them so long?

Finding Right SBA Loan For Your Business

Whether you are thinking of starting a business or you are already running one, money is your lifeline. Small businesses have financing as a major factor in keeping their businesses afloat and sometime getting funding for the same proves to be most beneficial for them. Small Business Administration, SBA, helps piece it together for the small businesses. It offers them the funding that they need to operate the businesses and even grow them.

This is a federal government agency that has come through for many small businesses. Instead of lending the money directly to the businesses, it sets and uses guidelines for the loans through partners like credit unions, micro-lending institutions, banks and community development organizations. SBA eliminates lender risks by guaranteeing repayment of portions of loans granted. It can be termed as a win-win situation because the business people get the funding they need and the lenders get assured that the loans will be repaid making the agency very beneficial. The loans simply offer access to capital at lowest costs without the requirement to give up equity.

The loan programs

Important to note is that SBA loan programs are specifically structured for small businesses that do not have access to other kinds of financing. As a small business person, you should be familiar with the loan programs so you are able to apply for the right one for your business.

7 (a) loan program – It is the primary program meant to assist startups as well as existing small businesses that need financing. The loans are basic and the money can be for general business purposes like equipment, machinery, working capital leasehold improvements, fixtures and furniture and other business needs. You can basically take care of business acquisitions, consolidating unsecured debts into a new loan, large inventory purchase and business expansion.

CDC/504 loan program – This loan program under SBA offers long term financing purchase of large assets. The assets can include commercial real estate, buildings and land or even equipment. The loans usually cover 40% of total project cost, participating lender covers 50% and the borrower puts up the last 10%. Loans under this program are never used for inventory or capital.

Disaster loans – Businesses can be affected by disasters and this can be devastating for any business. SBA extends the disaster loans to businesses that are affected by disasters that have been declared. The low interest loans are structured to assist in replacing or repairing damaged machinery, personal property, business assets, inventory and equipment. You will basically manage to get back on your feet after disaster strikes at very low interests using this loan program.

Microloan program – The loan program gives very small loans to business startups, growing businesses or newly established ones. They usually have designated intermediary lenders by the SBA most of which are nonprofit organization with some experience in technical and lending assistance. Even though the small loans cannot be used for the payment of existing debts or real estate purchases, they still come in handy for purchase of fixtures, equipment, machinery, supplies and inventory or used as working capital.

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