CFO: Small Business Credit is Expensive and Scarce

With banks under financial pressure, a government-backed loan is the only affordable route for many owners.

With banks under financial pressure, a government-backed loan is the only affordable route for many owners.

August 15, 2023 | Vincent Ryan, Senior Reporter-at-Large, CFO

“With small business owners’ views about future sales growth and business conditions dismal,” said NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg recently, some small business owners “want to hire and make money now from solid consumer spending.” Indeed, U.S. retail sales rose 0.7% in July, beating expectations, suggesting continued consumer resilience.

However, small businesses looking for near-term capital to fund growth must wonder where to get it.

The Employee Retention Credit, a pandemic tax incentive that offers credits of up to $26,000 per retained employee for qualifying wages, has been used as a source of capital by small businesses affected by the pandemic. But the ERC program is ending next tax season and has been plagued by fraudsters offering small businesses “easy money.”

Otherwise, small businesses seeking capital don’t have many choices that aren’t prohibitively expensive.

An option is a group like Newity, which offers access to working capital loans through the Small Business Administration’s 7(a) program. Newity’s niche is loans of $250,000 and under, too small for a bank, and rates run at prime plus 275 basis points, or currently about 11%, said Luke LaHaie, co-founder and co-CEO of the firm.

(In the current government fiscal year, SBA lenders — many of them banks — have approved more than 46,000 loans totaling about $22 billion.)

Newity saw an uptick in loan applications in May, and the numbers have stayed consistent over the summer, LaHaie told CFO. “A huge universe of small business owners is looking for credit, and about 20% of those people qualify,” said LaHaie. Newity refers businesses that don’t qualify to other providers of capital.

For the 7(a) loans, used for working capital, personal and business credit scores and number of years in business drive the underwriting. (Newity looks for businesses at least three years old.)

An SBA loan — a portion of which is guaranteed by the federal government — has a 10-year term and is fully amortizing, said LaHaie, making it “more stable capital” with low repayments. 

In comparison, many small business applicants come to Newity laden with high-interest debt — like a merchant cash advance loan – that has a rate of 20% to 30% or more, LaHaie said.

He said the small businesses borrowing through Newity have proven resilient, having made it through the pandemic. “Revenues are still pretty strong,” LaHaie said.

Bank Blues

Borrowing from a bank is out of the question for many small businesses. They wouldn’t qualify for a bank loan in the best of times, and now is not the best of times.

Large and regional banks are tightening business loan terms, and they are getting pressured by federal regulatory agencies about their balance sheets in the wake of the Silicon Valley Bank collapse.

The head of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has floated the idea of requiring institutions with more than $100 billion in assets to fund themselves using more long-term debt. Another proposed regulatory change would tie unrealized securities losses to how much capital a bank must maintain.

“Instead of aggressively aiming for growth [in the second quarter], some community banks chose to focus on their best borrowers and on depositors that stick with them.”

S&P Global Market Intelligence

Moody’s put a slew of regional and larger U.S. banks on review for potential downgrade and attached a negative outlook to others last week, noting rising asset risks, higher funding costs, and a curbing of loan growth. Slowing lending “preserves capital but also slows the shift in their loan mix toward higher-yielding assets,” Moody’s said.

Fitch Ratings downgraded the U.S. banking industry in June. On Tuesday, a Fitch analyst said another one-notch industry downgrade could result in negative rating actions for more than 70 U.S. banks.

 

Read Original CFO Article

Need help?

Connect with our team by email, phone, or live chat.

Contact Form   |   773-839-8089

Mon – Fri: 8am – 5pm CT
Sat: 10am – 7pm CT
Sun: Closed

To qualify for an SBA 7(a) small business loan, your business must be:

  1. U.S.-based and operated
  2. Owner supported / owner funded
  3. Eligible per the SBA’s requirements

Your loan amount will determined by the business’ average annual revenue, FICO score, and years in business