Dayton Daily News

FIFTH THIRD BOOSTS DAYTON LENDING, INVESTMENT­S

- By Thomas Gnau

Fifth Third Bank said it has boosted its small business lending and housing investment­s in Dayton.

The Dayton market saw $52.1 million in mortgage lending from the Cincinnati-based bank in 2016, with $54.5 million in small business lending and $54.3 million in “community developmen­t lending and investment­s.”

Last year, Fifth Third pledged to boost its community lending and investment commitment­s by $2.5 billion to $30 billion over the next four years — and Dayton investment­s were expected to be part of that.

The pledge itself was spurred by the Federal Reserve system giving the bank a “needs to improve” rating — the second lowest in a range of four ratings — on its community investment­s last summer.

Brian Lamb — named last year as Fifth Third executive vice president, chief corporate responsibi­lity and reputation officer — said in an interview Friday that the 2016 numbers represent an improvemen­t over 2015.

While small businesses — businesses with less than $1 million in revenue — in the bank’s Dayton market saw nearly $55 million in loans last year, Lamb said the number of small business loans in 2016 increased in volume 22 percent compared to 2015.

There were 220 Fifth Third small business loans in the market last year, compared to about 180 loans the year before, he said.

“When we were in the community, they really appreciate­d the dollar volumes we were talking about,” Lamb said. “But (Dayton customers) were more focused on access to capital.”

He added, “I think the real story here is we’re touching more small businesses.”

He also said community developmen­t lending and investment — mostly in affordable housing — also was up in 2016.

“We doubled the number of loans we did just in the Dayton market,” Lamb said. Ten loans of that type in the Dayton market in 2015 rose to 20 last year, he said.

Those loans go mostly to housing-related projects, including the Oberer-driven Twin Towers Crossing II single-family homes developmen­t in East Dayton.

“It’s not just the dollar amount — it’s the purpose of the dollars that has a real impact on the Dayton community,” Lamb said.

The bank also put new leadership in the Dayton market.

In recent weeks, Marya Rutherford-Long was named Fifth Third’s new Dayton community and economic developmen­t manager.

Previously, Fifth Third was “covering” Dayton from Cincinnati, Lamb said. But he said it was important to the bank to put local representa­tion in place.

Fifth Third will also offer financial education and workforce developmen­ttrainingl­ocally,Lamb said. The bank will have representa­tives at the Wesley Community Center in Dayton May 15 to 19 for a week of classes and training.

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