Federal Reserve expands its lending program
The Federal Reserve expanded its Main Street Lending Program, which it said will be open for eligible lenders “soon,” allowing more companies to participate and lessening the burden on banks that create the loans.
“Supporting small and midsized businesses so they are ready to reopen and rehire workers will help foster a broad-based economic recovery,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a statement Monday accompanying the announcement. “I am confident the changes we are making will improve the ability of the Main Street Lending Program to support employment during this difficult period.”
The program, among nine unveiled by the Fed to combat the fallout from shutting down the U.S. economy to limit the spread of the coronavirus, has been long awaited since it was initially announced in late March. Powell can expect more questions on how many jobs it will save when he speaks to reporters on Wednesday following a meeting of the Fed’s policy-setting committee.
Businesses participating in the program, which aims to boost lending to small and mid-size companies through three facilities, will be able to defer principal payments on their loans for two years, up from the previously announced one year. Interest payments will still be deferred for one year.
The Fed lowered loan minimums to $250,000 from $500,000 and extended the loan term to five years from four. It also increased loan maximums across the three facilities. Company loans up to $300 million will now be eligible for the program.
Loan recipients are still limited to 15,000 employers or fewer and an annual revenue cap of $5 billion. The requirements on earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization remain the same for each facility.
Banks will be required to hold 5 percent of the loans on their balance sheet for all three facilities, where previously they had to hold 15 percent of loans to more-risky businesses.
The Main Street program will be open for lender registration soon, the Fed said, and it’ll start buying loans “shortly afterward.” The three facilities will buy up to $600 billion in loans and are backed by a $75 billion investment from the Treasury Department. The backstop is part of the $454 billion allocated by Congress in the CARES Act for the Fed’s emergency-lending programs during the coronavirus pandemic.
This marks the second update to the Main Street program, which was first announced March 23. The Fed said it received more than 2,200 comment letters about the program, prompting an expansion at the end of April. The central bank has come under scrutiny from lawmakers about its delay in launching the program, which presents new challenges to the Fed, such as how to lend to companies that don’t have official designations from ratings companies.
Powell said May 29 that the central bank was “days” away from launching the facility and called it the most challenging program to set up. The Fed also said that it is working to establish a lending program for nonprofit organizations.