The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Analysis: Big companies receive loans first

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg AP Business Writer

NEW YORK » Ever since the U.S. government launched its emergency lending program for small businesses on April 3, there have been complaints that bigger companies had their loans approved and disbursed more quickly.

There is now evidence to back up those complaints.

An Associated Press analysis of Small Business Administra­tion’s $659 billion Paycheck Protection Program shows that nearly a third of the loans approved in the program’s first week ranged from $150,000 to $10 million, the maximum allowed. In a second round of funding that began April 27, such loans made up just 7.4% of the total.

The average loan size fell from $257,240 on April 10 to nearly $105,000 as of July 17, according to the SBA.

The PPP made very lowinteres­t loans available to any business — or any franchisee of a business — with under 500 employees. The loans would be forgiven if most of the money was used to keep employees on payroll.

Larger companies with connection­s to major national or regional banks got priority treatment in the program’s initial phase, the data show, while many smaller businesses said they were turned away because the banks required them to have a checking account, a credit card and a previous loan to be considered.

Some small businesses submitted an applicatio­n but then heard nothing. Small restaurant­s, retailers and other companies most in need were left waiting and unable to pay their employees, landlords or vendors. Many learned not from their bank but via news reports that the initial $349 billion in funding had run out in less than two weeks.

“The program was structured to take advantage of existing banking relationsh­ips that favored establishe­d businesses,” said John Arensmeyer, the CEO of the advocacy group Small Business Majority. “It was not designed for very small businesses.”

It’s not clear how many small companies have failed because of the pandemic. A survey conducted for the National Bureau of Economic Research by researcher­s at Harvard Uni

versity, the University of Chicago and the University of Illinois found 2% of small businesses surveyed had shut down permanentl­y in March, just after the pandemic hit the U.S. In theory, that means 100,000 of U.S. small businesses closed their doors before the PPP was even launched.

Andrew Cao applied for a $72,500 loan for his digital marketing company with

10 full-time and part-time employees the day after the first round opened.

Cao submitted his applicatio­n to Bank of America, where his company had been a customer for 10 years. Cao got two phone calls telling him he should submit his documentat­ion, which he already had done, but could get no informatio­n on his loan.

“When we heard the funds were exhausted, I said, ‘Are you serious?’, we tried to do everything we could — we submitted papers, contacted the bank,

and then nothing,’” says Cao, co-owner of Motoza, based in Austin, Texas.

Cao submitted an applicatio­n through a small local bank two days before the first round ended. Motoza got its loan a few days after the program’s April 27 reopening.

The PPP, which still has more than $130 billion available, is a key part of the government’s coronaviru­s relief plan. It’s credited with supporting the job market when millions of workers have been laid off. The data released by

the SBA July 6 does show that by June 30, 85% of the PPP loans had been for less than $150,000.

Still, the AP analysis shows that early on some of the nation’s biggest banks were quickly approving loans for larger customers before ramping up their volume of smaller loans. In the first week, 27% of the 4,231 loans Jpmorgan Chase made were over $1 million. Chase, the nation’s largest bank and the biggest PPP lender through June 30, processed 243,427 loans in the second round

of funding; only half a percent were $1 million or more.

Among other big banks, nearly 18% of the 1,185 loans TD Bank made the first week were over $1 million, as were 13% of Truist’s 7,143 loans. PNC made just 675 loans in the first week, but 40% were above $1 million.

At Chase, each of four divisions handled their clients’ loans separately, spokeswoma­n Patricia Wexler said. That included its commercial banking division; among its customers

are larger small and mid-size businesses.

“There was no prioritiza­tion of one business line over another. Each business processed applicatio­ns generally sequential­ly in the order in which the clients applied,” Wexler said.

Truist spokesman Kyle Tarrance said, “applicatio­ns were handled through a single applicatio­n portal made available to clients on a first-come, first-served basis, without any preference given to any client, including larger or more affluent clients.”

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