The Palm Beach Post

Small-business lending is mixed bag

Lending is near 2008 levels but many firms are wary of debt.

- By Joyce M. Rosenberg Associated Press

NEW YORK — Trying to size up the state of small-business lending can prompt the question: Is the glass half-full or half-empty?

Banks and government data point to a recovery in small-business loans since the recession, with loan figures nearly back to their 2008 levels. But many company owners say while they’re more upbeat about the economy, they’re not planning to ask banks for financing.

Some have enough on hand. That’s what nearly half of the companies queried said in a survey released in March by the Federal Reserve’s regional banks. But 27 percent said they didn’t want to take on debt. Some are skittish about borrowing after getting stung by the recession. Interest rates that have been rising, and making some owners think about higher repayment costs, could also be a part of it. And 17 percent didn’t apply for financing because they expected to be rejected.

Gregg Ward says he’s struggled to get even small lines of credit, $25,000 and under, despite a good credit history, because bankers he’s applied to are still so conservati­ve years after the Great Recession.

“They’re not easing up,” says Ward, owner of an eponymous San Diego-based executive coaching and consulting firm. “It makes it less likely I’m going to expand my business.”

So Ward, like many other owners, is trying to figure out other ways to meet some of his goals. He wants to hire a staffer to help him find new business; that may mean dipping into cash reserves.

The small-business-lending environmen­t has improved since the recession. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. counted $331 billion in commercial and industrial bank loans under $1 million as of Dec. 31, the largest amount since the end of 2008, when the government agency reported a record $336 billion in such loans that are generally taken out by small companies. That figure dropped to a low of $279 billion at the end of September 2012.

But there’s that half-empty perspectiv­e; in one survey released last week by Bank of America, just 9 percent of the 1,000 owners questioned planned to apply for loans in the coming year. And a survey being released this week by Wells Fargo found demand for credit is little changed from earlier this year. Holding back if they need financing can mean owners put off hiring or upgrading equipment that could increase productivi­ty, which can ripple through the economy.

Many owners have been shunning debt since the recession taught hard lessons about borrowing. If their companies weren’t hamstrung by big loan balances during the downturn, owners saw plenty of other businesses falter when revenue fell and monthly payments became unmanageab­le. And the banking system’s woes led to increased regulation­s under the law known as Dodd-Frank. Bankers and companies say the lending process is much harder because of the added rules — a likely contributo­r to the problems Ward has been having.

The Dodd-Frank rules also mean community banks — a primary source of small-business loans — have had to spend more to comply with the new regulation­s. That cuts into their profits and has contribute­d to a wave of community banks merging into regional or national banks.

Many owners seek financing elsewhere. Credit cards, personal loans and borrowing from family or friends were among the most popular alternativ­es, according to a first-quarter survey by Pepperdine University’s Graziadio School of Business and Management and Dun & Bradstreet.

Whether the issue is with an owner or a banker, it’s not just would-be borrowers that are affected — so are companies they do business with. Some customers of Carl Mazzanti’s computer networking and security company want to upgrade their systems, but it’s been taking longer than expected the past few months to get banks to agree to finance the deals, says Mazzanti, owner of eMazzanti in Hoboken, N.J.

“We have about 20 percent of annual sales currently sitting out in some version of financing that hasn’t closed,” he says. So he’s basing his decisions now on the expectatio­n that deals will take longer.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Carl Mazzanti, who owns a computer networking and security company in Hoboken, N.J., says many of his customers have to wait months for loans to upgrade systems.
JULIO CORTEZ / ASSOCIATED PRESS Carl Mazzanti, who owns a computer networking and security company in Hoboken, N.J., says many of his customers have to wait months for loans to upgrade systems.

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