October 15, 2009

Credit Lines For Small Business Cut 25% Since Last Year!

Everywhere in the news we have been hearing that the signs are there for the end of the recession. Unfortunately the recession will not be ending anytime soon until the credit markets return to normalcy. At American Finance Solutions we supply credit to small- and medium-sized business and we follow the credit market closely and sadly report that credit is being denied at an accelerating pace. Large, well-capitalized companies have no problem finding credit. Small businesses, on the other hand, have never had a harder time getting a loan.

Since the onset of the credit crisis two years ago, available credit to small businesses has contracted by trillions of dollars. The same is true for consumers (who support most small businesses with their spending) and that phenomenon is reflected in dismal consumer spending trends. Equally worrisome are the trends in small-business credit, which has contracted at one of the fastest paces of any lending category. Small business loans are hard to find, and personal credit-card lines for small business owners (a critical funding source to small businesses) have been cut by 25% since last year.

Unfortunately for small businesses, credit-line cuts are only about half way through. Home equity loans, also historically a key funding source for start-up small businesses, are not a source of liquidity anymore because more than 32% of U.S. homes are worth less than their mortgages.

Why do small businesses matter so much? In the U.S., small businesses employ 50% of the country's workforce and contribute 38% of GDP. Without access to credit, small businesses can't grow, can't hire, and too often end up going out of business. What's more, small businesses are often the primary source of this country's innovation. Apple, Dell, McDonald's, Starbucks were all started as small businesses.

What's especially disturbing is how taxpayer dollars have supported "too big to fail" businesses yet left small businesses unassisted and at a significant disadvantage. Small businesses do not have the same access to government guarantees on their debt. After all, most of these small businesses don't issue public debt.

In reality, our government should be supporting the life blood of our economy by offering incentives to community banks to step up small-business loans on a greater scale. These smaller banks could not only bridge gaps created by the shut down in the securitization market but also gaps being created by a massive contraction in credit-card lines. Arguably credit would perform better with these types of loans as they would reintroduce and reinforce the most important rule in banking: "Know Your Customer."

Alternative lending sources such as merchant cash advances offered by AFS will continue to thrive as the trend continues. We get to "Know Our Customers" and offer solutions to access capital and grow your business.