Will FIs Take Part in the Small Business Lending Surge?

“They’re looking to banking partners for reasonable capital infusions ..."

Despite the nation experiencing an unprecedented level of small business optimism, access to credit will ultimately boost or limit economic growth within this high-impact sector, according to new research.

The study “Gimme Credit: Faster, Simpler, Safer Credit for Main Street America,” a joint effort from Skokie, Ill.-based PayNet, a provider of small business credit data and analysis and  Lombard, Ill.-based Raddon, a Fiserv company and provider of innovative research, explored factors contributing to small businesses’ access to credit, and proposes lending best practices to increase economic output of these companies.

The good news, according to the study, small businesses are on an upward trajectory:

“Small businesses are in full-on growth mode,” PayNet president William Phelan said. “They’re looking to banking partners for reasonable capital infusions, but are discouraged by slow reviews, impersonal processes and denials. This creates a huge opportunity for nimble community banks, credit unions, and alternative lenders to fill the void.”

The downside: a small business credit gap is slowing economic recovery. According to a Harvard study, following the 2008 financial crisis, a recipe of regulatory and risk factors lowered credit volume among larger financial institutions, hampering the pace of recovery. The lingering effects of these factors continue to hamper small business growth today.

“It’s a recurring cycle,” Bill Handel, chief economist, Raddon, said. “Cumbersome underwriting practices increase the likelihood that lenders are either unwilling or unable to extend favorable terms to small businesses, which in turn discourages applications. Fortunately, lenders can take steps to improve their efficiency and profitability in this area. If localized or niche lenders are able to foster improvements in their local markets, it will in turn fuel the broader economy.”

The study revealed a variety of factors – including high charge-off rates, increased capital requirements, heightened regulation – influencing larger banks to decrease small business lending.

The fundamental challenge remains the inability of financial institutions to profitably extend loans with terms and conditions that are attractive to small business borrowers. The joint research found a key factor preventing community institutions from closing this gap is the loan process itself. The traditional loan process, a still mostly human-intensive method still deployed by numerous lenders, exposed two critical issues.

The first, high costs to underwrite and review loans make it financially prohibitive for lenders to meet the needs of small business borrowers. Per Raddon’s Small Business National Research, 95% seek loans under $250,000 with the average loan amount sought only $75,000. PayNet and Raddon research shows that a financial institution would need to charge an interest rate of 9.49% just to break even on a five-year loan for this average loan amount.

The second issue is a combination of inefficiencies resulting in a challenging application process and long duration (30 days or more in too many instances) to settlement. These are untenable for potential borrowers. In the Federal Reserve Bank’s 2015 Small Business Credit Survey, 52% of small businesses mentioned the difficult application process and 43% cited the long wait for a credit decision as dissatisfaction sources when they sought to borrow from small financial institutions. And the 2018 Raddon’s Small Business Survey revealed 47% agreed with the statement, “Getting a business loan is a long and difficult process.”

The study outlined three specific steps lenders of all sizes can take to improve automation, achieve faster decision-making and reduce the lending cost curve:

  1. Segmenting applications by loan request size and reviews by loan risk profile.
  2. Deploying technology to assist in preparing applications, collecting data, and analyzing the business/loan.
  3. Optimizing procedures by leveraging industry intelligence to improve their decision engines.

The report noted lenders employing these best practices stand to gain market share as the economy expands. Because barriers generate a tendency for small businesses to look to alternative lenders, technology-based lenders have made strides to reach this underserved market, although they may struggle with higher marketing costs and weak local connections.