Working Capital Loans and Business Finance Funding
Working Capital Loans and Business Finance Funding
As reported in The Working Capital Journal, traditional
working capital loans are currently available from a
shrinking number of commercial banks. Most of these
business lenders are not among the relatively small group
of larger banks which have received bailout funds. Small
business owners should familiarize themselves about which
commercial lenders are still actively providing this kind
of business finance funding.
In most cases the active commercial lenders for this
specialized form of commercial funding are limiting working
capital loans to businesses which are current in their debt
payments and are showing a net profit (based on recent
financial statements). If these two conditions are met, new
commercial loans can frequently be obtained to refinance
lines of credit and term loans which have been cancelled or
recalled by many lenders. For businesses not qualified for
commercial financing using these two requirements, there
are alternative funding sources such as business cash
advance programs.
Many small business owners also rely on personal lines of
credit to finance some of their business operations. There
have been many reports of widespread cancellations and
reductions of these lending programs as well, especially
those involving lenders which have received a multi-billion
dollar cash infusion from U.S. taxpayer money that was
intended to facilitate the lending of money to businesses
and consumers.
In many cases, business and personal lines of credit have
been eliminated by lenders because of deteriorating
business conditions and a reduced ability to pay by
borrowers. However, as described in The Working Capital
Journal, many borrowers had an excellent payment history
for a high percentage of recent credit line cancellations
or reductions.
Meanwhile, there are banks willing to make working capital
loans. The most notable examples are (for the most part,
anyway) not banks which have received bailout funds. In
general, these commercial lenders have been willing to
provide working capital financing, either in the form of
new business financing or refinancing lines of credit and
term loans which have been recalled or cancelled by other
lenders.
The pattern described above is very disturbing to most
observers because it basically indicates that bailout funds
have been given (so far) to lenders who primarily have a
history of making bad loans (virtually all lenders
receiving bailout funds to date). At this point, little
attention has been given to lenders with a healthy balance
sheet in federal attempts to get more funds into the hands
of consumers and businesses.
There are some significant conclusions apparent in the
recent behavior of commercial lenders.
(1) Businesses need to increasingly prepare for life
without relying on a traditional bank line of credit and
instead consider other viable sources of commercial
financing such as business cash advances (which provide
working capital based upon future credit card processing
activity).
(2) The recent unwillingness by most lenders receiving
bailout funds to report in any meaningful way how and where
these funds have been used would certainly seem to be a
loud and clear signal that these particular lenders are
probably in worse shape than they are reporting to anyone.
(3) Future government assistance should be primarily
restricted to banks and other lenders which have a history
of making good loans rather than bad loans.
(4) Business owners should be willing to seek out
commercial finance funding sources beyond their previous
banking relationships when they encounter difficulties
obtaining working capital loans and commercial loans from
normally dependable lenders.
About the Author:
Learn how to avoid mistakes for commercial loans and
commercial real estate loans - Steve Bush is a working
capital finance expert => AEX Commercial Finance Funding
and Commercial Mortgages -
www.aexcommercialfinancing.com
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