SBA Expands
Eligibility for 7(a) Loans To Spur Recovery Opportunities for Small Businesses
WASHINGTON - More small businesses will be eligible for
U.S. Small Business Administration-backed loans, meaning greater access to much-needed
capital in this tough economy, as a result of a temporary alternate size standard
for the agency's largest lending program.
SBA's alternate
size standard for its 7(a) loan program will go into effect early next week through
Sept. 30, 2010. As a result of the temporary change, more than 70,000 additional
small businesses - including auto and RV dealerships, auto industry suppliers
and others - could be eligible to apply for SBA 7(a) loan.
"This
is just one more step we are taking to make sure small businesses have access
to capital to keep their doors open and employees working during these tough economic
times," SBA Administrator Karen Mills said. "We have seen signs that
small businesses that are just outside the traditional 7(a) size standard are
being shut out of the conventional lending market. This temporary change will
help those businesses weather these tough times and help move our nation closer
to economic recovery."
The temporary 7(a) loan size
standard will parallel the standard for the agency's 504 Certified Development
Company loan, and will allow businesses to qualify based on net worth and average
income. The net worth for the company and its affiliates can't be in excess of
$8.5 million and average net income after federal income taxes (excluding any
carry-over losses) for the preceding two completed fiscal years can't be more
than $3 million. The alternate size standard is available at the offices of The
Federal Register today and will be published as an interim final rule early next
week.
The temporary change to the 7(a) loan size standard
is not unprecedented. SBA took similar actions in 1993, as a result of the recession
of the early 1990s, and again in 2005 as part of a program aimed at helping small
businesses in the wake of hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
This
change also means more small businesses can take advantage of benefits made possible
through the Recovery Act. On March 16, the SBA implemented two key provisions
of the Recovery Act that raised the guarantee on 7(a) loans to 90 percent and
reduced fees for borrowers. Since then, the agency has seen average weekly 7(a)
loan volume increase by more than 25 percent and new SBA loans made by nearly
450 lenders who had not made loans since October 2008.
For
more information about SBA's revisions to its small business size standards, visit
http://www.sba.gov/size/indexwhatsnew.html
and click on "What's New about Small Business Size Standards."
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