LOW interest to help who stimulate what. Keep who afloat?

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Anonymous

05, 2008
Credit Crunch Starts To Hurt Small Business
One of the largest credit card providers to small business, Advanta Corp, took some big write-downs last quarter. According to CFO Magazine "Recent studies and reports from lenders show that small businesses are either having a harder time getting credit or struggling to pay off their debt." To some large extent, that is because banks simply don't want to take the risk of lending.

Over the last year, SBA loans to small businesses are also down 18%, a sign that even the government is reluctant to invest in a market which it thinks may end up with high default rates.

Businesses which don't have easy access to capital are employing some unusual methods to get their hands on cash. The National Small Business Association did a survey of members which found that "available capital" was one of the greatest risks to their firms. It also showed that 44% of these businesses had used a credit card to provide financing over the last year.

To a very large extent the increasing use of credit cards to keep smaller companies afloat shows the huge dislocation between government policy and life in the real business world. The Fed is dropping interest rates to bank, which can now borrow money at 2.5%. It has also opened its discount window to provide billions of dollars in aid to financial firms with weak balance sheets.

Does the bank pass this on to businesses or consumers? Absolutely not. Left with using credit card financing as a last resort, small firms may be forced to cover interest rates as high as 19%. That, in turn almost guarantees default rates will spike up. Banks, with access to cheap capital, are not fulfilling their traditional role of stepping in with lending facilities.

The system is now set up, probably unintentionally, to help keep banks open while undermining the opportunities of small businesses to borrow, and, in some cases, to stay alive.

Douglas A. McIntyre
 
My local lender doesn't mind lowering my interest rate on my operating note everytime the feds lower the rate they are paying to the government. Unwillingness of the lenders to loan money on new loans doesn't seem to be happening here. Yet
 
Dusty...Fed Funds rate may or may not effect lending rates. Actually these are rates that local banks can either borrow funds to meet liquidity requirements (usually very short term as in overnight) or invest surplus funds into Federal Funds in which case they are paid "fed fund rate" for that one night or more. It's a simple way to keep excess cash earning some rate of interest. Banks by law are required to keep a certain % of cash available at all times. Anything over that amount can be loaned out or invested in "fed funds", any amount short of that amount would be borrowed overnight to meet liquidity requirements.
 
As far as the CC goes for business, isn't that just a way of life now? When I had the yard running, I'd get an order, call the supplier and have it drop shipped to the business. Some orders were as much as $20K and it went on a CC. There was an 18% mark up. It would have been nice to have been charging $200K :lol: :lol: You just pay off the CC before you take any profit out of the sale. Or in our case at times, send the money on immediately.

I love debit cards. They are excellent but I wouldn't use one for any on-line purchases or enterprise.
 

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