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Growth of Small and Microbusiness Lending Remained Positive in 2008


May 26, 2009 (SmartPros) A new study by the Small Business Administration finds that for the year that ended in June 2008, the total value of small business loans outstanding increased 4 percent and the value of microbusiness loans outstanding increased 6.8 percent.



Both rates were down from the previous one-year period, but they were still in positive territory. 

The growth of small and microbusiness lending remained positive during the first half of 2008, although the expansion was slower than in the previous year, according to the latest edition of the Office of Advocacy’s annual study of lending to small firms.  This new report, Small Business and Micro Business Lending in the United States for Data Years 2007- 2008, (http://www.sba.gov/advo/research/sbl_08study.pdf) gives a detailed account of small business lending overall, plus state-by-state totals and totals for individual lenders.
 
The largest increase was in the number of microbusiness loans (under $100,000), which were up by 15.7 percent.  This may be an indication that more loans are being made through business credit cards.  The number of mid- sized loans ($100,000 to $1 million) fell by 23.3 percent.
 
Small businesses that are looking for loans will find the report useful because it provides state-by-state rankings of banks and other financial institutions on their small business lending.  These rankings show who made the most small and microloans in each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia.  “In the current financial climate, it’s especially critical for small firms to know which banks and financial institutions have been the most likely to make small and microbusiness loans,” said Advocacy Economist Victoria Williams, coauthor of the study with Senior Economist Charles Ou.
 
The report uses the most recent Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call Report) data for June 2007 to June 2008 and Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) data for 2007 to examine financial institutions’ small and microbusiness lending.  Small business loans in these data are business loans of less than $1 million and microbusiness loans are loans of less than $100,000.  The report ranks lenders on their overall small business lending, not lending under SBA programs.
 
The full study, including expanded state-by-state tables, is available online at www.sba.gov/advo/research/lending.html.
 
 

2009 SmartPros Ltd. All rights reserved.

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