BusinessBrief.com » A way to overcome the credit crunch

A way to overcome the credit crunch

February 3, 2010 by Bob Hill
Posted in: Special Report

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Bank lending may be way down, but if you’re a company looking to secure credit (or extend it to your buyers), there’s another way.

A lot of small business owners are running into the same problem — banks just aren’t handing out loans like they used to. The reality is major banks have reduced lending to small and mid-size companies nearly 5% in the past six months alone. This is, of course, symptomatic of a much larger trend that started more than two years ago when the credit crisis hit full force.

Tighter regulation on lending — combined with an increase in defaults — has forced banks to rethink their lending practices. Some banks also cite a lack
of demand combined with a major dip in sales.

Regardless of who or what is to blame, the result is thousands of companies spinning their wheels because they lack the temporary capital they need to grow.

The good news: There are a growing number of third-party companies willing to extend credit to small and mid-size companies without holding them to the stringent requirements big-name banks do.

Small lending companies like Hartsko Financial Services and King Trade Capital specialize in third-party financing (via purchase orders). They enter into a contract with a buyer and a company who have committed to doing business together. The borrower then pays its debt in full to the third-party lender, which collects its interest and passes the principle (in most cases the cost of the goods) back to the company.

While these loans are relatively easy to secure, the trade off is an incredibly short term limit, after which the interest rate skyrockets.  For example, a
typical interest schedule for a Hartsko loan might look like this:

  • 3.5% for the first 30 days, and
  • 1.25% additional for every 10 days after that, resulting in the possibility of an interest rate that’s 40% (or higher) after the first year.

Despite the threat of revolving debt, business at companies like Hartsko and and King has grown considerably during the past year. King’s profits are up 10%, while Hartsko’s business has increased 80% (with an estimated default rate as low as 5%).

Small third-party lenders now represent the go-to option for startups with
immediate growth potential but very little backing. The idea is to secure the loan, recoup your investment, and get out quick before the interest threatens to swallow you whole.

It’s a dicey proposition, but it’s also one more and more companies (and prospects) are willing to take.

The best bet for companies looking to extend credit via one of these third-party companies — do your own credit checks and have your own credit restrictions to ensure you’re not putting your company at risk. After all, in cases like these, no one gets paid until the lender does.

Source: The Places They Go When Banks Say No,” by Andrew Martin, New York Times, 1/31/10

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One Response to “A way to overcome the credit crunch”

  1. Charles Bailey Says:

    I have seen several companies get caught up in this type of financing in the past. Short term, it seems like a real solution. Long term, it is very difficult to get out from under. It becomes a standard way of doing business. Unless there is a tremendous amount of dicipline (which there probably is not, or you wouldn’t be in the shape to use this form of financing) you will find that you will find yourself having to repeat the process on your next job, to finish paying for your last job. It becomes like the ‘tar baby’ fable. Given the profit margins most of us work with, this can become your reality…and very quickly. Beware when considering this form of financial assistance!

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2010-03-19 16:05