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Bernanke Calls Out Banks For Stiffing Small Business In Favor Of Big Firms

JEANNINE AVERSA   07/12/10 05:41 PM ET   AP

Bernanke Small Business

WASHINGTON — Big companies are building up cash and are expected to report strong earnings starting this week. Not so for small businesses that can't get loans – or hire freely until they do.

The gap helps explain why the economic rebound isn't stronger and could even stall. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke stepped up pressure Monday on banks to break the logjam and lend more to smaller firms, which employ at least half of American workers.

Small business owners are relying on personal credit cards or raiding retirement accounts to stay afloat, the Fed chairman said.

Bernanke and other regulators have urged banks for months to lend more to smaller companies. Lawmakers have complained that small businesses that want loans are having trouble getting them. Banks have countered by saying demand remains weak.

The Fed does have authority to create programs to increase lending, such as providing low-cost loans to banks. But economic conditions would probably have to weaken considerably before the Fed would propose such a move. One such program set up during the 2008 financial crisis was recently closed.

The Fed chief's latest comments came as legislative efforts to spur small-business lending have languished, and as the recovery has lost momentum. Bernanke spoke at a Fed conference held to explore ways to loosen lending to small companies.

"Making credit accessible to sound small businesses is crucial to our economic recovery," Bernanke said. "More must be done."

Some small business leaders say they would hire more if only they had easier access to loans. One of them is Marilyn Landis of Basic Business Concepts Inc. of Pittsburgh, which compiles financial documents for other small businesses.

Landis says she would like to hire one or two more people for her 10-person firm and wants to expand into New England. Yet even though she says she's never missed a payment, Landis says her line of credit was cut about 18 months ago.

She relies on credit cards to pay for everything from supplies to payrolls. Without additional credit, she says, "It is impossible to expand, and I can't hire."

Nearly one-third of small business borrowers report difficulty arranging credit, the National Federation of Independent Businesses says.

By contrast, big businesses, which start reporting their second-quarter earnings this week, have enjoyed easier access to loans and low interest rates.

Analysts expect companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 to report a 42 percent jump in profit by one measure, S&P says. For the current quarter, which ends Sept. 30, they expect a 31 percent rise.

The big companies also benefit from something available to fairly few small businesses: plenty of cash.

In March, cash at S&P 500 companies hit a record $837 billion – about a year and a half's worth of profits. And S&P senior analyst Howard Silverblatt says he expects cash to rise to a new record for the April-to-June quarter when figures are released later this summer.

Yet even as the economy has improved, lending to small businesses has declined. It's dropped from around $710 billion in the second quarter 2008 to less than $670 billion in the first quarter of this year.

The Fed and other regulators have urged banks to step up lending to creditworthy small businesses. Despite the push, such lending is still tight.

The impact on the economy is severe because small businesses tend to drive job growth during recoveries. They employ roughly half of all Americans and account for about 60 percent of job creation, Bernanke said.

And newer small businesses – those less than two years old – are especially vital. Over the past 20 years, these startups accounted for roughly a quarter of all job creation, even though they employed less than 10 percent of the work force, he added.

The Obama administration in early May sent Congress a proposal to create a $30 billion program to unfreeze credit for small businesses. The fund would provide money to small and medium-sized banks to encourage them to lend to small businesses. The legislation has yet to pass the Senate.

Bernanke said it's hard to tell whether the problem is banks refusing to lend to small businesses or a lack of demand from those companies. Each company faces different economic conditions and complex relationships with customers, suppliers and creditors, Bernanke said.

Some lenders say they have restored more traditional standards after a period of lax lending that contributed to the financial crisis.

Several big banks say they're already lending more to small businesses. Bank of America lent $19.4 billion to small and medium-sized businesses in the first three months of 2010, an increase of nearly $3 billion from last year. JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup have pledged to lend more, too.

Combined, though, the dollar amounts are relatively tiny compared with how much banks would lend in a healthy economy, said Robert DeYoung, a finance professor at the University of Kansas.

"These numbers would be dwarfed by the increase in lending after the economy starts recovering, and the economy hasn't really started to recover," DeYoung said.

Banks will be able to increase lending significantly, DeYoung said, only after businesses feel confident enough to take on more debt. Prodding banks to lend before then raises the risk that they'll make bad loans, he said.

"I wish I could conclude this wrap-up with a list of the three or four things we could do to immediately unlock small business lending," Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke said at the conference. "But the problems are numerous and complex, and they will require creativity and persistence to solve."

___

AP Business Writers Bernard Condon and Stevenson Jacobs in New York and Daniel Wagner in Washington contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Big companies are building up cash and are expected to report strong earnings starting this week. Not so for small businesses that can't get loans – or hire freely until they ...
WASHINGTON — Big companies are building up cash and are expected to report strong earnings starting this week. Not so for small businesses that can't get loans – or hire freely until they ...
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04:41 PM on 07/14/2010
I am analyzing the financial effects of a total default by the US government as an alternative to austerity and/or monetary expansion. Comments and suggestions welcome at:

http://wjmc.blogspot.com/2010/07/what-about-default-option.html

Thank you in advance for you participation...
09:23 AM on 07/14/2010
Hello all -- I am looking for public feedback regarding the default option separate from austerity measures or monetary expansion -- the link below outlines the concepts:

http://wjmc.blogspot.com/2010/07/what-about-default-option.html

All comments and feedback most welcome under at the link above, thank you in advance...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
EJavaM07
Doing what no one else will.
11:13 PM on 07/13/2010
Does this article suggest that the banks are betting that small businesses will fail over the short term, so are not willing to bet their money against that perception?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ruolivert
12:09 PM on 07/17/2010
That would seem to be the case. Banks primary concern is making money so if they DON'T do something one would have to assume its because its not a good investment
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04:07 PM on 07/13/2010
Tomorrow tip an iced tea or cold beer to the French as they celebrate Bastille Day,
July 14, 2010.
12:10 PM on 07/13/2010
.

"Bernanke Calls Out Banks For Stiffing Small Business In Favor Of Big Firms"

About as two-faced as it gets, (even in Wall Street Washington)
since Ben is the one who set the Banks up to be able to do this most profitably.
.
11:32 AM on 07/13/2010
ne quick way to solve the national debt problem would be simply to default -- the US taxpayer would be off the hook for $13 trillion in principal -- the US taxpayer would be off the hook for over $400 billion per year in interest payments -- the US government would lose its global borrowing power -- and the banksters would be out of business once and for all -- if you think about it, the American taxpayer has much to gain by a US default on its national debt...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrumpyGrandpa
A '60's liberal who didn't sell out
10:35 AM on 07/13/2010
I have a proposal for Big Ben. Why doesn't he go to Congress and ask for authority to set up a collateral division of the Fed, auditable if that's what it takes to get permission, to give small business loans directly from this subsidiary of the Fed. Would that make the banks howl? And Jim DeMint mess his pants? You bet! That's the point.
The wingnuts would scream socialism, but since the Fed is not technically a branch of the government, it isn't really socialism. Big Ben would have a club that he could use on the banks, big or small, to make them be more equitable in their treatment of small business and even consumers. There's no need to restrict the authority to just small business. God would that put the Repugnicans on the defensive or what? If they dared vote against it, they could be beat over the head with their own bloody arm about being all about loving big banks and big business and against consumers and small business. I think that would work! Or not!
But it sure would scare the Hell out of the Big Banks AND Big Business.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
inthelandoftheblind
Obama wants a strong Middle Class
11:53 AM on 07/13/2010
It seems workable - but what do I know....

The bottom line, it seems to me - is this environment.With so many financially on life support, & many hanging on to money they do have.This feeling of instability hasn't left us, though we're doing better than we might have, given the cratered economy.

The future seems to have the potential for becoming more bleak, or not...we don't know what adjustments may be made down the road...but - the consumers are fewer, & many with money are feeling cautious about spending.

For a bank to extend a loan for a new business, there's the issue of having little confidence that small business loans will be paid back.How many hoping to make it, against all odds, will banks risk their own capital on - (including, taxpayer dollars infusions, of course).
10:27 AM on 07/13/2010
We are witnessing the result of an administration with almost no understanding of the needs of small and mid-sized businesses. There is no one in the administration with any business operation experience, other than some consulting and political deal making positions like Emmanuel during his short stint with an investment firm. Sadly, academic and big institution approaches will not do much to benefit small businesses. They need predictability, low tax rates and a welcoming environment.
10:10 AM on 07/13/2010
Dr Bernanke knows that depression, austerity, looting, riots, and general anarchy are right around the corner...
10:08 AM on 07/13/2010
Dr Bernanke did not call anyone out -- the banksters own the Federal Reserve and Congress -- I'm sure Dr Barnanke will be scolded for his tone by his bankster supervisors...
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humanbeing-rick
Born in the USA 1947
10:00 AM on 07/13/2010
"The Fed does have authority to create programs to increase lending, such as providing low-cost loans to banks." - NO! No more welfare assistance for the banks!!!
The Fed needs to skip level the banks, and offer low-cost loans directly to the small businesses and entrepreneurs that actually create good jobs here in America.
Stop helping out the big banks and their bed-fellows - the big global corporations that have screwed the American workers and our economy.
10:12 AM on 07/13/2010
I agree -- banksters cannot be trusted -- the fact is that all the banksters see depression coming very soon, and so they are looting their treasuries now while they still can -- our nation has already fallen to the banksters and no one can see this reality...
09:18 AM on 07/13/2010
Small business have been squeezed by the likes of PNC, Chase, BOA, etc...they should be ashamed of themselves they got the bailout and aren't willing to put back and help the economy!!
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EJavaM07
Doing what no one else will.
11:18 PM on 07/13/2010
The deal made by our own government did not require them to do anything for us to get this money.

Reminds me of a tune I heard yesterday. "Money for nothin', and your chicks for free."

Bankers theme song.
09:04 AM on 07/13/2010
More scolding, no action. BTW, it appears deficit spending does spur the economy. That's exactly what businesses do when they borrow money to grow and employ more people. You don't have to be a rocket scientist to see this country is headed for the crapper with the likes of Geithner and Summers. Too bad, Obama has turned out to be such a poor leader. A golden opportunity for real change was thrown away.
10:10 AM on 07/13/2010
Geither and Summers both support continued deficit spending. They have both stated that now is not the time to cut spending or to focus on the deficit.
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06:57 AM on 07/13/2010
Far out. Time to go. One last Hume quote...

HumeSkeptic Jan 27, 2009 at 19:36:28
"Call me a terr0rist, but don't call me a Republican."
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03:29 PM on 07/13/2010
Good morning and thanks for last night...you're the best!!!
And a great quote to go out on!!!
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05:57 AM on 07/13/2010
"Hume seemed to have fun doing everything he did.

"I knew him professionally, as a physicist. I know of no other physicist who could scientifically analyze a poem or a song, and who could string together cold scientific facts into poetry. “It’s all about the same thing”, he would say, “It’s all about discoveries – good science, good music, good sex”. And then, he would add, “Unless I am full of_shit.” "

http://southpawbeagle.com/2010/07/12/on-humeskeptic/#comments
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
12:12 PM on 07/13/2010
Thank you for the reminder of what we had and what we lost.