SBA 7(a) loan volume continues to improve as $381,129,000 in SBA 7(a) loans were approved for the week ending March 21st.
This is better than last week which so far had been the best week of the new year.
The positive impacts of these new loans will ripple through the economy as the correlation coefficient between SBA 7(a) loan volume and the economy's gross domestic product is a statistically significant 0.86.
Monday, March 31, 2014
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
SBA Loans Are Good For the Economy
SBA 7(a) loan volume picked up with loan approvals totaling $377,386,000 for the week ending March 14th.
So far this is the best week of the year!
Don't forget that the correlation coefficient between SBA 7(a) loan volume and the economy's gross domestic product is a statistically significant 0.86.
So far this is the best week of the year!
Don't forget that the correlation coefficient between SBA 7(a) loan volume and the economy's gross domestic product is a statistically significant 0.86.
Monday, March 24, 2014
The SBA and nimiety
nimiety
ni-MY-i-tee
Excess or
redundancy.
From Latin nimius
(too much)
_______________________________________________
TIP OF THE WEEK
TIP OF THE WEEK
The perceived
nimiety of SBA rules and regulations is improving.
The elimination
of the Personal Resource Test will be effective, April 21, 2014. Business
owners no longer need to pass a personal resource test that could restrict
high-net worth owners from participating in SBA loan programs.
With the
definition of a small business now at net profits less than $5,000,000 and a SBA
loan size up to $5,000,000, more borrowers are eligible for more financing!
_____________________________________
Indices:
Indices:
PRIME
RATE= 3.25%
SBA
LIBOR Base Rate March 2014 = 3.16%
SBA
Fixed Base Rate March 2014 = 5.31%
________________________________________
SBA 504 Loan Debenture Rate for March
SBA 504 Loan Debenture Rate for March
The
debenture rate is only 3.21% but note rate is 3.26% and the effective yield is
5.289%.
________________________________________________
AHEAD OF THE YIELD CURVE
AHEAD OF THE YIELD CURVE
A
nimiety of proclamations emanated from the Federal Reserve last week at their
meeting on monetary policy.
The
key sentence in the announcement was: "The Committee currently anticipates that,
even after employment and inflation are near mandate-consistent levels, economic
conditions may, for some time, warrant keeping the target federal funds rate
below levels the Committee views as normal in the longer
run."
Near
mandate consistent levels? What does that mean? The Federal Reserve has a
statutory mandate, which by law means it is supposed to foster maximum
employment and price stability. Starting in December 2012, the FOMC said the
federal funds rate would stay low at least as long as unemployment was higher
than 6.5 percent and the outlook for inflation didn’t exceed 2.5 percent. With
the jobless rate at 6.7 percent last month, that guidance was fast becoming
obsolete and the Fed has now dropped any specific reference to the unemployment
rate.
So
how about inflation? The central bank’s preferred gauge of consumer prices
climbed 1.2 percent in the year through February and hasn’t exceeded its 2
percent goal since March 2012.
So
where then are interest rates going?
Eurodollar
futures settle at a three- month lending rate that has averaged about 22 basis
points more than the Fed's target over the past 10
years.
Here
is a summary of what the market expects for Eurodollar futures based upon the
pit-traded prices at the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange:
DEC14- 0.35
DEC15- 1.16
DEC16- 2.29
DEC17- 3.12
DEC18- 3.70
DEC19-
4.12
DEC20-
4.42
What
does all this mean?
I
don’t know.
Traders
are betting the Federal Reserve won’t raise interest rates any time
soon.
__________________________________________
OFF BASE
OFF BASE
There
is no nimiety of Federal holidays.
According
to the Federal Reserve, here are our remaining holidays for
2014:
Memorial
Day May 26
Independence Day July 4
Labor Day September 1
Columbus Day October 13
Veterans Day November 11
Thanksgiving Day November 27
Christmas Day December 25
Independence Day July 4
Labor Day September 1
Columbus Day October 13
Veterans Day November 11
Thanksgiving Day November 27
Christmas Day December 25
Obviously
another holiday needs to be inserted somewhere.
One
possible candidate could be Opening Day for Major League Baseball which is next
week (the Dodgers in Australia don’t count). Of course
that would take all the fun out of playing hooky.
By
the way, playing hooky apparently developed from the colloquial phrase
"hooky-crooky" common in the early 19th century, which meant "dishonest or
underhanded." The connection between the two phrases becomes clearer when we
recall that to "play hooky" properly, one had to pretend to go to school.
Hooky-crooky," came from "by hook or by crook," meaning "by any means or
tactic, fair or foul." Although this phrase first occurs in print way back in
1380 and is still common today, no one is sure of what the hook and crook were.
One theory is that while tenants on English manors were not allowed to cut trees
for firewood, the lord of the manor permitted them to have all the branches they
could pull down with a shepherd's crook or a curved knife on a pole called a
"hook."
Enough
of this nimiety.
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
SBA 504 Loan Debenture Rate for March
SBA 504 Loan Debenture Rate for March
The debenture rate is only 3.21% but note rate is 3.26% and the effective yield is 5.289%.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
SBA Loans Are Good For the Economy
The month of March began slowly for SBA lenders and borrowers as only $285,390,000 in SBA 7(a) loans were approved for the week ending March 7th.
Total SBA 7(a) loan approvals for the entire month of February were $1,323,495,000 compared to January's $1,193,005. Forth quarter 2013 loan approvals totaled $3,989,696,000.
Keep in mind that the correlation coefficient between SBA 7(a) loan approvals and our economy's Gross Domestic Product is a statistically significant 0.86.
Total SBA 7(a) loan approvals for the entire month of February were $1,323,495,000 compared to January's $1,193,005. Forth quarter 2013 loan approvals totaled $3,989,696,000.
Keep in mind that the correlation coefficient between SBA 7(a) loan approvals and our economy's Gross Domestic Product is a statistically significant 0.86.
Monday, March 10, 2014
The SBA and concinnity
concinnity
kuhn-SIN-i-tee
A harmonious
arrangement of various parts.
From Latin
concinnare (to put in order) and concinnus (skillfully put
together)
_______________________________________________
TIP OF THE WEEK
TIP OF THE WEEK
The concinnity of
SBA lending continues as the Personal Resources Test has been eliminated.
SBA applicants
with excess personal resources had been required to utilize those assets first
prior to SBA financial assistance.
A formal
announcement from SBA is on the way.
_____________________________________
Indices:
Indices:
PRIME
RATE= 3.25%
SBA LIBOR Base Rate March 2014 = 3.16%
SBA Fixed Base Rate March 2014 = 5.31%
SBA LIBOR Base Rate March 2014 = 3.16%
SBA Fixed Base Rate March 2014 = 5.31%
________________________________________
SBA 504 Debenture Rate for February
The
debenture rate is only 3.23% but note rate is 3.28% and the effective yield is
5.309%.
________________________________________________
AHEAD OF THE YIELD CURVE
AHEAD OF THE YIELD CURVE
Much
like Goldilock’s porridge being neither too hot nor too cold, the Federal
Reserve seeks a comforting concinnity between inflation and
unemployment.
It
has said that it will keep its short-term interest rate near zero "well past"
when unemployment reaches 6.5 percent, especially with inflation well below the
Fed's 2% target.
The
unemployment rate has bumped back up to 6.7 percent.
But
the job market actually rebounded from a two-month slump in February as
employers added 175,000 jobs. Employment gains for December and January were
revised up by a total 25,000. December's were revised to 84,000 from 75,000 and
January's to 129,000 from 113,000.
Despite
the solid payroll advances, the unemployment rate ticked up. The main reason
for the increase in the unemployment rate was a surge in the labor force — the
number of people working or looking for work. The labor force jumped by more
than half a million people in February. After seeing many months of people
giving up looking for work, it could be an indication that more people are
coming off the sidelines and back into the labor force. Employment is now 0.5%
below the pre-recession peak (666 thousand fewer total jobs). Private employment
is now just 129 thousand below the previous peak in January of
2008.
The
Federal Open Market Committee meets March 18-19. Keep your eyes and ears open
to the 6.5% unemployment rate threshold in its March statement as it is not a
sufficient or particularly informative measure of labor market slack and
therefore not the best guidepost for monetary
policy.
Also
keep your eyes and ears open for this week’s sale of 30 year Treasury
bonds.
Last
month the Treasury Department sold $16 billion of 30-year bonds at a high yield
of 3.690%. January’s auction of $13 billion of 30 year Treasury bonds sold at a
yield of 3.899% compared to December’s 3.90%. In November the 30 year Treasury
bonds drew a yield of 3.81% while in October it was
3.758%.
Here
is what the 30 year Treasury bond has been doing and this week’s interesting
little table:
2001-
5.49
2002-
5.43
2003-
ND
2004-
ND
2005-
ND
2006-
4.91
2007-
4.84
2008-
4.18
2009-
3.89
2010-
4.61
2011-
2.89
2012-
2.77
2013-
3.25
The
30 year Treasury bond is currently at 3.72 percent.
What
does all this mean?
I
don’t know.
The
slope of the yield curve—the difference between the yields on short- and
long-term maturity bonds—has achieved some notoriety as a simple forecaster of
economic growth. The rule of thumb is that an inverted yield curve (short
rates above long rates) indicates a recession in about a year while a flat curve
indicates weak growth and a steep curve indicates strong
growth.
According
to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland the steeper slope had a negligible
impact on projected future growth. Projecting forward using past values of the
treasury yield spread and GDP growth suggests that real GDP will grow at about a
1.3 percentage rate over the next year. According to the Bureau of Economic
Analysis, GDP for all of 2013 expanded at a 1.9 percentage
rate.
__________________________________________
OFF BASE
OFF BASE
Our
seasonal concinnity is always disrupted by daylight saving time.
This
barbaric torture began with the Germans during World War I to alleviate
hardships from wartime coal shortages and air raid blackouts. The
United
States adopted it in 1918 as a result of our
joining in on the war. Daylight saving time was repealed in the
United
States after the war ended in 1919. During
World War II, Congress enacted the War Time Act with year round daylight saving
time. This remained in effect until after the end of the war when daylight
saving time was once again repealed.
With
the escalation of the war in Vietnam , politicians naturally
thought we needed to once again have daylight saving time. The U.S.
federal Uniform Time Act became law on April 13, 1966 and it mandated that
daylight saving time begin nationwide on the last Sunday in April and end on the
last Sunday in October, effective in 1967.
In
1987, the Federal Fire Prevention and Control Act of 1986 moved the beginning of
daylight saving time to the first Sunday in April. Its primary support came
from both of the Senators from Idaho based on the premise that during daylight
saving time fast-food restaurants sell more French fries, which are made from
Idaho potatoes. Not enough French fries were being eaten so in 2007, daylight
saving time was extended another four to five weeks, from the second Sunday of
March to the first Sunday of November.
Since
daylight saving time moves sunrise one hour later by the clock, late sunrise
times become a problem when daylight saving time is observed either too far
before the vernal equinox or too far after the autumnal
equinox.
The
vernal equinox, the first day of Spring, is not until March
20th.
Friday, March 7, 2014
SBA Loans Are Good For the Economy
February ended with SBA 7(a) loan approvals totaling $392,982,000 for the last week of the month. This is nice bump up from the $280,012,000 in SBA 7(a) loans for the week ending February 21th and the $302,053,000 in SBA 7(a) loan approvals for the prior week.
Total SBA 7(a) loan approvals for the entire month were $1,323,495,000 in February compared to January's $1,193,005.
Keep in mind that the correlation coefficient between SBA 7(a) loan approvals and our economy's Gross Domestic Product is a statistically significant 0.86.
Total SBA 7(a) loan approvals for the entire month were $1,323,495,000 in February compared to January's $1,193,005.
Keep in mind that the correlation coefficient between SBA 7(a) loan approvals and our economy's Gross Domestic Product is a statistically significant 0.86.
Thursday, March 6, 2014
SBA 7(a) Loan Rate Update
Indices:
PRIME RATE= 3.25%
SBA LIBOR Base Rate March 2014 = 3.16%
SBA Fixed Base Rate March 2014 = 5.31%
PRIME RATE= 3.25%
SBA LIBOR Base Rate March 2014 = 3.16%
SBA Fixed Base Rate March 2014 = 5.31%
Lenders can charge up to 2.75% over these indices.
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