Monday, November 18, 2024

The SBA and PROtreptic

protreptic

pro·trep·tic

an utterance (such as a speech) designed to instruct and persuade from the Greek word protreptikos, which is derived from protrepein, meaning "to turn forward" or "to urge on".

 

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PROTREPTIC OF THE WEEK

Roughly 21% of all SBA 7(a) loans were utilized for business acquisitions.    A growing portion of those are for Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOP).

 

A SSBCI guarantee can also be used on those ESOP deals that are too big for a 7(a) loan.   Loan amounts can go up to $20,000,000.

 

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Indices:

PRIME RATE= 7.75%

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SBA 504 Loan Debenture Rate for NOVEMBER

 

For 20 year debentures, the debenture rate is only 5.01% but note rate is 5.08277% and the effective yield is 6.395%.

For 25 year debentures, the debenture rate is only 5.01% but note rate is 5.06275% and the effective yield is 6.325%.

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AHEAD OF THE YIELD CURVE

 

The Federal Reserve no longer has confidence.

 

Its last protreptic on monetary policy left out any mention of the "greater confidence" that the FOMC had been seeking in its fight against inflation.

 

The statement said, "The Committee judges that the risks to achieving its employment and inflation goals are roughly in balance”.

 

Previously it had stated “The Committee has gained greater confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2 percent, and judges that the risks to achieving its employment and inflation goals are roughly in balance.”

 

For inflation, the Federal Reserve looks closely at both industrial production and capacity utilization for prospicient prognostications.

 

The Federal Reserve watches this report closely to see if production constraints are threatening to cause inflationary pressures.

 

Normally the Fed does not feel there are inflationary pressures until the capacity utilization rate is about 82%.

 

Here is what capacity utilization has been doing and this week interesting little table of data:

 

2007- 81.5

2008- 79.9

2009- 66.9

2010- 74.8

2011- 76.7

2012- 79.0

2013- 77.8

2014- 78.8

2015- 76.5

2016- 75.4

2017- 76.2

2018- 78.5

2019- 79.7

2020- 74.5

2021- 76.4

2022- 80.0

2023- 78.5

 

What does all this mean?

 

I don’t know.

 

Last week it was reported capacity utilization moved down to 77.1 percent in October but that drop might be an outlier.

 

The Boeing strike has since been settled and hurricane effects should be more-or-less gone from the data in November.

 

Treasury yields turned higher Friday morning with indications that the Federal Reserve is not looking to cut rates quickly.

 

The November auction of 30 year treasury bonds ended with the high yield awarded at 4.608 percent versus 4.389 percent a month ago and 4.015 percent two months ago.

 

The yield on the 30-year Treasury was 4.639% on Friday, up 5 basis points from 4.589% on Thursday.

 

The long end of the yield curve prognosticates inflationary expectations and ultimately market rate expectations.

 

 

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OFF BASE

 

Thanksgiving is almost here.    The Friday after Thanksgiving however is NOT a federal holiday.

 

Many people mistakenly think it’s because banks can’t be closed more than 3 days straight.

 

The Bank Holiday of 1933 shut down the American banking system.    For an entire week, Americans would have no access to banks or banking services. They could not withdraw or transfer their money, nor could they make deposits.

 

The crisis had been a long time coming. In the three years leading up to it thousands of banks had failed as bank panics proliferated.

 

The Emergency Banking Act of 1933 aimed at restoring public confidence in the nation’s financial system after the weeklong bank holiday.   It promised to not let banks be closed for extended periods.

 

When banks reopened, it was common to see long lines of customers returning their stashed cash to their bank accounts.  Within two weeks the public had redeposited about two-thirds of this cash.

 

Currently there is no law requiring banks to not be closed more than 3 days.