Showing posts with label Loan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Loan. Show all posts

9.2.12

Government and banks reached record housing settlement of more than $26 billion

State and federal government officials on Thursday announced a record housing settlement of more than $26 billion with five of the country's biggest banks over foreclosure abuses after more than a year of negotiations. The deal is expected to help more than one million U.S. homeowners.

For more than a year state attorneys-general and federal officials have been in discussions with banks over the robo-signing crisis - the practice of assigning bank employees to rapidly approve numerous foreclosures with only cursory glances at the glut of paperwork to determine if all the documents are in order. In the end, 49 states participated in the settlement, including California and New York which had previously held out for a better deal.

The settlement is with five big banks: Bank of America Corp., J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Inc., Wells Fargo & Co., and Ally Financial Inc., the company formerly known as GMAC.

Of the $26 billion in the deal with the five banks, $17 billion must be spent by the banks to assist struggling homeowners. Of that amount, 60% must be employed to reduce the amount owed by troubled borrowers, known as principal reduction. The amount must be spent within three years, or banks will need to make cash payments to regulators.

11.8.10

Micro credit supports under-served markets

The idea of micro lending, sometimes called micro-finance, is more typically associated with loans in amounts as little as $25, disbursed to impoverished people in developing countries, ideally helping them to generate their own income to climb out of poverty.

But more recently, microcredit has become a mainstream practice in the U.S., and even though the average Small Business Administration (SBA) microloan size is $13,000, the SBA's program shares a similar mission as traditional microloan programs.

While the microloan program is open to all entrepreneurs, the program especially supports underserved markets. This includes borrowers with little or no credit history, low-income borrowers, and women and minority entrepreneurs who generally don't qualify for conventional loans or larger SBA guaranteed loans, said Pravina Raghavan, director of the SBA's New York District Office

Most banks, large or small, do not bother granting business loans of less than $50,000 because there’s not enough profit to balance the risk. By contrast, microfinance programs in the United States typically lend $35,000 or less to small businesses with five or fewer employees. They charge more than traditional banks, of course, with interest rates ranging from 5 to 18 percent.

When President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act into law in February 2009 to create jobs and promote spending, the law included $56.1 million for microloans for small businesses, to be doled out through the SBA through September.

Targeted toward start-up, newly-established, or growing small businesses, the microloans are short-term loans up to $35,000 each for working capital or inventory and equipment purchases. The intermediary lenders who distribute the loans can choose to lend more than that limit.

Read the full article of Microloans help small businesses on dLoewi Consulting.