Today I visited the SBA website again, but headed directly to the section providing information from our local Small Business Development Center in Denver. After taking a closer look at the types of loans offered by the SBA, I’m convinced that what I am looking for is a MicroLoan.
The MicroLoan Program was developed to increase the availability of very small loans to prospective small business borrowers. Under this program, the SBA makes funds available to nonprofit intermediaries, who in turn make loans to eligible borrowers in amounts that range from under $100 to a maximum of $25,000. The average loan size is $10,000. Completed applications can usually be processed by the intermediary in less than one week.
The intermediary for our area is the Colorado Enterprise Fund
The mission of Colorado Enterprise Fund (CEF), according to their website, is to provide credit to small businesses that do not have access to loans from commercial sources. Through loans and services, we help entrepreneurs strengthen their businesses, stabilize and increase their incomes, create additional employment and contribute to the economic revitalization of their communities.
CEF lends to businesses anywhere in the State of Colorado and Loan funds may not be used for owner’s salaries, personal expenses, delinquent taxes and certain other purposes.
That’s fine with me since I only desire to update equipment and software.
Loans range from $1k to $250k, rates range from 9% to 14% per year, terms are 7 years, and come with three fees which have NOT been waived by the Recovery Act:
- Loan application fee of $25 per owner or cosigner
- Commitment fee between 1.5% to 5%
- $100 per year technical assistance fee and other fees for document recording, etc.
The Colorado Enterprise Fund states that while good credit is important, CEF recognizes that applicants may have had credit issues in the past. We attempt to be more flexible than a traditional lender when reviewing your credit report.
Good news! Since we have no other delinquencies and the drop in our credit score is clearly related to the short sale of our home in Florida, I can provide a letter of hardship which would hopefully suffice.
I download a loan application and get to work. I am at page 4, under “credit information: when I hit the following question:
Are you currently slow pay in your mortgage and/or vehicle account?
Followed by:
If you presently are delinquent in your mortgage and/or vehicle account you DO NOT QUALIFY for a loan under our program’s guidelines. If you have proof that these accounts are current, please provide supporting information.
TIP! Read through the whole application BEFORE you begin filling it out
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Next, I look into the 7(m) Micro Loan Program (although it feels like a stretch)
The Micro Loan program is for short-term loans up to $25,000. The average Colorado loan is approximately $11,000. Fees and eligibility requirement are similar to those found in the 7(a) program while terms are typically less than three years.
- 39% of these loans go to start-up businesses while the remaining are made to existing businesses with a demonstrated track record.
- 29% of loans made to service industry while the bulk are made to manufacturing, retail and other types of businesses.
I visit the intermediary lender for our area: Colorado Office of Economic Development
I find that these types of loans typically support real estate purchase and rural development (not me), but there is a link on their site for “business loans” which leads me to their recommended SBA Express Loan lender, Innovative Bank. Innovative bank offers another type of loan I had not heard of before called a SOHO Loan.
A SOHO Loan is a lending product developed by Innovative Bank to promote the Small Business Administration’s (SBA) Community Express program to provide financial assistance, capital access, technical and management assistance to the underserved segment of the small business community. SOHO stands for Small Office/Home Office and is geared to small to medium size businesses in all geographic areas of the United States. That sounds more like it!
A SOHO loan offers the potential qualified small business owner financing that ranges from $5,000 up to $50,000 (Community Express minimum loan amount is $25,000). All loans carry an 84-month term, no pre-payment penalty, minimal paperwork, Innovative Bank paid technical assistance, as needed, and quick turnaround time. Variable interest rates are tied to the new Prime Rate published in the Wall Street Journal plus the Innovative Bank spread of 4.75% or 3.75%, depending on the amount of the loan, i.e.,
Loan amount: $10,000
Approximate monthly payment: $156
Variable rate: P + 4.75%
Terms: 84 Months
Packaging fee: $575
SBA Fee: (WAIVED BY RECOVERY ACT) $180
But here’s the catch. To apply, you must go through your local TAP (Technology Advisory Program) representative and guess who that is? The Colorado Enterprise Fund, the program that does not allow you to apply if you have mortgage issues!
Why do you have to work through a TAP representative? According to Innovative’s website “Because the government wants to assist you with start-up business services such as applying for business licenses, permits, etc. and/or where to apply for business services such as loans or checking services. Your TAP will assist you with technical needs, such as accounting, marketing, e-commerce, business planning, computer assistance, etc. and arrange for you to attend workshops. The TAP will also assess your need for other banking products (checking, merchant account, etc.). This service is free of charge.
Groan…
So, here’s where I’m at. It was hard to get psyched about taking out a business loan in the first place, so it’s hard to say I am disappointed. We are cutting back and trying to reduce debt like most everyone in the Country, so borrowing felt completely counterintuitive at first thought.
I have to admit though, all of the publicity behind the “Small Business Incentives”(incentive: an expectation that induces action or motivates effort) did inspire hope in me that maybe this was the time to move forward and invest in my company. That our government was taking into consideration the hard economics times and was stretching out their hand to help. In reality, if you are attempting to finance the purchase of real estate or launch a new business in a low income or rural area…maybe. If you are looking for assistance in troubling economic times…probably not.
What is SAD to me, is I know that we are not alone. When the value of your home drops $250,000 obviously the best strategy is to stay put until the value climbs again, and God alone knows when that will happen. But what if you can’t stay put? What if you have to relocate for a job, like us? The city where our home is located in Florida had the second highest foreclosure rate in the nation in February, with one out of every 65 housing units receiving a foreclosure notice. Two-thirds of the homes sold in the county so far this year have been foreclosed properties. Nope, we are not alone. With so many people backed into a corner, with so many credit scores plummeting, I’m not sure how small business will thrive, but in my case it will NOT be through a government assisted loan. I won’t pursue it any further. The incentive to grow is there, but the old saying ‘where there is a will there is a way”certainly doesn’t apply to SBA loans or the Recovery Act.
What makes me HAPPY is that my decision to not pursue an SBA loan means that I will not be taking on any more debt. I will continue to cut back, scrape and save and when the time is right I will upgrade my equipment using cash.
What makes me CONFUSED is how this incentive is supposed to spark the economy if the majority of small business owners come to the same conclusion. If anything, the new SBA incentives have motivated me to save, not borrow.


