FREE SUBSCRIPTION Includes: The Advisor Daily eBlast + Exclusive Content + Professional Network Membership: JOIN NOW LOGIN
Skip Navigation LinksHome / Blogs / Read Blog

Print

PayNet: U.S. Small Business Lending Pauses in August

October 01, 2014, 06:35 AM
By
Topic: Economy

The August release of the Thomson Reuters/PayNet Small Business Lending Index (SBLI), which is a leading economic indicator of GDP, declined 1% compared to August 2013. The SBLI decreased 10% from 127.5 in July 2014 to 114.5 in August 2014 signaling small businesses are temporarily full of new debt.

“This release is not a surprise given the strong growth in investment by small businesses over the past several months,” states William Phelan, president of PayNet.  “Keeping up a double-digit investment rate could actually compromise the expansion phase of this business cycle.”

Although ticking up, credit risk remains at an unusually low rate for this business cycle.  The Thomson Reuters/PayNet Small Business Delinquency Index (SBDI) 31-90 days past due increased for the fourth consecutive month, up from 1.25% in July 2014 to 1.27% in August 2014.  Compared to one year ago when delinquency was 1.16%, the SBDI is up 9%. All segments (except Retail) saw month-over-month increases ranging from 1 basis point to 3 basis points.

The SBDI 91-180 days past due increased to 0.31% from July 2014 to August 2014. Compared to one year ago, delinquency is up 9%, the fourth consecutive month of year-over-year increases.

“At face value, this report appears to be a setback for small business and the economy.  Although we don’t know if this is the start of a correction, the data tells us small businesses are making measured investment. This measured investment with low credit risk helps extend the low risk expansion phase of this business cycle,” Phelan noted.

 

Comments From Our Members

You must be an Equipment Finance Advisor member to post comments. Login or Join Now.