Small business lending continued its blistering pace in August, according to the latest Strategic Insights Report from PayNet, the leading provider of small business credit data and analysis.
The Thomson Reuters / PayNet Small Business Lending Index (SBLI) seasonally adjusted originations increased 7 percent from 145.1 in July 2018 to 154.7 in August 2018, its second-highest reading ever. Year-over-year, the index is up 16 percent, marking its 11th consecutive increase over the prior year and the fourth double-digit year-over-year gain in the last five months. The rolling three-month index at 148.3 is relatively flat compared to July 2018 but is up 12 percent on the year.
“The rapid pace of small business investment we reported last month continues in this month’s release,” said PayNet, Inc., President William Phelan. “Recent gains in the SBLI are echoed by the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) Small Business Optimism Index, which climbed to a record high in August as the net share of small business owners planning to increase inventories in the next three to six months reached its highest level since 2005. All this is occurring against the backdrop of improved financial health, as PayNet’s data suggest that small businesses are not overextended and that financial stress remains muted. As a result, credit conditions for lenders are particularly healthy right now.”
The SBLI remained above 140 for the eighth consecutive month. The majority of industries experienced lending growth on an annual basis in August, led by Transportation & Warehousing (+20.4 percent Y/Y) and Mining (+9.7 percent Y/Y). Lending in Arts & Entertainment (+4.6 percent Y/Y) climbed to an all-time high in August, and more than half of industries achieved index readings in the top 25th percentile of all readings since 2005. Construction (+8.0 percent Y/Y) saw its strongest annual growth since November 2016 (despite weakening residential investment) due to strong investment in commercial and industrial structures. Regionally, lending increased across all 10 of the largest states in August, continuing the widespread expansion seen in July. On an annual basis, regional growth was led by Texas (+15.3 percent Y/Y), Illinois (+12.3 percent Y/Y), North Carolina (+9.9 percent Y/Y) and Michigan (+9.4 percent Y/Y) — each of which saw lending reach record highs in August. Meanwhile, Pennsylvania (+7.9 percent Y/Y) and New York (+6.2 percent Y/Y) experienced their fastest year-over-year growth since mid-2015.
The Thomson Reuters/PayNet Small Business Delinquency Index (SBDI) showing loans 31-90 days past due edged down one basis point to 1.40 percent in August, but remains seven basis points above its year-ago level. Year-over-year growth in delinquencies was a mixed bag, with half of the major industries seeing increases and half experiencing declines or holding steady. Notably, Retail delinquencies fell on an annual basis for the first time in over two years (-2bp Y/Y). Seven of the largest states saw delinquencies rise compared to year-ago levels, with three posting double-digit increases: Florida (+28bp Y/Y), Georgia (+25bp Y/Y) and Ohio (+17bp Y/Y).
Compared to July, the Thomson Reuters/PayNet Small Business Default Index (SBDFI) ticked up two basis points to 1.85 percent in August, but held steady on a year-over-year basis. The majority of industries experienced a decline in defaults on an annual basis, led by Transportation & Warehousing (-147bp Y/Y) and Mining (-114bp Y/Y). Meanwhile, Finance (-14bp Y/Y) posted its fifth straight double-digit annual decrease, and Education (-14bp Y/Y) saw its fifth consecutive decline on an annual basis after increasing in each of the prior 16 months. Regionally, half of the ten largest states experienced declines in defaults on the year, with four seeing double-digit decreases: Texas (-31bp Y/Y), Illinois (-27bp Y/Y), New York (-22bp Y/Y), and Michigan (-14bp Y/Y). All ten of the largest states remain more than 300 basis points below historic highs.
“This winning streak for private companies is marked by exceptionally robust investment at low risk, signaling unusually good conditions for Main Street and commercial lending,” added Phelan. “Private businesses are in good shape financially and see business opportunity in taking risks. Lenders are finding increased demand for credit while loss provisions remain stable. While nothing on the horizon shows rising credit risks now, the additional money Main Street is putting to work will likely result in increased delinquencies as investment projects mature.”