President Obama is of the view this Wednesday that:
“There’s still too little credit flowing to our small businesses”
The measures, announced by Mr. Obama at a small records storage company in Maryland, would allow smaller community banks to borrow at low rates from the Treasury Department’s Troubled Asset Relief Program. It would also raise the loan caps on several popular Small Business Administration programs. Under the administration plan, banks with less than $1 billion in assets could borrow from the program at a lower interest rate than financial institutions are required to pay.
In exchange, banks must demonstrate how they would increase lending to small businesses and follow up with quarterly reports. According to the White House, most business loans by the community banks that are eligible for the new rules are made to small businesses. In addition, community groups that lend to small businesses in low-income areas under a Treasury Department program will be able to borrow relief money at just 2 percent annually for eight years. The proposal as described Wednesday caps the infusions at $20 million.
Gene Sperling, senior counselor to Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, said in an interview that the small institutions would be subject to the same compensation rules as any other relief recipient but “for these smaller community banks, the executive bonus restrictions will usually affect only their single most highly compensated employee.” Read more…

























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