April 3rd: SHIT GOT REAL, FOR REAL.
The PPP rollout has become its own disaster.
According to Lenders we’ve spoken to and an article in yesterday afternoon’s NYTimes.com, as of yesterday evening SBA had not provided full guidance to Lenders on how to underwrite and approve PPP loans.
One Lender said SBA had provided “minimal” guidance by advising Lenders to accept three documents and process and approve the loans.
The three documents are:
1. Payroll records
2. Proof the business existed and conducted business last year
3. Loan Application (with a certification of needing the funds)
This Lender advised us that his company has decided to defer acting on PPP lending until they receive full and detailed guidance from SBA.
(The following reflects the opinions of Linda Rey and Trevor Curran at Aurora Consulting)
You should be aware that your local banks, especially on the smaller scale, may make their strategic decisions in the same fashion. Or they may decide to lend under PPP on a limited scale, such as to existing business customers. (According to the NYTimes.com article, CHASE stated it would only lend under PPP to customers with a business checking account as of February 2020)
The reason Lenders may hesitate is the concern that, with this minimal guidance, should they lend under PPP and then later a loan becomes a default situation, the SBA and the Federal Government may take that Lender to task for having made a “bad” loan.
If you think that, given the current circumstances, this is unreasonable or unrealistic, then you are living in a dream world; and this is why.
Government lending programs, notoriously the FHA (Federal Housing Administration) have a long history of holding lenders accountable for defaulted loans even when the Lender made the loans following the Government guidelines.
Lenders are right to be wary about venturing out on what they perceive to be rocky terrain.
Which leads us to our advice to all of you today: SLOW DOWN. We have stated this same advice for the past ten days. This situation is Ever-Evolving.
There is no “quick fix” although the press coverage and chest-beating from Government officials may make it seem that way. This is the lending world in which we at Aurora Consulting work.
Lenders are cautious, conservative and careful. Absent granite-like assurances and guidance from the SBA, Lenders will behave like the profit-driven and careful-lending organizations they are: they may “wait and see” before jumping on the PPP bandwagon.
In three conversations with CPA’s yesterday, we learned that many of their clients are calling them up, inquiring about EIDL and PPP and asking, “When do I get my FREE money?”
Neither of these loan programs are “FREE” money. These are LOANS. And they must be repaid.
SLOW DOWN.
Decision-making out of panic will not truly help your business survive. Ask yourself this question: DO I WANT TO TAKE ON DEBT FOR MY BUSINESS?
Eliminate the “survival” component. Focus on the DEBT question. Because the monies from these programs, with the exception of the EIDL $10k Grant/Advance, must be repaid.
Continuing our mission to provide clear and accurate information, we will present more about PPP as it develops. We’re receiving communications from Lenders stating, in oblique terms, their complete and utter confusion and lack of detailed information about how to properly apply for a PPP loan.
What we’re doing today here at Aurora Consulting.
We’ve decided that, considering the mad rush we’ve worked in for the past ten days helping clients and friends apply for EIDL financing, and other reading, researching, responding-to, CARES Act information and daily updates, well, we’ve decided we’re going to chill out today.
Also, we know from experience that EVERYONE will bombard Lenders with PPP requests today. And the Lenders don’t actually know anything. YOU READ THAT RIGHT.
Even those Lenders accepting applications will be bombarded. We recommend you do the same, if possible, and chill out. If you can’t do that, and you want to concentrate on thinking about your business, then do this:
Conduct a matter-of-fact, honest-to-goodness, totally honest with yourself and realistic assessment of the COVID-19 situation and your business’ prospects over the next three, six, and twelve months. Maybe today is a good day to decide if and how you will continue.
For example, here at Aurora Consulting, we’ve used this crisis as a time to look down from 10,000 feet, survey the landscape, and make cold and difficult, but honest, decisions about how we want to continue.
We’ve begun shifting our entire business strategy over the past ten days. Going forward, we’re going to conduct our business in a radically different fashion.
Take a deep breath. Ask yourself the hard questions. Or…pick a couple of great movies, and chill out.
Aurora Consulting cannot charge a consulting fee for advice with regards to CARES Act provisions for the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) provided through SBA Approved Lenders. Aurora Consulting is a Broker, not a Lender. We do not make loans or loan approval decisions. All loans placed through third party providers. Aurora Consulting cannot guarantee approvals on any financing requests.
SBA has updated their portal for business owners to upload required documents directly to the SBA to meet requirements for reconsideration of their DECLINED EIDL LOAN.
THIS IS GREAT NEWS (so far).
READ UPDATE HERE for when you’re filing for a reconsideration.