Community Advantage Pilot Program, 67433-67435 [2012-27334]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 218 / Friday, November 9, 2012 / Notices
Electronic Comments
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml); or
• Send an email to rulecomments@sec.gov. Please include File
Number SR–NYSE–2012–56 on the
subject line.
Community Advantage Pilot Program
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street NE., Washington, DC
20549–1090.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
All submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NYSE–2012–56. This file
number should be included on the
subject line if email is used. To help the
Commission process and review your
comments more efficiently, please use
only one method. The Commission will
post all comments on the Commission’s
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro.shtml). Copies of the
submission, all subsequent
amendments, all written statements
with respect to the proposed rule
change that are filed with the
Commission, and all written
communications relating to the
proposed rule change between the
Commission and any person, other than
those that may be withheld from the
public in accordance with the
provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552, will be
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F Street NE.,
Washington, DC 20549, on official
business days between the hours of
10:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Copies of the
filing also will be available for
inspection and copying at the principal
office of the Exchange. All comments
received will be posted without change;
the Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly. All submissions
should refer to File Number SR–NYSE–
2012–56 and should be submitted on or
before November 30, 2012.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.8
Kevin M. O’Neill,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012–27353 Filed 11–8–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:34 Nov 08, 2012
The Community Advantage
(‘‘CA’’) Pilot Program is a pilot program
to increase SBA-guaranteed loans to
small businesses in underserved areas.
SBA continues to refine and improve
the design of the Community Advantage
Pilot Program. To support SBA’s
commitment to expanding access to
capital for small businesses and
entrepreneurs in underserved markets,
SBA is issuing this Notice to extend the
term of the CA Pilot Program, to modify
the loan loss reserve requirements for
CA loans, and to revise other program
requirements, including certain of the
regulatory waivers.
DATES: Effective Date: The changes to
the CA Pilot Program identified in this
Notice will be effective November 9,
2012, and the CA Pilot Program will
remain in effect until March 15, 2017.
Comment Date: Comments must be
received on or before January 8, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by SBA docket number SBA–
2012–0016 by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Community Advantage Pilot
Program Comments—Office of Financial
Assistance, U.S. Small Business
Administration, 409 Third Street SW.,
Suite 8300, Washington, DC 20416.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Grady B.
Hedgespeth, Director, Office of
Financial Assistance, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 Third
Street SW., Washington, DC 20416.
SBA will post all comments on
www.regulations.gov. If you wish to
submit confidential business
information (CBI) as defined in the User
Notice at www.regulations.gov, please
submit the information to Grady B.
Hedgespeth, Director, Office of
Financial Assistance, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 Third
Street SW., Washington, DC 20416, or
send an email to
communityadvantage@sba.gov.
Highlight the information that you
consider to be CBI and explain why you
believe SBA should hold this
information as confidential. SBA will
review the information and make the
final determination whether it will
publish the information.
SUMMARY:
Paper Comments
8 17
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Notice of extension of and
changes to Community Advantage Pilot
Program and request for comments.
AGENCY:
Jkt 229001
PO 00000
Frm 00105
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
67433
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Grady B. Hedgespeth, Director, Office of
Financial Assistance, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 Third
Street SW., Washington DC 20416; (202)
205–7562; grady.hedgespeth@sba.gov.
For information regarding revisions to
the loan loss reserve requirements,
contact Brent Ciurlino, Director, Office
of Credit Risk Management, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 Third
Street SW., Washington DC 20416; (202)
205–6538; brent.ciurlino@sba.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Background
On February 18, 2011, SBA issued a
notice and request for comments
introducing the CA Pilot Program (76 FR
9626). The CA Pilot Program was
introduced to increase the number of
SBA-guaranteed loans made to small
businesses in underserved markets. The
February 18, 2011 notice provided an
overview of the CA Pilot Program
requirements and, pursuant to the
authority provided to SBA under 13
CFR 120.3 to suspend, modify or waive
certain regulations in establishing and
testing pilot loan initiatives, SBA
modified or waived as appropriate
certain regulations which otherwise
apply to 7(a) loans for the CA Pilot
Program. On September 12, 2011, SBA
issued a second notice modifying
certain of those regulatory waivers in
order to permit Community Advantage
Lenders (‘‘CA Lenders’’) to pledge loans
made under the CA Pilot Program (‘‘CA
loans’’) as collateral for certain lender
financings approved by SBA. (76 FR
56262).
SBA continues to refine and improve
the design of the CA Pilot Program and,
on February 8, 2012, SBA issued a third
notice revising certain program
requirements in order to, among other
things, change the maximum allowable
interest rate for CA loans and permit CA
Lenders to contract with Lender Service
Providers. (77 FR 6619). To further
support SBA’s commitment to
expanding access to capital for small
businesses and entrepreneurs in
underserved markets, SBA is issuing
this fourth notice to further revise
program requirements as described
more fully below.
2. Comments
Although the extension of and
changes to the CA Pilot Program will be
effective November 9, 2012, comments
are solicited from interested members of
the public on all aspects of the CA Pilot
Program. Comments must be submitted
on or before the deadline for comments
listed in the DATES section. The SBA
will consider these comments and the
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
09NON1
67434
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 218 / Friday, November 9, 2012 / Notices
need for making any revisions as a
result of these comments.
3. Changes to the Community
Advantage Pilot Program
Extension of the CA Pilot Program
The CA Pilot Program is currently set
to expire on March 15, 2014. It was
anticipated that this would be sufficient
time to evaluate whether the CA Pilot
Program was succeeding in expanding
access to capital to small businesses in
underserved markets and for SBA to
determine whether to take the necessary
steps to make the program permanent.
In response to comments received from
prospective applicants to the CA Pilot
Program, SBA has made significant
program modifications to increase the
overall interest and participation in the
program. However, CA Lenders have not
had enough time to allow the program
to gain the traction necessary to
adequately measure whether the goals of
the CA Pilot Program are being met. For
these reasons and due to the significant
investment in time and resources that is
necessary to become a CA Lender, SBA
is extending the CA Pilot Program
through March 15, 2017.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Fidelity Insurance Requirement
When a CA Lender is approved to
participate in the CA Pilot Program it is
identified as either a Small Business
Lending Company (SBLC) or a NonFederally Regulated Lender (NFRL),
depending on whether the lender is
subject to regulation by a State.
Accordingly, all CA Lenders are SBA
Supervised Lenders, as that term is
defined in 13 CFR 120.10, and are
subject to all regulations applicable to
such lenders unless specifically waived
or modified in the regulatory waiver
section of the notices identified above.
Agency regulations at 13 CFR
120.470(e) require an SBLC to ‘‘maintain
a Brokers Blanket Bond, Standard Form
14, or Financing Companies Blanket
Bond, Standard Form 15, or such other
form of coverage as SBA may approve,
in a minimum amount of $2,000,000
executed by a surety holding a
certificate of authority from the
Secretary of the Treasury pursuant to 31
U.S.C. 9304–9308.’’ SBA believes that
this amount of coverage is unnecessary
for most CA Lenders because the
maximum amount of any one CA loan
(currently $250,000) is significantly less
than the maximum amount of any one
7(a) loan (currently $5,000,000).
Therefore, SBA is modifying the
regulation at 13 CFR 120.470(e) to
reduce the minimum amount of
coverage to $500,000 for CA Lenders
identified as SBLCs with outstanding
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:34 Nov 08, 2012
Jkt 229001
SBA guarantee exposure of $20 million
or less. CA Lenders with outstanding
SBA guarantee exposure of more than
$20 million must maintain fidelity
insurance coverage in a minimum
amount of $2,000,000. SBLCs that are
not CA Lenders must comply with the
insurance requirement in the regulation.
Secondary Market Access
SBA is revising the approval process
concerning secondary market access for
CA Lenders. In the February 8, 2012
notice SBA modified the requirements
for CA Lenders to sell loans in the
secondary market by allowing CA
Lenders to request authority ‘‘either at
the time of application or after one year
of participation.’’ (77 FR 6619). SBA is
revising this requirement to allow a CA
Lender to request access to the
secondary market with its application to
participate in the CA Pilot or at any time
thereafter. If authority is not awarded as
a result of the first request, the CA
Lender should resolve any weakness or
deficiency indicated as reasons for
rejection for secondary market authority
before submitting a request for
reconsideration.
Loan Loss Reserve Requirements
CA Lenders are required to create and
maintain a separate Loan Loss Reserve
Account (LLRA) to cover potential
losses arising from defaulted CA loans.
In the February 18, 2011 Federal
Register Notice introducing the CA Pilot
Program (76 FR 9626), SBA required all
CA Lenders to create and maintain the
LLRA with a reserve amount equal to 15
percent of the outstanding amount of
the unguaranteed portion of a CA
Lender’s CA loan portfolio. This level of
loan loss reserve was based on the SBA
Microloan Program’s loan loss reserve
requirements. Upon further review,
however, SBA believes that the
Microloan Program is not an appropriate
comparison for the CA Pilot Program
because the maximum loan size in the
Microloan Program is $50,000,
compared to a maximum loan size of
$250,000 permitted in the CA Pilot
Program. The United States Department
of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) Intermediary
Relending Program for loans in
underserved rural areas, which has a
maximum loan size of $250,000,
requires a 6% cash reserve. (7 CFR
4274.332(b)(3)). SBA’s Intermediary
Lending Pilot Program, which has a
maximum loan size of $200,000,
requires a 5% cash reserve. (13 CFR
109.350). In addition, larger commercial
lenders that provide warehouse lines of
credit to non-profit, mission-oriented
lenders for loans to small businesses
typically require a reserve rate of 5% for
PO 00000
Frm 00106
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
their riskier credits. Finally, CA Lenders
must also establish an additional reserve
for the guaranteed portion of loans sold
into the secondary market because
secondary market loan sales create a
direct risk to SBA. The total cash
reserve required for CA Lenders needs
to be at a level that does not provide a
significant disincentive for CA Lenders
to participate in the program. Therefore,
SBA is revising the reserve requirement
to permit CA Lenders to fund and
maintain the LLRA with an amount
equal to 5% of the outstanding amount
of the unguaranteed portion of the CA
Lender’s CA loan portfolio. CA Lenders
must deposit this required reserve
amount in the LLRA no later than 45
days after the date of each CA loan
disbursement. In order to ensure that
the 5% reserve is adequate for each
individual CA Lender, OCRM will
review asset quality for each CA Lender
as a part of the quarterly review process.
This will include reviewing current
delinquency and default rates, current
and projected purchase rates, and risk
rating for each lender. OCRM will also
review compliance with the cash
reserve requirements, including
examination of bank statements to
ensure that the reserve is adequately
funded. OCRM reserves the right to
increase this level in its discretion. The
additional reserve requirement for loans
sold on the secondary market is
described in the next paragraph.
On February 8, 2012, SBA published
a notice in the Federal Register that
made changes to certain CA Pilot
Program requirements, including among
other things the requirements
surrounding access to the secondary
market for CA Lenders. (77 FR 6619). In
that Federal Register notice, SBA stated
that CA Lenders granted access to the
secondary market must have additional
reserves and must complete additional
training in secondary market activities
and requirements before initiating
secondary market sales. The February 8,
2011 notice did not, however, state what
the additional reserve requirement
would be for CA Lenders with
secondary market authority. With this
Notice, SBA is establishing an
additional reserve requirement of 3% of
the outstanding amount of the
guaranteed portion of each CA loan sold
in the secondary market. This level of
additional reserve is based upon the
dollar rate of repairs and denials for all
7(a) loans purchased over the last two
calendar years (2.75%). Because CA
Lenders are generally inexperienced 7(a)
lenders, the rate is set more
conservatively. CA Lenders must
deposit the required reserve amount
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
09NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 218 / Friday, November 9, 2012 / Notices
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
covering the guaranteed portion of the
CA loan in the LLRA no later than 10
days after the CA loan has been sold in
the secondary market. In addition, to
address the concern that a CA Lender
with an unacceptable purchase rate
might use secondary market sales to
significantly expand its CA loan
portfolio, SBA is modifying its
regulation at 13 CFR 120.660 for the
duration of the pilot program, to allow
the Director, Office of Credit Risk
Management, discretion to suspend
secondary market authority for any CA
Lender based on the risk characteristics
or performance of the CA Lender’s
portfolio.
The 5% loan loss reserve amount for
the unguaranteed portion of CA loans
and the 3% loan loss reserve amount for
the guaranteed portion of CA loans sold
in the secondary market may be kept in
the same segregated bank account and
must be carried as a restricted reserve
on the CA Lender’s balance sheet for use
in meeting obligations the CA Lender
has to cover losses from their CA
lending activity including but not
limited to defaults and guarantee
repairs, denials, withdrawals or
cancelations. This reserve may be used
to repay SBA in the event of a repair or
denial. If the CA Lender chooses to use
the reserve to repay SBA, the CA Lender
must ensure that the reserve is
replenished to the required level within
45 days. All other requirements
regarding the creation and maintenance
of the LLRA stated in the February 18,
2011 notice and all subsequent notices
remain unchanged. Failure to maintain
the loan loss reserve account as required
may result in removal from the CA Pilot
Program, the imposition of additional
controls or reserve amounts, and/or
other action permitted by SBA
regulation or otherwise by law. Based
on the risk characteristics or
performance of a CA Lender, OCRM in
its discretion may require additional
amounts to be included in the LLRA or
may suspend secondary market
privileges.
Refinancing of SBA Microloans
Currently, CA loans may not be used
to refinance loans made by Microloan
Intermediaries in SBA’s Microloan
Program. Because of the natural
synergies that exist between the SBA
Microloan Program and the CA Pilot
Program, a number of CA Lenders have
asked SBA to reconsider this
prohibition. The CA Pilot Program was
designed as a complement to the SBA
Microloan Program, especially when
small business borrowers’ capital needs
exceed the Microloan Program’s $50,000
maximum loan limit. Allowing CA
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:34 Nov 08, 2012
Jkt 229001
Lenders to refinance their SBA
microloans or those of other Microloan
Intermediaries into CA loans will not
only free up microloan program
resources to make more small dollar
loans, but also will make both programs
more attractive and thereby maximize
lender participation and capital
availability to underserved markets.
Analysis indicates that this can be done
without any significant additional risk
to the 7(a) program. Loan performance
data from the 7(a) loan program, (for
loans less than $250,000) over the last
10 years show virtually identical
cumulative default rates for loans that
went to former micro borrowers versus
similarly-sized 7(a) loans that went to
other borrowers (a 0.2 percent
difference). Therefore, SBA is revising
its policy to permit CA loans to be used
to refinance loans made by SBA
Microlenders subject to the policies and
procedures governing debt refinancing
for 7(a) loans as set forth in SBA Loan
Program Requirements and the CA
Participant Guide. As such, the
refinancing of same-institution debt
cannot be processed on a delegated
basis and must be submitted to the
Standard 7(a) Loan Guaranty Processing
Center. SBA will monitor the CA Pilot
Program portfolio to ensure that such
refinancings are in the best interest of
the affected borrowers.
Financial Reports
SBA regulations at 13 CFR
120.464(b)(2) require an SBA
Supervised Lender to prepare financial
reports on an accrual basis. In the
February 18, 2011 notice, however, SBA
modified 13 CFR 120.463(a) to eliminate
the requirement for CA Lenders to keep
their books and records on an accrual
basis. In order to be consistent with that
modification, SBA is waiving 13 CFR
120.464(b)(2) for purposes of the CA
Pilot Program.
CA Associate
The CA Pilot Program was originated
under the basic premise that missionbased lenders are the optimal
distribution tool to get capital to small
businesses in underserved markets.
While this premise remains true, SBA
has recognized that there are many
mission-based organizations that do not
have the capacity to become CA Lenders
but can nevertheless provide referral
services to CA Lenders. Linking higher
capacity CA Lenders with these other
mission-based organizations should
increase the flow of capital to small
businesses in underserved markets.
Current SBA regulations at 13 CFR part
103 and SBA’s Standard Operating
Procedure (SOP) 50 10 5(E) set forth the
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
67435
Agency’s policy and procedures
governing Referral Agents and apply
with equal force and effect to
organizations acting as agents for CA
Lenders on CA loans. Mission-based
organizations providing referral services
to one or more CA Lenders may be
referred to as ‘‘Community Advantage
Associates’’ (‘‘CA Associates’’) for the
purpose of the CA program and are
subject to all of the same requirements
as other agents. SBA may place
additional reporting requirements on
CA Lenders that utilize CA Associates.
Guarantee Purchase
Guarantee purchase requests for CA
loans will be processed in SBA’s
Commercial Loan Servicing Centers
(CLSCs) in Little Rock, AR and Fresno,
CA. The CLSCs, which process
similarly-sized loans, have a greater
capacity to receive and process
additional guarantee purchase requests
than the National Guaranty Purchase
Center, which processes the larger and
more complex standard 7(a) guarantee
purchase requests.
General Information
These changes are limited to the CA
Pilot Program only. All other SBA
guidelines and regulatory waivers
related to the CA Pilot Program remain
unchanged.
SBA has provided more detailed
guidance in the form of a Participant
Guide which has been updated and is
available on SBA’s Web site at https://
www.sba.gov. SBA may provide
additional guidance, through SBA
notices, which may also be published
on SBA’s Web site at https://
www.sba.gov/category/lendernavigation/forms-notices-sops/notices.
Questions regarding the CA Pilot
Program may be directed to the Lender
Relations Specialist in the local SBA
district office. The local SBA district
office may be found at https://
www.sba.gov/about-offices-list/2.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 636(a)(25) and 13
CFR 120.3.
Dated: October 15, 2012.
Karen G. Mills,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2012–27334 Filed 11–8–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Proposed Request and
Comment Request
The Social Security Administration
(SSA) publishes a list of information
E:\FR\FM\09NON1.SGM
09NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 218 (Friday, November 9, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 67433-67435]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-27334]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Community Advantage Pilot Program
AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration.
ACTION: Notice of extension of and changes to Community Advantage Pilot
Program and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Community Advantage (``CA'') Pilot Program is a pilot
program to increase SBA-guaranteed loans to small businesses in
underserved areas. SBA continues to refine and improve the design of
the Community Advantage Pilot Program. To support SBA's commitment to
expanding access to capital for small businesses and entrepreneurs in
underserved markets, SBA is issuing this Notice to extend the term of
the CA Pilot Program, to modify the loan loss reserve requirements for
CA loans, and to revise other program requirements, including certain
of the regulatory waivers.
DATES: Effective Date: The changes to the CA Pilot Program identified
in this Notice will be effective November 9, 2012, and the CA Pilot
Program will remain in effect until March 15, 2017.
Comment Date: Comments must be received on or before January 8,
2013.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by SBA docket number
SBA-2012-0016 by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Community Advantage Pilot Program Comments--Office
of Financial Assistance, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third
Street SW., Suite 8300, Washington, DC 20416.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Grady B. Hedgespeth, Director,
Office of Financial Assistance, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409
Third Street SW., Washington, DC 20416.
SBA will post all comments on www.regulations.gov. If you wish to
submit confidential business information (CBI) as defined in the User
Notice at www.regulations.gov, please submit the information to Grady
B. Hedgespeth, Director, Office of Financial Assistance, U.S. Small
Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW., Washington, DC 20416, or
send an email to communityadvantage@sba.gov. Highlight the information
that you consider to be CBI and explain why you believe SBA should hold
this information as confidential. SBA will review the information and
make the final determination whether it will publish the information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Grady B. Hedgespeth, Director, Office
of Financial Assistance, U.S. Small Business Administration, 409 Third
Street SW., Washington DC 20416; (202) 205-7562;
grady.hedgespeth@sba.gov. For information regarding revisions to the
loan loss reserve requirements, contact Brent Ciurlino, Director,
Office of Credit Risk Management, U.S. Small Business Administration,
409 Third Street SW., Washington DC 20416; (202) 205-6538;
brent.ciurlino@sba.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
1. Background
On February 18, 2011, SBA issued a notice and request for comments
introducing the CA Pilot Program (76 FR 9626). The CA Pilot Program was
introduced to increase the number of SBA-guaranteed loans made to small
businesses in underserved markets. The February 18, 2011 notice
provided an overview of the CA Pilot Program requirements and, pursuant
to the authority provided to SBA under 13 CFR 120.3 to suspend, modify
or waive certain regulations in establishing and testing pilot loan
initiatives, SBA modified or waived as appropriate certain regulations
which otherwise apply to 7(a) loans for the CA Pilot Program. On
September 12, 2011, SBA issued a second notice modifying certain of
those regulatory waivers in order to permit Community Advantage Lenders
(``CA Lenders'') to pledge loans made under the CA Pilot Program (``CA
loans'') as collateral for certain lender financings approved by SBA.
(76 FR 56262).
SBA continues to refine and improve the design of the CA Pilot
Program and, on February 8, 2012, SBA issued a third notice revising
certain program requirements in order to, among other things, change
the maximum allowable interest rate for CA loans and permit CA Lenders
to contract with Lender Service Providers. (77 FR 6619). To further
support SBA's commitment to expanding access to capital for small
businesses and entrepreneurs in underserved markets, SBA is issuing
this fourth notice to further revise program requirements as described
more fully below.
2. Comments
Although the extension of and changes to the CA Pilot Program will
be effective November 9, 2012, comments are solicited from interested
members of the public on all aspects of the CA Pilot Program. Comments
must be submitted on or before the deadline for comments listed in the
DATES section. The SBA will consider these comments and the
[[Page 67434]]
need for making any revisions as a result of these comments.
3. Changes to the Community Advantage Pilot Program
Extension of the CA Pilot Program
The CA Pilot Program is currently set to expire on March 15, 2014.
It was anticipated that this would be sufficient time to evaluate
whether the CA Pilot Program was succeeding in expanding access to
capital to small businesses in underserved markets and for SBA to
determine whether to take the necessary steps to make the program
permanent. In response to comments received from prospective applicants
to the CA Pilot Program, SBA has made significant program modifications
to increase the overall interest and participation in the program.
However, CA Lenders have not had enough time to allow the program to
gain the traction necessary to adequately measure whether the goals of
the CA Pilot Program are being met. For these reasons and due to the
significant investment in time and resources that is necessary to
become a CA Lender, SBA is extending the CA Pilot Program through March
15, 2017.
Fidelity Insurance Requirement
When a CA Lender is approved to participate in the CA Pilot Program
it is identified as either a Small Business Lending Company (SBLC) or a
Non-Federally Regulated Lender (NFRL), depending on whether the lender
is subject to regulation by a State. Accordingly, all CA Lenders are
SBA Supervised Lenders, as that term is defined in 13 CFR 120.10, and
are subject to all regulations applicable to such lenders unless
specifically waived or modified in the regulatory waiver section of the
notices identified above.
Agency regulations at 13 CFR 120.470(e) require an SBLC to
``maintain a Brokers Blanket Bond, Standard Form 14, or Financing
Companies Blanket Bond, Standard Form 15, or such other form of
coverage as SBA may approve, in a minimum amount of $2,000,000 executed
by a surety holding a certificate of authority from the Secretary of
the Treasury pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 9304-9308.'' SBA believes that this
amount of coverage is unnecessary for most CA Lenders because the
maximum amount of any one CA loan (currently $250,000) is significantly
less than the maximum amount of any one 7(a) loan (currently
$5,000,000). Therefore, SBA is modifying the regulation at 13 CFR
120.470(e) to reduce the minimum amount of coverage to $500,000 for CA
Lenders identified as SBLCs with outstanding SBA guarantee exposure of
$20 million or less. CA Lenders with outstanding SBA guarantee exposure
of more than $20 million must maintain fidelity insurance coverage in a
minimum amount of $2,000,000. SBLCs that are not CA Lenders must comply
with the insurance requirement in the regulation.
Secondary Market Access
SBA is revising the approval process concerning secondary market
access for CA Lenders. In the February 8, 2012 notice SBA modified the
requirements for CA Lenders to sell loans in the secondary market by
allowing CA Lenders to request authority ``either at the time of
application or after one year of participation.'' (77 FR 6619). SBA is
revising this requirement to allow a CA Lender to request access to the
secondary market with its application to participate in the CA Pilot or
at any time thereafter. If authority is not awarded as a result of the
first request, the CA Lender should resolve any weakness or deficiency
indicated as reasons for rejection for secondary market authority
before submitting a request for reconsideration.
Loan Loss Reserve Requirements
CA Lenders are required to create and maintain a separate Loan Loss
Reserve Account (LLRA) to cover potential losses arising from defaulted
CA loans. In the February 18, 2011 Federal Register Notice introducing
the CA Pilot Program (76 FR 9626), SBA required all CA Lenders to
create and maintain the LLRA with a reserve amount equal to 15 percent
of the outstanding amount of the unguaranteed portion of a CA Lender's
CA loan portfolio. This level of loan loss reserve was based on the SBA
Microloan Program's loan loss reserve requirements. Upon further
review, however, SBA believes that the Microloan Program is not an
appropriate comparison for the CA Pilot Program because the maximum
loan size in the Microloan Program is $50,000, compared to a maximum
loan size of $250,000 permitted in the CA Pilot Program. The United
States Department of Agriculture's (USDA's) Intermediary Relending
Program for loans in underserved rural areas, which has a maximum loan
size of $250,000, requires a 6% cash reserve. (7 CFR 4274.332(b)(3)).
SBA's Intermediary Lending Pilot Program, which has a maximum loan size
of $200,000, requires a 5% cash reserve. (13 CFR 109.350). In addition,
larger commercial lenders that provide warehouse lines of credit to
non-profit, mission-oriented lenders for loans to small businesses
typically require a reserve rate of 5% for their riskier credits.
Finally, CA Lenders must also establish an additional reserve for the
guaranteed portion of loans sold into the secondary market because
secondary market loan sales create a direct risk to SBA. The total cash
reserve required for CA Lenders needs to be at a level that does not
provide a significant disincentive for CA Lenders to participate in the
program. Therefore, SBA is revising the reserve requirement to permit
CA Lenders to fund and maintain the LLRA with an amount equal to 5% of
the outstanding amount of the unguaranteed portion of the CA Lender's
CA loan portfolio. CA Lenders must deposit this required reserve amount
in the LLRA no later than 45 days after the date of each CA loan
disbursement. In order to ensure that the 5% reserve is adequate for
each individual CA Lender, OCRM will review asset quality for each CA
Lender as a part of the quarterly review process. This will include
reviewing current delinquency and default rates, current and projected
purchase rates, and risk rating for each lender. OCRM will also review
compliance with the cash reserve requirements, including examination of
bank statements to ensure that the reserve is adequately funded. OCRM
reserves the right to increase this level in its discretion. The
additional reserve requirement for loans sold on the secondary market
is described in the next paragraph.
On February 8, 2012, SBA published a notice in the Federal Register
that made changes to certain CA Pilot Program requirements, including
among other things the requirements surrounding access to the secondary
market for CA Lenders. (77 FR 6619). In that Federal Register notice,
SBA stated that CA Lenders granted access to the secondary market must
have additional reserves and must complete additional training in
secondary market activities and requirements before initiating
secondary market sales. The February 8, 2011 notice did not, however,
state what the additional reserve requirement would be for CA Lenders
with secondary market authority. With this Notice, SBA is establishing
an additional reserve requirement of 3% of the outstanding amount of
the guaranteed portion of each CA loan sold in the secondary market.
This level of additional reserve is based upon the dollar rate of
repairs and denials for all 7(a) loans purchased over the last two
calendar years (2.75%). Because CA Lenders are generally inexperienced
7(a) lenders, the rate is set more conservatively. CA Lenders must
deposit the required reserve amount
[[Page 67435]]
covering the guaranteed portion of the CA loan in the LLRA no later
than 10 days after the CA loan has been sold in the secondary market.
In addition, to address the concern that a CA Lender with an
unacceptable purchase rate might use secondary market sales to
significantly expand its CA loan portfolio, SBA is modifying its
regulation at 13 CFR 120.660 for the duration of the pilot program, to
allow the Director, Office of Credit Risk Management, discretion to
suspend secondary market authority for any CA Lender based on the risk
characteristics or performance of the CA Lender's portfolio.
The 5% loan loss reserve amount for the unguaranteed portion of CA
loans and the 3% loan loss reserve amount for the guaranteed portion of
CA loans sold in the secondary market may be kept in the same
segregated bank account and must be carried as a restricted reserve on
the CA Lender's balance sheet for use in meeting obligations the CA
Lender has to cover losses from their CA lending activity including but
not limited to defaults and guarantee repairs, denials, withdrawals or
cancelations. This reserve may be used to repay SBA in the event of a
repair or denial. If the CA Lender chooses to use the reserve to repay
SBA, the CA Lender must ensure that the reserve is replenished to the
required level within 45 days. All other requirements regarding the
creation and maintenance of the LLRA stated in the February 18, 2011
notice and all subsequent notices remain unchanged. Failure to maintain
the loan loss reserve account as required may result in removal from
the CA Pilot Program, the imposition of additional controls or reserve
amounts, and/or other action permitted by SBA regulation or otherwise
by law. Based on the risk characteristics or performance of a CA
Lender, OCRM in its discretion may require additional amounts to be
included in the LLRA or may suspend secondary market privileges.
Refinancing of SBA Microloans
Currently, CA loans may not be used to refinance loans made by
Microloan Intermediaries in SBA's Microloan Program. Because of the
natural synergies that exist between the SBA Microloan Program and the
CA Pilot Program, a number of CA Lenders have asked SBA to reconsider
this prohibition. The CA Pilot Program was designed as a complement to
the SBA Microloan Program, especially when small business borrowers'
capital needs exceed the Microloan Program's $50,000 maximum loan
limit. Allowing CA Lenders to refinance their SBA microloans or those
of other Microloan Intermediaries into CA loans will not only free up
microloan program resources to make more small dollar loans, but also
will make both programs more attractive and thereby maximize lender
participation and capital availability to underserved markets. Analysis
indicates that this can be done without any significant additional risk
to the 7(a) program. Loan performance data from the 7(a) loan program,
(for loans less than $250,000) over the last 10 years show virtually
identical cumulative default rates for loans that went to former micro
borrowers versus similarly-sized 7(a) loans that went to other
borrowers (a 0.2 percent difference). Therefore, SBA is revising its
policy to permit CA loans to be used to refinance loans made by SBA
Microlenders subject to the policies and procedures governing debt
refinancing for 7(a) loans as set forth in SBA Loan Program
Requirements and the CA Participant Guide. As such, the refinancing of
same-institution debt cannot be processed on a delegated basis and must
be submitted to the Standard 7(a) Loan Guaranty Processing Center. SBA
will monitor the CA Pilot Program portfolio to ensure that such
refinancings are in the best interest of the affected borrowers.
Financial Reports
SBA regulations at 13 CFR 120.464(b)(2) require an SBA Supervised
Lender to prepare financial reports on an accrual basis. In the
February 18, 2011 notice, however, SBA modified 13 CFR 120.463(a) to
eliminate the requirement for CA Lenders to keep their books and
records on an accrual basis. In order to be consistent with that
modification, SBA is waiving 13 CFR 120.464(b)(2) for purposes of the
CA Pilot Program.
CA Associate
The CA Pilot Program was originated under the basic premise that
mission-based lenders are the optimal distribution tool to get capital
to small businesses in underserved markets. While this premise remains
true, SBA has recognized that there are many mission-based
organizations that do not have the capacity to become CA Lenders but
can nevertheless provide referral services to CA Lenders. Linking
higher capacity CA Lenders with these other mission-based organizations
should increase the flow of capital to small businesses in underserved
markets. Current SBA regulations at 13 CFR part 103 and SBA's Standard
Operating Procedure (SOP) 50 10 5(E) set forth the Agency's policy and
procedures governing Referral Agents and apply with equal force and
effect to organizations acting as agents for CA Lenders on CA loans.
Mission-based organizations providing referral services to one or more
CA Lenders may be referred to as ``Community Advantage Associates''
(``CA Associates'') for the purpose of the CA program and are subject
to all of the same requirements as other agents. SBA may place
additional reporting requirements on CA Lenders that utilize CA
Associates.
Guarantee Purchase
Guarantee purchase requests for CA loans will be processed in SBA's
Commercial Loan Servicing Centers (CLSCs) in Little Rock, AR and
Fresno, CA. The CLSCs, which process similarly-sized loans, have a
greater capacity to receive and process additional guarantee purchase
requests than the National Guaranty Purchase Center, which processes
the larger and more complex standard 7(a) guarantee purchase requests.
General Information
These changes are limited to the CA Pilot Program only. All other
SBA guidelines and regulatory waivers related to the CA Pilot Program
remain unchanged.
SBA has provided more detailed guidance in the form of a
Participant Guide which has been updated and is available on SBA's Web
site at https://www.sba.gov. SBA may provide additional guidance,
through SBA notices, which may also be published on SBA's Web site at
https://www.sba.gov/category/lender-navigation/forms-notices-sops/notices. Questions regarding the CA Pilot Program may be directed to
the Lender Relations Specialist in the local SBA district office. The
local SBA district office may be found at https://www.sba.gov/about-offices-list/2.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 636(a)(25) and 13 CFR 120.3.
Dated: October 15, 2012.
Karen G. Mills,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2012-27334 Filed 11-8-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025-01-P