Express Loan Programs; Affiliation Standards, 49001-49017 [2018-20869]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
contractually required to remain in the
project until the HVCRE exposure has
been reclassified by the FDICsupervised institution as a non-HVCRE
exposure under paragraph (6) of this
definition;
(3) An HVCRE exposure does not
include any loan made prior to January
1, 2015;
(4) An HVCRE exposure does not
include a credit facility reclassified as a
non-HVCRE exposure under paragraph
(6).
(5) Value Of contributed real
property.—For the purposes of this
definition of HVCRE exposure, the value
of any real property contributed by a
borrower as a capital contribution is the
appraised value of the property as
determined under standards prescribed
pursuant to section 1110 of the
Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery,
and Enforcement Act of 1989 (12 U.S.C.
3339), in connection with the extension
of the credit facility or loan to such
borrower.
(6) Reclassification as a non-HVCRE
exposure.—For purposes of this
definition of HVCRE exposure and with
respect to a credit facility and an FDICsupervised institution, an FDICsupervised institution may reclassify an
HVCRE exposure as a non-HVCRE
exposure upon—
(i) The substantial completion of the
development or construction of the real
property being financed by the credit
facility; and
(ii) Cash flow being generated by the
real property being sufficient to support
the debt service and expenses of the real
property, in accordance with the FDICsupervised institution’s applicable loan
underwriting criteria for permanent
financings.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: September 11, 2018.
Joseph M. Otting,
Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, September 18, 2018.
Ann E. Misback,
Secretary of the Board.
Dated at Washington, DC, on September
12, 2018.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–20875 Filed 9–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
13 CFR Parts 103, 120 and 121
RIN 3245–AG74
Express Loan Programs; Affiliation
Standards
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA or Agency) is
proposing to amend various regulations
governing its business loan programs,
including the SBA Express and Export
Express Loan Programs and the
Microloan and Development Company
(504) loan programs.
DATES: SBA must receive comments to
the proposed rule on or before
November 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN: 3245–AG74, by any of
the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Kimberly Chuday or Thomas
Heou, Office of Financial Assistance,
Office of Capital Access, Small Business
Administration, 409 Third Street SW,
Washington, DC 20416.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Kimberly
Chuday or Thomas Heou, Office of
Financial Assistance, Office of Capital
Access, 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 Kimberly
Chuday or Thomas Heou, Office of
Financial Assistance, Office of Capital
Access, 409 Third Street SW,
Washington, DC 20416. 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:
Robert Carpenter, Acting Chief, 7(a)
Program and Policy Branch, Office of
Financial Assistance, Office of Capital
Access, Small Business Administration,
409 Third Street SW, Washington, DC
20416; telephone: (202) 205–7654;
email://robert.carpenter@sba.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49001
I. Background Information
The SBA Express Loan Program (SBA
Express) is established in section
7(a)(31) of the Small Business Act (the
Act) (15 U.S.C. 636(a)(31)). Under SBA
Express, designated Lenders (SBA
Express Lenders) are permitted to use,
to the maximum extent practicable,
their own analyses, procedures, and
documentation in making, closing,
servicing, and liquidating SBA Express
loans. They also have reduced
requirements for submitting
documentation to SBA and obtaining
the Agency’s prior approval. These loan
analyses, procedures, and
documentation must meet prudent
lending standards; be consistent with
those the Lenders use for their similarlysized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial
loans; and conform to all requirements
imposed upon Lenders generally and
SBA Express Lenders in particular by
Loan Program Requirements (as defined
in 13 CFR 120.10), as such requirements
are issued and revised by SBA from
time to time, unless specifically
identified by SBA as inapplicable to
SBA Express loans. In exchange for the
increased authority and autonomy
provided under the SBA Express
Program, SBA Express Lenders agree to
accept a maximum guaranty of 50
percent.
The Export Express Loan Program
(Export Express) is established in
section 7(a)(34) of the Act (15 U.S.C.
636(a)(34)). This program is designed to
help SBA meet the export financing
needs of small businesses. Although it
is a separate program, Export Express is
generally subject to the same loan
processing, making, closing, servicing,
and liquidation requirements as well as
the same interest rates and applicable
fees as SBA Express. However, Export
Express loans have a higher maximum
loan amount than is available under
SBA Express, and a maximum guaranty
percentage of 75 or 90 percent,
depending on the amount of the Export
Express loan.
A. Proposed Amendments
This proposed rule would:
1. Incorporate into the regulations
governing the 7(a) Loan Program the
requirements specifically applicable to
the SBA Express and Export Express
Loan Programs in order to provide
additional clarity for SBA Express and
Export Express Lenders;
2. Add a new regulation to require
certain owners of the small business
Applicant to inject excess liquid assets
into the business to reduce the amount
of SBA-guaranteed funds that otherwise
would be needed;
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
49002
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
3. Revise the regulations concerning
allowable fees for the 7(a) Loan Program
to limit the fees payable by the small
business Applicant and to clarify what
SBA considers reasonable with respect
to such fees;
4. Amend the regulation that explains
the Agency’s policy governing SBAguaranteed loans to qualified employee
trusts to require that all such
applications be processed under nondelegated procedures;
5. Incorporate a change to implement
SBA’s long-standing policy regarding
the responsibility of a Lender for the
contingent liabilities (including repairs
and denials) for Lenders purchasing 7(a)
loans from the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) (as
receiver, conservator, or other liquidator
of a failed insured depository
institution), whether such loans are
acquired through a loan sale where SBA
has not already purchased the guaranty
or through a whole bank transfer;
6. Revise the regulations governing
the use of microloan grant funds by
Microloan Intermediaries and extend
the maximum maturity of a microloan;
7. Modify the affiliation principles
applicable to SBA’s financial assistance
programs to include additional
circumstances when a small business
Applicant will be deemed to be
affiliated with another entity for
purposes of determining the small
business Applicant’s size;
8. Amend the regulation identifying
when the size status of an Applicant for
financial assistance is determined with
respect to applications under the SBA
Express and Export Express Loan
Programs; and
9. Make technical corrections to the
regulation identifying prohibited fees in
the 7(a) Loan Program and the
regulation discussing the application for
the Accredited Lenders Program (ALP)
in the 504 Loan Program, as well as
conforming amendments to two existing
regulations for consistency with the
proposed regulations governing SBA
Express and Export Express, and a
conforming amendment to one existing
regulation for consistency with the
proposed changes to the allowable fees
that may be charged in connection with
a 7(a) loan.
B. Affected Programs
The SBA programs affected by this
proposed rule are:
1. The 7(a) Loan Program authorized
pursuant to Section 7(a) of the Act (15
U.S.C. 636(a));
2. The Business Disaster Loan
Programs (collectively, the Economic
Injury Disaster Loans, Military Reservist
Economic Injury Disaster Loans, and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
Physical Disaster Business Loans)
authorized pursuant to Section 7(b) of
the Act;
3. The Microloan Program authorized
pursuant to Section 7(m) of the Act (15
U.S.C. 636(m));
4. The Intermediary Lending Pilot
(ILP) Program authorized pursuant to
Section 7(l) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 636(l));
5. The Surety Bond Guarantee
Program authorized pursuant to Part B
of Title IV of the Small Business
Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 694b
et seq.); and
6. The Development Company
Program (the 504 Loan Program)
authorized pursuant to Title V of the
Small Business Investment Act of 1958
(15 U.S.C. 695 et seq.).
(The 7(a), Microloan, ILP, and 504 Loan
Programs are collectively referred to as
the Business Loan Programs.)
The Agency requests comments on all
aspects of the regulatory revisions in
this proposed rule and on any related
issues affecting the Business Loan,
Surety Bond Guarantee, and Business
Disaster Loan Programs.
II. Summary of Proposed Changes
A. Business Loan Programs
1. SBA Express and Export Express
Loan Programs
Sections 120.441 through 120.447 SBA
Express and Export Express Loan
Programs
SBA proposes adding a new
undesignated center heading entitled
‘‘SBA Express and Export Express Loan
Programs’’ and several new regulations
that describe the two loan programs and
the specific requirements applicable to
them, as described more fully below.
These proposed regulations are drafted
based on the current statutory limits
applicable to the SBA Express and
Export Express Loan Programs. In the
event that the SBA Express or Export
Express statutory loan limits are
increased by Congress, SBA will revise
the regulations, including making
necessary changes to mitigate any
additional risk associated with an
increase in loan size.
Section 120.441 SBA Express and
Export Express Loan Programs. SBA
proposes adding a regulation providing
general descriptions of the SBA Express
and Export Express Loan Programs.
Section 120.442 Process to obtain or
renew SBA Express or Export Express
authority. SBA proposes adding a
regulation that sets forth the criteria and
process to obtain or renew SBA Express
or Export Express authority. In
evaluating an existing 7(a) Lender’s
application for SBA Express or Export
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Express authority, SBA will consider
the delegated authority criteria and
follow the procedures set forth in
§ 120.440. Lending institutions that do
not currently participate with SBA may
apply to be SBA Express and/or Export
Express Lenders, but must become 7(a)
Lenders in order to participate in SBA
Express and/or Export Express. Such
institutions may request SBA 7(a)
lending and SBA Express and/or Export
Express authority simultaneously. In
evaluating such institutions, in addition
to the criteria set forth in §§ 120.410
(requirements for all participating
Lenders) and 120.440 (delegated
authority criteria), SBA will consider
whether the institution has acceptable
experience making small commercial
loans, and whether its employees have
received appropriate training on SBA’s
policies and procedures. Currently, SBA
considers a Lender to have acceptable
experience making small commercial
loans when the Lender has at least 20
commercial loans of $350,000 or less
with acceptable performance.
As set forth in § 120.440, the decision
to grant SBA Express or Export Express
authority will be made by the
appropriate SBA official in accordance
with Delegations of Authority, and is
final. If SBA Express or Export Express
authority is approved, SBA will provide
the Lender with the appropriate
supplemental guarantee agreement,
which the Lender must execute and
return to SBA before the Lender’s SBA
Express or Export Express authority will
become effective.
In renewing a Lender’s SBA Express
or Export Express authority and
determining the term of the renewal,
SBA will consider the criteria and
follow the process set forth in § 120.440.
Currently, in renewing a Lender’s
Export Express authority, SBA also will
consider whether the Export Express
Lender can effectively process, make,
close, service, and liquidate Export
Express loans; has received a major
substantive objection regarding renewal
from the Field Office(s) covering the
territory where the Lender generates
significant numbers of Export Express
loans; and has received acceptable
review results on the Export Express
portion of any SBA-administered
Lender reviews. In this rule, SBA
proposes to incorporate the additional
considerations identified above for
Export Express authority, but modify
them to apply to both SBA Express and
Export Express authority. Thus, in
addition to the criteria set out in
§ 120.440, SBA also would consider
whether the Lender can effectively
process, make, close, service, and
liquidate SBA Express or Export Express
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
loans, as applicable; has received a
major substantive objection regarding
renewal from the Field Office(s)
covering the territory where the Lender
generates significant numbers of SBA
Express or Export Express loans, as
applicable; and has received acceptable
review results on the SBA Express or
Export Express portion, as applicable, of
any SBA-administered Lender reviews.
SBA may approve a Lender’s initial
application for authority to participate
in SBA Express or Export Express for a
maximum term of two years. SBA may
approve a lesser term or limit a Lender’s
maximum SBA Express or Export
Express loan volume if, in SBA’s sole
discretion, a Lender’s qualifications,
performance, experience with SBA
lending, or other factors so warrant (e.g.,
Lenders with little or no experience
with SBA lending).
SBA is proposing to include in the
regulations that the Agency may renew
a Lender’s authority to participate in
SBA Express for a maximum term of
three years if, in SBA’s sole discretion,
a Lender’s qualifications, performance,
SBA experience, or other factors so
warrant. Although renewals of other
types of delegated authority (e.g.,
Preferred Lender Program (PLP)) are for
a maximum term of two years, SBA is
proposing a longer renewal term for
Lenders participating in SBA Express
because SBA Express Lenders have
accepted more of the risk in their SBA
Express loans than other SBA Lenders,
including Export Express Lenders.
SBA may renew a Lender’s authority
to participate in Export Express for a
maximum term of two years. SBA may
approve a shorter renewal term or limit
a Lender’s maximum SBA Express or
Export Express loan volume if, in SBA’s
sole discretion, a Lender’s
qualifications, performance, experience
with SBA lending, or other factors so
warrant.
SBA is proposing a conforming
amendment to the delegated authority
criteria regulation at § 120.440(c) to
clarify that a Lender’s authority to
participate in SBA Express may be
renewed for a maximum term of three
years. In addition, SBA is proposing
some technical corrections to
§ 120.440(c).
Section 120.443 SBA Express and
Export Express loan processing
requirements. SBA proposes adding a
regulation that sets forth the
requirements for loan processing under
the SBA Express and Export Express
loan programs. The regulations
applicable to all Business Loans in
Subparts A and B of Part 120, and 7(a)
Loans specifically, govern the making of
SBA Express and Export Express loans,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
unless specifically identified by SBA as
inapplicable. For example, the same
types of businesses that are ineligible for
7(a) loans under § 120.110 also are
ineligible for SBA Express and Export
Express loans. SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders must follow all 7(a)
eligibility requirements and maintain
appropriate documentation supporting
their eligibility determination in the
loan file.
Certain types of loans and loan
programs are not eligible for processing
under a Lender’s delegated authority
(including under a Lender’s SBA
Express or Export Express authority), as
described in SBA’s Standard Operating
Procedure (SOP) 50 10 (Lender and
Development Company Loan Programs).
These loans currently include, but are
not limited to: Special purpose loans
(e.g., Disabled Assistance Loans, loans
to Employee Stock Ownership Plans or
equivalent trusts, Pollution Control
Loans, or CAPLines); a loan that would
reduce an SBA Express or Export
Express Lender’s existing credit
exposure for a single Borrower,
including its affiliates as defined in 13
CFR 121.301(f); a loan to a business that
has an outstanding 7(a) loan where the
Applicant is unable to certify that the
loan is current at the time the SBA
Express or Export Express Lender
approves the SBA Express or Export
Express loan; a loan that would have as
its primary collateral real estate or
personal property that will not meet
SBA’s environmental requirements; and
complex loan structures or eligibility
situations.
For all other loans, SBA has
authorized SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders to make the credit
decision without prior SBA review (i.e.,
using the Lender’s delegated authority).
As with all 7(a) loans, Lenders must not
make an SBA-guaranteed loan that
would be available on reasonable terms
from either the Lender itself or another
non-federal source without an SBA
guaranty. In addition, the Lender’s
credit analysis must demonstrate that
there is reasonable assurance of
repayment. SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders must use appropriate
and prudent credit analysis processes
and procedures that are generally
accepted in the commercial lending
industry and consistent with those used
for their similarly-sized, non-SBA
guaranteed commercial loans. As part of
their prudent credit analysis, SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders
may use a business credit scoring model
(such a model cannot rely solely on
consumer credit scores) to assess the
credit history of the Applicant and/or
repayment ability if they do so for their
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49003
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed
commercial loans. If used, the business
credit scoring results must be
documented in each loan file and
available for SBA review. Lenders that
do not use credit scoring for their
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed
commercial loans may not use credit
scoring for SBA Express or Export
Express. Although Small Business
Lending Companies (SBLCs), as defined
in § 120.10, do not make non-SBA
guaranteed loans, SBA has determined
that they may use credit scoring as part
of their prudent credit analysis for their
SBA Express or Export Express loans.
All SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders must validate (and document)
with appropriate statistical
methodologies that their credit analysis
procedures are predictive of loan
performance, and they must provide
that documentation to SBA upon
request. SOP 50 10 includes the
requirement that SBLCs provide credit
scoring model validation to SBA for
review and approval on an annual basis.
The credit decision, including for
example, how much to factor in a past
bankruptcy and whether to require an
equity injection (outside of any injection
of excess personal resources under the
proposed new § 120.102, as discussed
below), is left to the business judgment
of the SBA Express or Export Express
Lender. Also, if the SBA Express or
Export Express Lender requires an
equity injection and, as part of its
standard processes for its similarlysized, non-SBA guaranteed loans
verifies the equity injection, it must do
so for its SBA Express or Export Express
loans. SBLCs must follow the written
policies and procedures that have been
reviewed by SBA. While the credit
decision is left to the business judgment
of the SBA Express or Export Express
Lender, early loan defaults will be
reviewed by SBA pursuant to SOP 50 57
(7(a) Loan Servicing and Liquidation).
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders are responsible for all loan
decisions, including eligibility for 7(a)
loans (including size), creditworthiness
and compliance with all Loan Program
Requirements (as defined in § 120.10).
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders also are responsible for
confirming that all loan closing
decisions are correct and that they have
complied with all requirements of law
and Loan Program Requirements.
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders must ensure all required forms
are obtained and are complete and
properly executed. Appropriate
documentation must be maintained in
the Lender’s loan file, including
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
49004
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
adequate information to support the
eligibility of the Applicant and the loan.
Section 120.444 Eligible uses of SBA
Express and Export Express loan
proceeds. SBA is proposing to add a
regulation to identify the eligible uses of
loan proceeds for SBA Express and
Export Express loans. Under SBA
Express, loan proceeds must be used
exclusively for eligible business-related
purposes, as described in 13 CFR
120.120 and 120.130, which set forth
the eligible uses of loan proceeds for
7(a) loans. In addition, it is the SBA
Express Lender’s responsibility to take
reasonable steps to ensure and
document that the loan proceeds are
used exclusively for business-related
purposes.
Notwithstanding 13 CFR 120.130(c),
revolving lines of credit are eligible for
SBA Express, subject to certain
conditions related to maturities and
disbursement as set forth in SOP 50 10.
Currently, SBA Express revolving loans
have a maximum maturity of 10 years
and must be structured with a term-out
period that is not less than the draw
period, with no draws permitted during
the term-out period. For example, an
SBA Express loan can have an eight year
maturity with a two year draw period
and a term-out period of six years.
Conversely, a loan with an eight year
maturity cannot have a draw period of
six years and term-out period of two
years. Further, as set forth in 13 CFR
part 120, subpart F, revolving loans
cannot be sold on the secondary market.
(SBA is proposing a conforming
amendment to § 120.130(c)
(‘‘Restrictions on uses of proceeds’’) to
include a reference to this new
§ 120.444 to clarify that revolving lines
of credit are an eligible use of 7(a) loan
proceeds under SBA Express and Export
Express.)
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders may refinance certain
outstanding debts with SBA Express or
Export Express loans, under the
conditions set forth in SOP 50 10. An
SBA Express Lender may refinance an
existing non-SBA guaranteed loan held
by another lender with an SBA Express
loan if the Lender determines that the
existing debt no longer meets the needs
of the Applicant and, for certain types
of debt, the new loan will provide a 10
percent improvement in the debt service
coverage ratio. An SBA Express Lender
may refinance its own non-SBA
guaranteed debt, provided that: (1) The
Lender determines that the existing debt
no longer meets the needs of the
Applicant; (2) the new loan will provide
a 10 percent improvement in the debt
service coverage ratio (for certain types
of loans as explained in SOP 50 10); (3)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
the debt to be refinanced is, and has
been, current for the past 36 months
(‘‘current’’ means no required payment
has been more than 29 days past due);
and (4) the Lender’s credit exposure to
the Applicant will not be reduced.
Existing SBA-guaranteed loans may not
be refinanced under SBA Express,
unless: (1) The transaction is the
purchase of an existing business that
has an existing SBA loan that is not
with the requesting SBA Express
Lender; or (2) the Applicant needs
additional financing and the existing
Lender is unable or unwilling to
increase the existing SBA loan or make
a second loan, and (3) the new loan will
provide a 10 percent improvement in
debt service coverage. An SBA Express
Lender may not refinance its own
existing SBA-guaranteed debt under
SBA Express.
Export Express loans must be used for
an export development activity, which
is defined in section 7(a)(34)(A)(i) of the
Act and includes the following:
(1) Obtaining a Standby Letter of
Credit when required as a bid bond,
performance bond, or advance payment
guarantee;
(2) Participation in a trade show that
takes place outside the United States;
(3) Translation of product brochures
or catalogues for use in markets outside
the United States;
(4) Obtaining a general line of credit
for export purposes;
(5) Performing a service contract for
buyers located outside the United
States;
(6) Obtaining transaction-specific
financing associated with completing
export orders;
(7) Purchasing real estate or
equipment to be used in the production
of goods or services for export;
(8) Providing term loans and other
financing to enable a small business
concern, including an export trading
company and an export management
company, to develop a market outside
the United States; and
(9) Acquiring, constructing,
renovating, modernizing, improving or
expanding a production facility or
equipment to be used in the United
States in the production of goods or
services for export.
As noted above, Export Express loans
may be used to refinance certain
outstanding debts, under the conditions
set forth in SOP 50 10. Specifically,
Export Express loans may be used to
refinance existing non-SBA guaranteed
debt, whether held by another lender or
by the Export Express Lender, if the
Export Express Lender follows the
guidance for refinancing under SBA
Express and verifies and documents that
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
the new loan will be used to finance an
export development activity. Export
Express loans may be used to refinance
an existing Export Express loan held by
another Export Express Lender only if
the original Export Express Lender is
unable or unwilling to increase or make
a second Export Express loan, which
must be documented in the loan file. An
Export Express Lender may not
refinance one of its own Export Express
loans with a new Export Express loan.
Export Express loans may not be used
to finance overseas operations, except
for the marketing and/or distribution of
products/services exported from the
United States.
Export Express Lenders are
responsible for ensuring that U.S.
companies are authorized to conduct
business with the Persons and countries
to which the Borrower will be
exporting. Specific guidance as to how
Export Express Lenders will be expected
to do so will be included in SOP 50 10.
Specific documentation requirements
related to the use of proceeds for Export
Express loans are described more fully
in SOP 50 10.
Section 120.445 Terms and
conditions of SBA Express and Export
Express loans. While generally the
terms and conditions applicable to 7(a)
loans also apply to SBA Express and
Export Express loans, there are some
differences. SBA is proposing to add a
new regulation to identify those terms
and conditions of SBA Express and
Export Express loans that are unique to
these two programs, including
maximum loan amounts and guaranty
percentages, maturities, interest rates,
collateral and insurance requirements,
allowable fees and requirements
concerning loan increases. With respect
to the maximum loan amounts, the
proposed rule refers to the maximum
loan amount for each program as set
forth in the applicable section of the
Small Business Act (sections 7(a)(31)(D)
and 7(a)(34)(C)(i), respectively).
Currently, the maximum loan amount
for SBA Express is $350,000 and the
maximum loan amount for Export
Express is $500,000.
With respect to collateral, currently,
for loans of $25,000 or less, SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders are
not required to take collateral to secure
the loan. For loans over $25,000, SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders
must, to the maximum extent
practicable, follow the written collateral
policies and procedures that they have
established and implemented for their
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed
commercial loans, except for Export
Express lines of credit over $25,000
used to support the issuance of a
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
standby letter of credit. Export Express
lines of credit over $25,000 used to
support the issuance of a standby letter
of credit must have collateral (cash, cash
equivalent or project) that will provide
coverage for at least 25% of the issued
standby letter of credit amount.
SBA proposes to incorporate these
collateral requirements into new
§ 120.445(e), with the exception of the
dollar thresholds. Rather than include
the current thresholds in the proposed
rule, SBA is proposing to include
language in the regulation giving the
Agency the ability to establish a
threshold below which SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders will not be
required to take collateral to secure an
SBA Express or Export Express loan.
The threshold would be described more
fully in SOP 50 10. This will provide
the Agency with the flexibility to adjust
the threshold if necessary.
Additionally, this proposed regulation
provides that SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders may sell the guaranteed
portions of SBA Express and Export
Express term loans on the secondary
market in accordance with 13 CFR
subpart F, but may not sell the
guaranteed portions of SBA Express or
Export Express revolving lines of credit
on the secondary market.
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders must pay the same fees to SBA
that all 7(a) Lenders pay, which are
identified in § 120.220. The fees and
expenses that 7(a) Lenders may collect
from an Applicant or Borrower are set
forth in the regulation at § 120.221.
Currently, with the exception of renewal
fees, SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders may charge an Applicant or
Borrower on an SBA Express or Export
Express loan the same types of fees they
charge on their similarly-sized, nonSBA guaranteed commercial loans,
provided that the fees are directly
related to the service provided and are
reasonable and customary for the
services performed. The fees charged on
SBA Express or Export Express loans
may not be higher than those charged on
the Lender’s similarly-sized, non-SBA
guaranteed commercial loans. In this
rule, SBA proposes to require SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders to
comply with the same rules that apply
to all other 7(a) Lenders with respect to
the fees that may be collected from an
Applicant or Borrower on SBA Express
and Export Express loans. As noted
above, the regulation at § 120.221 sets
forth the fees and expenses that 7(a)
Lenders may collect from an Applicant
or Borrower. In addition, 13 CFR part
103 of the regulations governs Agents,
including their fees and provision of
services. As discussed more fully in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
Section 3 below, SBA is proposing
changes to §§ 120.221, 103.4(g), and
103.5 with respect to the fees that may
be collected from an Applicant or
Borrower by a 7(a) Lender or Agent.
These changes will be applicable to all
7(a) loans, including SBA Express and
Export Express loans.
Consistent with SBA Loan Program
Requirements, if an SBA Express or
Export Express Lender requests that
SBA honor its guaranty, the Agency will
not purchase any portion of the loan
balance that consists of fees charged to
the borrower, with the exception of the
SBA guaranty fee. Also, as set forth in
§ 120.222, SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders and their Associates
are prohibited from sharing any
premium received from the sale of an
SBA guaranteed loan in the secondary
market with a Service Provider,
packager, or other loan-referral source.
Lenders may be subject to enforcement
or other appropriate action, including
suspension or revocation of their
privilege to sell loans in the secondary
market, in the event of a violation of this
prohibition.
Because SBA will require SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders to
comply with the same rules that apply
to all other 7(a) Lenders with respect to
the fees and expenses that may be
collected from an Applicant or Borrower
in connection with an SBA-guaranteed
loan (including SBA Express and Export
Express loans), SBA is not including
language regarding fees in proposed
§ 120.445.
Section 120.446 SBA Express and
Export Express loan closing, servicing,
liquidation, and litigation requirements.
SBA proposes to add a new regulation
providing that SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders must close, service,
liquidate, and litigate their SBA Express
and Export Express loans using the
same documentation and procedures
they use for their similarly-sized, nonSBA guaranteed commercial loans,
which must comply with law, prudent
lending practices, and Loan Program
Requirements. Additionally, the
proposed regulation provides that SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders
must comply with the loan servicing
and liquidation responsibilities set forth
for 7(a) Lenders in 13 CFR part 120,
subpart E and other Loan Program
Requirements. Additional guidance on
loan closing, servicing, liquidation and
litigation is provided in SOPs 50 10 and
50 57.
The proposed regulation also
describes the circumstances under
which SBA will honor the guaranty on
SBA Express and Export Express Loans.
As is true for 7(a) loans generally, SBA
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49005
will purchase the guaranteed portion of
an SBA Express or Export Express loan
in accordance with § 120.520 and other
Loan Program Requirements, in
particular SOP 50 57. In accordance
with § 120.520(a)(1), for loans approved
on or after May 14, 2007, unless the
Borrower filed for bankruptcy, the SBA
Express or Export Express Lender may
request that SBA honor the guaranty on
the loan if there is an uncured payment
default of more than 60 days and the
Lender has liquidated the business
personal property collateral securing the
defaulted loan. In accordance with
§ 120.520(a)(2) and SOP 50 57, for loans
approved before May 14, 2007, an SBA
Express Lender must liquidate all
collateral for the loan and pursue all
cost-effective means of recovery to
collect the debt before the Lender can
request that SBA honor its guaranty. For
Export Express loans, however, the
Lender does not have to liquidate all of
the collateral and pursue all costeffective means of recovery prior to
requesting that SBA honor its guaranty
if the outstanding principal balance is
$50,000 or less or there is protracted
litigation or other circumstances that
will extend the liquidation process. It is
important to note that, while nonfinancial default provisions are allowed
under SBA Express and Export Express
under certain conditions set forth in
SOP 50 10, an SBA Express or Export
Express Lender may not request
purchase of the guaranty based solely on
a violation of a non-financial default
provision.
SBA will be released of its liability on
an SBA Express or Export Express loan
guaranty in accordance with § 120.524.
Section 120.447 Lender oversight of
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders. SBA proposes to add a new
regulation explaining that SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders are subject
to the same risk-based lender oversight
as 7(a) Lenders, including supervision
and enforcement provisions, in
accordance with 13 CFR part 120,
subpart I. Additional guidance
concerning Lender supervision and
enforcement is provided in SOPs 50 53
(Lender Supervision and Enforcement)
and 51 00 (On-Site Lender Reviews/
Examinations).
2. Credit Elsewhere and the Personal
Resources of Owners of the Small
Business Applicant
Section 120.102 Funds not available
from alternative sources, including the
personal resources of owners. Effective
April 21, 2014, SBA removed § 120.102
from the regulations, thereby
eliminating what was commonly known
as the ‘‘personal resources test’’ from the
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
49006
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
requirements to determine eligibility for
the Business Loan Programs. This
regulation required certain owners of
the Applicant business to inject
personal liquid assets into the business
to reduce the amount of SBA-guaranteed
funds that would otherwise be needed.
The Agency eliminated this requirement
in 2014 because it was concerned, at
that time, that even borrowers whose
principals had significant personal
resources may have been unable to
obtain long-term fixed asset financing
from private sources at reasonable rates.
The Agency also questioned whether
the existence of personal resources
directly correlated to the ability to
obtain commercial credit on reasonable
terms. In addition, the Agency
determined that financing more robust
borrowers in the program would offset
some of the risks to SBA. However, SBA
is now concerned that borrowers with
large amounts of personal assets are
receiving government-backed loans. In
order to ensure that SBA financial
assistance is provided only to those
small businesses that are unable to
obtain credit from alternative sources
without a government guaranty,
including the personal resources of the
owners of the small business, SBA
proposes to reinstitute a personal
resources test.
SBA proposes to add a regulation that
would require SBA Lenders (i.e., both
7(a) Lenders and Certified Development
Companies (CDCs)) to analyze the
resources of individuals and entities
that own 20 percent or more of the
Applicant business in order to
determine if any of the owners have
liquid assets available that can provide
some or all of the desired financing.
(The resources of an owner who is an
individual include the resources of the
owner’s spouse and minor children.)
When an owner of 20 percent or more
has liquid assets that exceed stated
thresholds, SBA is proposing to require
an injection of cash from any such
owner to reduce the SBA loan amount.
Specifically, when the total financing
package (i.e., any SBA loans and any
other financing, including loans from
any other source, requested by the
Applicant business at or about the same
time):
(1) Is $350,000 or less, each 20
percent owner of the Applicant must
inject any liquid assets that are in excess
of one and three-quarter times the total
financing package, or $200,000,
whichever is greater;
(2) Is between $350,001 and
$1,000,000, each 20 percent owner of
the Applicant must inject any liquid
assets that are in excess of one and one-
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
half times the total financing package, or
$1,000,000, whichever is greater;
(3) Exceeds $1,000,000, each 20
percent owner of the Applicant must
inject any liquid assets that are in excess
of one times the total financing package,
or $2,500,000, whichever is greater.
SBA, in its sole discretion, may
permit exceptions to the required
injection of an owner’s excess liquid
assets only in extraordinary
circumstances, such as when the excess
funds are needed for medical expenses
of a family member or education/college
expenses for children.
3. Permissible Fees That a Lender or
Agent May Collect From an Applicant
or Borrower in Connection With a 7(a)
Loan Application.
The regulations governing permissible
fees a Lender may collect from a loan
Applicant or Borrower in connection
with an SBA-guaranteed loan are set
forth in § 120.221. In addition, the
regulations governing Agents, including
their fees and provision of services, are
set forth in 13 CFR part 103. Based on
feedback obtained when conducting
lender oversight activities and the
numerous questions SBA receives
concerning permissible fees, it is
apparent that there is a significant
amount of confusion surrounding who
may charge an Applicant fees in
connection with an SBA-guaranteed
loan, what fees may be charged to the
Applicant, what fees may be charged to
the Lender, and what is a ‘‘reasonable
fee.’’ In addition, in many cases,
Applicants are being charged multiple
fees by multiple providers (e.g., the
Lender and a third party), on the same
loan. On numerous occasions, SBA has
had to require that a Lender or Agent
refund amounts to an Applicant or
Borrower that the Agency deemed were
unreasonable or prohibited.
The regulations governing Agents,
including their fees and provision of
services to either an Applicant or a
Lender are set forth in Part 103, not in
Part 120 of the regulations. The
regulations in Part 103 provide key
definitions, including but not limited to
Agents, Lender Service Providers,
Packagers and Referral Agents. (See
§ 103.1.) The definition of a Referral
Agent in § 103.1(f) states that a Referral
Agent may be compensated by either an
Applicant or a Lender. Thus, Agents are
permitted to charge an Applicant a
referral fee, while Lenders are not. In
addition, while SBA permits Lenders to
engage with Lender Service Providers
(LSPs) (as defined in § 103.1(d)) to assist
the Lender with lender functions in
connection with SBA-guaranteed loans,
the cost of the LSP services may not be
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
charged to the Applicant or Borrower.
(See § 103.5(c).) To further complicate
matters, the regulation at § 103.4(g)
states that a Lender Service Provider
may not act as both a Lender Service
Provider or Referral Agent and a
Packager for an Applicant on the same
SBA business loan and receive
compensation for such activity from
both the Applicant and Lender.
However, that regulation provides a
limited exception to this ‘‘two master’’
prohibition when an Agent acts as a
Packager and is compensated by the
Applicant for packaging services, and
the same Agent also acts as a Referral
Agent and is compensated by the
Lender for referral activities in
connection with the same loan
application, provided the packaging
services are disclosed to the Lender and
the referral services are disclosed to the
Applicant.
In order to simplify who may charge
fees to the Applicant and/or the Lender,
and to limit the total amount of fees that
an Applicant may be charged in order
to obtain an SBA-guaranteed loan, SBA
proposes to revise certain portions of
the regulations at §§ 120.221, 103.4, and
103.5.
Section 120.221 Fees and expenses
which the Lender may collect from a
loan Applicant or Borrower. Currently,
§ 120.221(a) permits a Lender to charge
an Applicant reasonable fees (customary
for similar Lenders in the geographic
area where the loan is being made) for
packaging and other services. Under the
current regulation, SBA permits Lenders
to charge an Applicant a reasonable fee
to assist the Applicant with the
preparation of the application and
supporting materials. However, SBA
does not permit Lenders (or their
Associates) to charge an Applicant a
commitment, broker, referral, or similar
fee.
SBA proposes to amend § 120.221(a)
to limit the total fees an Applicant can
be charged by a Lender for assistance in
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan.
Regardless of what the fee is called (e.g.,
a packaging fee, application fee, etc.),
the Lender would be permitted to
collect a fee from the Applicant that is
no more than $2,500 for a loan up to
and including $350,000 and no more
than $5,000 for a loan over $350,000.
With the exception of necessary out-ofpocket costs, such as filing or recording
fees permitted in § 120.221(c), this is the
only fee that a Lender may collect
directly or indirectly from an Applicant
for assistance with obtaining an SBAguaranteed loan. In addition, the Lender
may not split a loan into two loans for
the purpose of charging an additional
fee to an Applicant. If there is a
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
legitimate business need for the
Applicant’s loan request to be split into
two loans (e.g., a term loan and a line
of credit), the Lender may only charge
the Applicant one fee within the
maximums set forth above, based on the
combined loan amounts. For example, if
the Applicant needs a $2 million term
loan to purchase real estate and a
building and a $350,000 line of credit
for working capital, the Lender may
charge one fee for both loans not to
exceed $5,000.
SBA considers these fees to be
reasonable for the services provided by
a Lender to an Applicant for assistance
with obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan.
SBA will monitor these fees and, if
adjustments are necessary, SBA may
revise these amounts from time to time.
If the Lender charges the Applicant a
fee for assistance with obtaining an
SBA-guaranteed loan, the Lender must
disclose the fee to the Applicant and
SBA by completing the Compensation
Agreement (SBA Form 159) in
accordance with the regulation at
§ 103.5 and the procedures set forth in
SOP 50 10.
SBA also proposes to amend
§ 120.221(b) to permit extraordinary
servicing fees in excess of 2 percent for
Export Working Capital Program
(EWCP) loans and Working Capital
CAPLines that are disbursed based on a
Borrowing Base Certificate. In these
programs, the fees charged must be
reasonable and prudent based on the
level of extraordinary effort required,
and cannot be higher than the fees
charged on the Lender’s similarly-sized,
non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans.
In addition, the fees charged cannot
exceed the actual cost of the extra
service provided. (SBA is proposing a
conforming amendment to § 120.344(b)
to ensure extraordinary servicing fees
charged on EWCP loans are reasonable
and prudent.)
The remaining sections of § 120.221
(sections (c) through (e)) remain
unchanged. Thus, in appropriate
circumstances as set forth in current
§§ 120.221(c) through (e) and further
clarified in SOP 50 10, a Lender may
charge an Applicant or Borrower out of
pocket expenses, a late payment fee, and
for legal services charged on an hourly
basis.
Section 103.4 What is ‘‘good cause’’
for suspension or revocation? As noted
above, the regulation at § 103.4(g)
currently permits a limited exception to
the ‘‘two master’’ prohibition when an
Agent acts as a Packager and is
compensated by the Applicant for
packaging services, and the same Agent
also acts as a Referral Agent and is
compensated by the Lender for those
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
activities in connection with the same
loan application. SBA believes there is,
at a minimum, an appearance of a
conflict of interest when an Agent
represents both the Applicant and the
SBA Lender on the same loan
application. In addition, the definition
of an ‘‘Associate’’ of a SBA Lender set
forth in § 120.10 includes ‘‘an agent
involved in the loan process.’’
Therefore, an LSP or Referral Agent
acting on behalf of the SBA Lender
meets the definition of an Associate of
the SBA Lender and is prohibited under
current Loan Program Requirements
from charging the Applicant certain fees
or expenses in connection with an SBAguaranteed loan. Further, when
conducting Lender oversight activities,
SBA has observed numerous instances
where Applicants have been
erroneously charged for services that
were provided for the SBA Lender, not
the Applicant. In order to prevent any
conflicts of interest from arising and to
ensure the Applicants are not
improperly charged for services
provided to the SBA Lender, SBA
proposes to eliminate the limited
exception to the ‘‘two master
prohibition’’ and prevent an Agent,
including an LSP, from providing
services to both the Applicant and the
SBA Lender and being compensated by
both parties in connection with the
same loan application. SBA proposes to
use the defined term ‘‘SBA Lender’’ in
the revised regulation to clarify that it
applies to both 7(a) Lenders and CDCs.
SBA also proposes to revise the
remaining text of § 103.4(g) for clarity.
Section 103.5 How does SBA
regulate an Agent’s fees and provision
of service? The regulation at § 103.5 sets
forth, among other things, the
requirement for all Agents to disclose to
SBA the compensation received for
services provided to an Applicant and
requires that fees charged must be
considered reasonable by SBA. In an
effort to clarify what SBA considers
reasonable and to prevent Applicants
from being overcharged by Agents, SBA
proposes to amend this section to limit
the total fees that an Agent may charge
an Applicant in connection with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan.
SBA proposes the following
limitations on the fees that an Agent
may charge an Applicant:
(1) For loans up to and including
$350,000: A maximum of up to 2.5% of
the loan amount, or $7,000, whichever
is less;
(2) For loans $350,001-$1,000,000: A
maximum of up to 2% of the loan
amount, or $15,000, whichever is less;
and
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49007
(3) For loans over $1,000,000: A
maximum of up to 1.5% of the loan
amount, or $30,000, whichever is less.
If an Agent provides more than one
service (e.g., packaging and referral
services), only one fee would be
permitted for all services performed by
the Agent. Further, if more than one
Agent (e.g., a Packager and a Referral
Agent) provides assistance to the
Applicant in obtaining the loan, the
amount of all fees that the Applicant
may be required to pay would be
combined to meet the maximum
allowable fee set by SBA. (However, a
fee charged to the Applicant by the
Lender in accordance with proposed
§ 120.221(a) will not be counted toward
the maximum allowable fee for an Agent
or Agents.) These maximum limits
would apply regardless of whether the
Agent’s fee is based on a percentage of
the loan amount or on an hourly basis.
SBA considers these fees to be
reasonable for the services provided by
an Agent or Agents to an Applicant in
connection with obtaining an SBAguaranteed loan. SBA will monitor these
fees and, if adjustments are necessary,
SBA may revise these amounts from
time to time by publishing a notice with
request for comments in the Federal
Register.
If an Agent or Agents charge an
Applicant fees in connection with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan, the
Agent or Agents must disclose the fees
to SBA by completing a Compensation
Agreement (SBA Form 159) in
accordance with the regulation at
§ 103.5 and must provide supporting
documentation as set forth in SOP 50
10.
Additionally, SBA proposes to
remove the word ‘‘directly’’ from the
last sentence of § 103.5(c) to clarify that
compensation paid by the Lender to a
Lender Service Provider may not be
charged to Applicants, either directly or
indirectly.
4. Loans to Qualified Employee Trusts
The regulations governing SBAguaranteed loans to qualified employee
trusts or ‘‘ESOPs’’ are set forth in
§§ 120.350 through 120.354. Currently,
the regulation at § 120.350 describes the
Agency’s policy concerning such loans
and states that SBA is authorized under
section 7(a)(15) of the Act to provide
guaranteed loans to ESOPs to help
finance the growth of the employer
small business or to purchase
ownership or voting control of the
employer. Because of the complex
nature of these transactions, SBA is
proposing to amend the regulation at
§ 120.350 to require such applications to
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
49008
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
be processed only on a non-delegated
basis.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
5. A Lender’s Responsibility When
Purchasing 7(a) Loans From the FDIC as
Receiver, Conservator, or Other
Liquidator of a Failed Financial
Institution
Generally, when the FDIC takes over
a failed insured depository institution, it
sells the 7(a) loan assets of the
institution to either an Assuming
Institution (through a purchase and
assumption transaction) or to an
investor in one or more FDIC loan sales.
SBA has a long-standing policy of
holding Assuming Institutions and
investors responsible for the contingent
liabilities (including repairs and
denials) associated with 7(a) loans
originated by failed insured depository
institutions, whether the 7(a) loans are
purchased by a Lender through an FDIC
loan sale where SBA has not already
purchased the guaranty or to an
Assuming Institution through a whole
bank transfer.
Under § 120.432(a), for 7(a) loan sales
that do not involve the FDIC (i.e., the
sale of a Lender’s entire interest in a 7(a)
loan to another Lender), SBA holds a
purchasing Lender responsible for the
contingent liabilities associated with the
7(a) loans acquired (even if the
guaranteed portion of the loan has
already been sold on the secondary
market). SBA is proposing to amend the
regulation at § 120.432(a) to implement
its long-established policy for 7(a) loans
acquired by Lenders from the FDIC (as
receiver, conservator, or other liquidator
of a failed insured depository
institution).
6. Microloan Program
Section 120.707 What conditions
apply to loans by Intermediaries to
Microloan borrowers? In order to
provide more flexibility for the
Microloan borrower, SBA proposes to
revise the regulation at § 120.707(b) to
increase the maximum maturity of a
loan from an Intermediary to a
Microloan borrower from six years to
seven years. This change would allow
for a longer repayment period for these
small loans.
Section 120.712 How does an
Intermediary get a grant to assist
Microloan borrowers? SBA proposes to
revise the regulation at § 120.712(b) to
incorporate recent statutory changes to
the percentage of grant funds that may
be used by the Intermediary for
marketing, managerial, and technical
assistance to prospective Microloan
borrowers from 25 percent to 50
percent. The balance of grant funds
must be used to provide technical
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
assistance to actual borrowers (i.e.,
small businesses that have received loan
funds from the Intermediary). In
§ 120.712(d), SBA proposes to
incorporate an identical recent statutory
change to the percentage of grant funds
the Intermediary may use to contract
with third parties to provide technical
assistance to Microloan borrowers. In
addition, SBA proposes to revise
§ 120.712(b) to limit the amount of grant
funds that an Intermediary may use to
market or advertise the Microloan
program to prospective borrowers to no
more than 5 percent of the amount of
the grant. None of the grant funds may
be used by the Intermediary to market
or advertise its non-SBA products or
services. Furthermore, in accordance
with the Office of Management and
Budget guidance for grants and
agreements set forth in 2 CFR 200.403
and 200.404, the amount of grant funds
used by the Intermediary to market or
advertise the Microloan program to
prospective borrowers must be
reasonable.
7. Technical Corrections
Section 120.222 Prohibition on
sharing premiums for secondary market
sales. SBA proposes a technical
correction to § 120.222 to remove an
extra word (‘‘in’’) that was inserted in
error.
Section 120.840 Accredited Lenders
Program (ALP). In § 120.840(b), SBA is
proposing to replace the reference to the
Director, Office of Financial Assistance
with ‘‘appropriate SBA official in
accordance with Delegations of
Authority.’’
B. Affiliation Principles for the Business
Loan, Business Disaster Loan, and
Surety Bond Guarantee Programs
Section 121.301 What size standards
and affiliation principles are applicable
to financial assistance programs? SBA
proposes to amend the affiliation
principles applicable to Applicants for
assistance in the financial assistance
programs set forth in § 121.301(f).
Specifically, SBA proposes to expand
the principle of affiliation arising from
‘‘identity of interest’’ to include
common investments and economic
dependence through contractual or
other relationships between any two or
more individuals or businesses,
reinstate the ‘‘newly organized concern’’
rule, reinstate the ‘‘totality of the
circumstances’’ analysis when
determining affiliation between an
Applicant for financial assistance and
other entities, and clarify affiliation
based on a franchise or license
agreement.
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Currently, the regulation at
§ 121.301(f)(4) defines affiliation based
on ‘‘identity of interest’’ for the Business
Loan, Business Disaster Loan, and
Surety Bond Guarantee Programs as
arising only when there are ‘‘close
relatives’’ with identical or substantially
identical business or economic interests
(such as where the close relatives
operate concerns in the same or similar
industry in the same geographic area).
Prior to 2016, this regulation also
defined affiliation to include identity of
interest based on other grounds,
including common investments or
economic dependence among other
parties (not just close relatives). The
current regulation also differs from the
principles of affiliation SBA uses for all
its other programs, all of which include
common investments and economic
dependence as grounds for affiliation.
By limiting the regulation to close
relatives only, SBA has allowed
businesses that are economically
dependent on one another to be treated
as independent businesses (i.e., not
affiliated) for the purposes of the
programs referenced in this paragraph.
SBA has also allowed individuals with
multiple common investments to have
their ownership interests be considered
separately in the Business Loan
Programs, whereas other SBA programs
would find those individuals to have an
identity of interest. SBA believes the
2016 regulatory change should be
reversed in order to better reflect the
controlling effect of an identity of
interest through common investments or
economic dependence and to conform
more closely to other SBA programs.
Accordingly, SBA is now proposing to
expand this regulation to include
affiliation between individuals or firms
that have identical or substantially
identical business or economic interests
(individuals or firms with common
investments, or firms that are
economically dependent through
contractual or other relationships).
Under the proposed rule, SBA would
find affiliation based on common
investments under the identity of
interest rule when multiple entities are
owned by the same individuals or firms,
and the entities owned by such
investors conduct business with each
other or share resources. In order to find
an identity of interest between
investors, the common investments
would need to be substantial, either in
number of investments or total value. As
an example, in the Size Appeal of W.
Harris, Government Services Contractor,
Inc., SBA No. SIZ–5717 (2016), SBA
found two individuals to have an
identity of interest based on common
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
investments where they each owned
50% of one firm, and split the
ownership of a second firm on a 55%/
45% basis. While there were only two
common investments, based on the fact
that the two individuals’ combined
ownership of the two firms was 100%,
their common investments were deemed
to be substantial in value. Because of the
substantial common investments, the
two firms were affiliated with each
other and with a firm wholly owned by
one of the individuals. The proposed
rule adopts the standard in W. Harris
with the following modification: Under
the proposed rule, SBA would consider
businesses to be affiliated based on
common investments only if they
conduct business with each other, or
share resources, equipment, locations or
employees; or provide loan guaranties
or other financial or managerial support
to each other.
As a hypothetical example, ABC
Company is owned by four unrelated
individuals: Ann owns 60% of the
business; Barbara owns 15%; Charlie
owns 15%; and David owns 10%. ABC
Company applies for a 504 loan to
acquire land and build a hotel. XYZ
Company is owned by the same four
unrelated individuals, but in different
ownership percentages: Ann owns 10%
of the business; Barbara owns 60%;
Charlie owns 15%; and David owns
15%. XYZ Company, a management
company, applies for a 7(a) loan for
working capital. DEF Company also is
owned by the same four unrelated
individuals in different ownership
percentages, but with a new member as
well: Ann owns 5% of the business;
Barbara owns 10%; Charlie owns 55%;
David owns 15%; and Ella owns 15%.
DEF Company applies for a 504 loan to
acquire land and build a hotel. XYZ
Company has agreements with ABC
Company and DEF Company to manage
both of the hotels. Under the proposed
rule, SBA will consider Ann, Barbara,
Charlie and David to have an identity of
interest because of their substantial
common investments in the three
companies, and the fact that XYZ
Company manages the hotels owned by
ABC Company and DEF Company. Any
firm in which Ann, Barbara, Charlie, or
David individually or collectively own
more than 50% also will be considered
affiliated with ABC Company, XYZ
Company, and DEF Company, if the
business owned by Ann, Barbara,
Charlie, or David conducts business or
shares resources with, or provides
financial or managerial support to, any
of the co-owned firms. Any other
businesses in which Ella may have an
ownership interest, however, will not be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
considered affiliated because Ella only
has a small ownership percentage in
DEF Company.
Also under the proposed identity of
interest rule, if a small business
Applicant derived more than 85% of its
revenue from another business over the
previous three fiscal years, SBA would
find that the small business Applicant is
economically dependent on the other
business and, therefore, that the two
businesses are affiliated. For example,
Company A manufactures tires and has
a contract with Company B to supply
the vast majority of Company B’s tires.
The sales to Company B accounted for
86%–88% of Company A’s revenues
over the previous three fiscal years.
Under the proposed rule, Company A
would be economically dependent on
Company B and the two businesses
would be deemed affiliated. The
proposed rule departs from SBA’s other
programs in using a higher threshold of
85% of the Applicant’s revenues to
establish economic dependence, rather
than 70%. SBA believes the higher
threshold is more appropriate to
establish affiliation in the programs
discussed in this Section II.B. As in
SBA’s other programs, this basis of
affiliation would include an exception
for a business that is new or a start-up.
New or start-up businesses may only
have a few customers or obtained a few
contracts, and do not have as many
partners and clients as established
businesses. In order to be eligible for the
exception for new or start-up
businesses, these businesses would
need to have a plan to diversify and
become less dependent on one entity.
For example, in the matter of Size
Appeal of Argus And Black, Inc., SBA
No. SIZ–5204, 2011 WL 1168302
(February 22, 2011), the SBA Office of
Hearings and Appeals held that where
a small business has only recently
begun operations either initially or after
a period of dormancy, and is dependent
upon its alleged affiliate for only one
small contract of short duration, which
by itself could not sustain a business, a
finding of economic dependence is not
warranted.
SBA recognizes that, if the proposed
identity of interest rule is adopted as
final, SBA Lenders may need assistance
in applying the rule to certain
agricultural business relationships or
agreements. In particular, the agreement
between a poultry farmer and a large
poultry producer (integrator) may be
critical to the determination of whether
the farmer is an independent small
business but, due to the complexity of
the typical integrator agreement, SBA
Lenders may be uncertain as to the
correct outcome of the affiliation
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49009
analysis for such a business
relationship. SBA is considering
reviewing these agreements and making
the affiliation determination itself so
that SBA Lenders will not be reluctant
to make loans to small poultry farmers
operating under such agreements. SBA
will provide further information on this
in the final rule, if necessary.
Additionally, SBA proposes to add
the newly organized concern rule to
§ 121.301(f), which will create
uniformity among SBA’s various
affiliation rules. The newly organized
concern rule applied to the Business
Loan Programs prior to the 2016 rule
change, but was removed at SBA’s own
initiative. Under the proposed newly
organized concern rule, a newly
organized spin-off company may be
found affiliated with the original
company where all of the following
conditions are met: (1) Former or
current officers, directors, principal
stockholders, managing members,
general partners, or key employees of
one concern organize a new concern; (2)
the new concern is in the same or
related industry or field of operation; (3)
the individuals who organized the new
concern serve as the new concern’s
officers, directors, principal
stockholders, managing members,
general partners, or key employees; and
(4) the original concern is furnishing or
will furnish the new concern with
contracts, financial or technical
assistance, indemnification on bid or
performance bonds, and/or other
facilities, whether for a fee or otherwise.
The proposed rule would define a key
employee to be an employee who,
because of his or her position in the
concern, has a critical influence in or
substantive control over the operations
or management of the concern. The
proposed rule further defines a ‘‘newly
organized’’ concern to be one that has
been actively operating continuously for
two years or less. The proposed newly
organized concern basis of affiliation
would be a rebuttable presumption that
may be rebutted if there is a clear line
of fracture between the new concern
and the other firm.
Finally, SBA proposes to amend
§ 121.301(f) by adding a new paragraph
6 to explain that, when making
affiliation determinations, SBA will
consider the totality of the
circumstances, and may find affiliation
even though no single factor is sufficient
to constitute affiliation. The totality of
the circumstances criterion for
determining affiliation was removed in
2016 in response to comments received
on the proposed revisions to the
affiliation rules. Commenters requested
that SBA either eliminate the criterion
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
49010
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
or provide examples of when it would
be used. SBA stated that, generally,
examples of when this criterion was
used involved negative control or
control through management
agreements. Rather than include
examples in the rule, SBA provided
additional specific guidance in
§§ 121.301(f)(1) and (f)(3) to address
negative control and control through
management agreements. However, SBA
now believes that there are other
examples of when affiliation may be
present and, therefore, is reinstating the
totality of the circumstances criterion.
Examples of affiliation between small
businesses based on the totality of the
circumstances include:
(1) SBA found a newly established
firm to be affiliated with the firm owned
by its 40% owner where both firms were
construction companies; they had
similar names (Specialized Services,
Inc. and Specialized Veterans, LLC); the
40% owner provided a $300,000 initial
capital contribution compared to the
60% owner’s $1,000 contribution; the
majority owner was previously the Chief
Operating Officer of the affiliate; the
majority owner had no construction
experience; and the affiliate provided
indemnification to the firm’s surety.
(Size Appeal of Specialized Veterans,
LLC, SBA No. SIZ–5138 (2010).)
(2) SBA found a newly established
firm to be affiliated with its minority
owner, an entity in the same line of
business, where the other owners were
previously key employees of the
affiliate; the affiliate provided
guarantees for the firm’s financing and
required the firm to seek the affiliate’s
approval before undertaking long-term
commitments; the affiliate supplied the
firm with machines and equipment for
free; the affiliate promised the firm a
large amount of business; and the sales
the firm made to the affiliate accounted
for the vast majority, 86%–88%, of its
revenues. (Size Appeal of Pointe
Precision, LLC, SBA No. SIZ–4466
(2001).)
SBA notes that a business found
affiliated under the totality of the
circumstances test (or any other ground
of affiliation) in the Business Loan
Programs may challenge the
determination by requesting a formal
size determination from SBA’s Office of
Government Contracting in accordance
with 13 CFR 121.1001(b)(1)(i). A
business can appeal a formal size
determination to SBA’s Office of
Hearings and Appeals in accordance
with 13 CFR 121.1101.
Finally, SBA proposes to revise
§ 121.301(f)(5) to clarify that the term
‘‘franchise’’ has the meaning given by
the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) in
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
its definition of ‘‘franchise’’ as set forth
in 16 CFR 436. SBA proposes to cross
reference the FTC definition of
‘‘franchise’’ in the regulation to clarify
that the regulation applies to all
agreements or relationships, whatever
they may be called, that meet the FTC
definition of a franchise. All such
agreements will be referred to in the
regulation as ‘‘franchise agreements’’
and the parties to such agreements will
be referred to as ‘‘franchisor’’ and
‘‘franchisee.’’ Further, SBA proposes to
add to this regulation a statement that
SBA will maintain a centralized list of
franchise and other similar agreements
that are eligible for SBA financial
assistance. SBA will make this
centralized list available to SBA Lenders
and the public. The proposed changes
discussed in this paragraph are
consistent with SBA’s current policy
and procedure.
Although not included in the
regulations, SBA is providing below a
description of the franchise procedures
currently in effect for lending to
franchisees in the Business Loan
Programs. As of January 1, 2018, SBA
created the SBA Franchise Directory
(the ‘‘Directory’’) of all franchise and
other brands reviewed by SBA that are
eligible for SBA financial assistance.
The Directory only includes business
models that SBA determines are eligible
under SBA’s affiliation rules and other
eligibility criteria. If the Applicant’s
brand meets the FTC definition of a
franchise, it must be on the Directory in
order to obtain SBA financing. (To help
minimize confusion over brands that
may appear to be franchises but that do
not meet the FTC definition, SBA
includes such brands on the Directory at
their request if they are eligible in all
other respects.) SBA Lenders are able to
rely on the Directory and no longer need
to review franchise or other brand
documentation for affiliation or
eligibility.
The Directory will continue to be
maintained on SBA’s website at
www.sba.gov. It will contain the
following information:
(1) Whether the brand meets the FTC
definition of a franchise;
(2) The SBA Franchise Identifier
Code, if applicable (a code will only be
issued if the agreement meets the FTC
definition of a franchise);
(3) Whether an addendum is needed
in order to resolve any affiliation issues
as a result of provisions in the franchise
agreement and, if so, whether the
franchisor will use the SBA Addendum
to Franchise Agreement (SBA Form
2462) or an SBA Negotiated Addendum
(with respect to an SBA Negotiated
Addendum, the Directory will reference
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
the addendum most recently negotiated
with SBA, which will not be earlier than
2015); and
(4) Whether there are additional
issues the Lender must consider with
respect to the brand (e.g.,
documentation that the business will be
open to all, review of any third party
management agreement to ensure
Applicant is not a passive business or
affiliated with the management
company).
For applications involving a franchise
or similar relationship that meets the
FTC definition of a franchise, before
submitting the application to SBA for
non-delegated processing or approving
the loan under the SBA Lender’s
delegated authority, the SBA Lender
must check the Directory to determine
if it includes the Applicant’s brand. If
the Applicant’s brand is on the
Directory, the SBA Lender may proceed
with submitting the application to SBA
for non-delegated processing, or
approving the loan under its delegated
authority. If the Applicant’s brand is not
on the Directory, the SBA Lender cannot
submit the application to SBA for nondelegated processing, or approve the
loan under its delegated authority. (See,
SOP 50 10 for a full discussion of the
procedures for processing franchise
loans.)
Section 121.302 When does SBA
determine the size status of an
applicant? SBA proposes to incorporate
the SBA Express and Export Express
programs into this regulation to clarify
that, with respect to applications for
financial assistance under these
programs, size is determined as of the
date of approval of the loan by the SBA
Express or Export Express Lender.
Compliance With Executive Orders
12866, 12988, 13132, 13563, and 13771,
the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C., Ch. 35), and the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612).
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that this
proposed rule is not a ‘‘significant’’
regulatory action for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866. However, SBA
has drafted a Regulatory Impact
Analysis in the next section. This is not
a major rule under the Congressional
Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 800.
Regulatory Impact Analysis
1. Is there a need for this regulatory
action?
The Agency believes it is necessary to
provide regulatory guidance for SBA
Express and Export Express loans,
which are authorized by statute. Current
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
regulatory guidance provides an
extensive framework for the delivery of
SBA’s 7(a) guaranteed loans through
participating private sector lenders.
However, currently there are not
regulations identifying the specific Loan
Program Requirements applicable to
SBA Express and Export Express.
Congress has authorized SBA to permit
qualified lenders to make SBA Express
and Export Express loans using, to the
maximum extent practicable, their own
analyses, procedures, and
documentation. It is necessary to
provide clear and succinct regulatory
guidance for lenders to encourage
participation in extending these smaller
dollar loans, and to enable these lenders
to extend credit with confidence in their
ability to rely on payment by SBA of the
guaranty if necessary.
The Small Business 7(a) Lending
Oversight Reform Act of 2018 was
signed into law on June 21, 2018. As
part of this legislation, Congress has
authorized the Agency to direct the
methods by which Lenders determine
whether a borrower is able to obtain
credit elsewhere. SBA will be
implementing that legislation in a
separate rulemaking, but in this rule
SBA proposes to reinstate a personal
resources test in an effort to provide
clear direction to SBA Lenders when
analyzing whether a borrower has credit
available elsewhere on reasonable terms
from non-Federal or alternative sources.
The statutory changes in the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2018 (Pub. L. 115–141) regarding the
Microloan Program require amendments
to existing regulations for the percentage
of grant funds that may be used by the
Microloan Intermediary for marketing,
managerial, and technical assistance to
prospective Microloan borrowers.
Existing regulations must be revised as
proposed to reflect the statutory
changes.
Further, the Agency believes it needs
to streamline and reduce regulatory
burdens to facilitate robust participation
in the business loan programs that assist
small and underserved U.S. businesses.
For that reason, SBA is proposing the
changes to the regulatory provisions
related to allowable fees that a Lender
or Agent may collect from an Applicant
for financial assistance. The proposed
changes are needed to simplify the
regulations regarding fees that may be
collected from an Applicant. The
proposal would establish clear limits on
the amount of fees that may be charged
by a Lender and/or an Agent. In
addition, the proposed changes to the
affiliation principles applicable to the
Business Loan, Disaster Loan, and
Surety Bond Guarantee Programs are
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
needed in order to simplify and clarify
the determination of eligibility of a
business as a small concern.
2. What are the potential benefits and
costs of this regulatory action?
SBA does not anticipate any
additional costs or impact on the
subsidy to operate the business loan
programs under these proposed
regulations. SBA anticipates that
providing clear regulatory guidance for
the SBA Express and Export Express
Loan Programs will result in an increase
in the number of participating lenders
and loans in both programs, which
would mean increased access to capital
for small businesses. SBA does not
anticipate any additional cost from the
addition of the SBA Express and Export
Express regulations because both
programs have been in use and
performing for over 5 years.
Additionally, portfolio performance of
both programs, including prepayment,
default and recovery behaviors is
already being captured in the 7(a)
program’s annual subsidy calculation.
In return for the additional autonomy
and authority granted under SBA
Express, Lenders who participate in the
SBA Express program agree to receive a
maximum guaranty of 50% on loans of
$350,000 or less. The ability for SBA
Express Lenders to use the same forms,
procedures and policies that they
already follow for their similarly-sized,
non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans
removes an additional layer of
documents and permits a lender to
move more quickly to a decision and
funding of small dollar small business
loans. This reduces the time and costs,
as well as the paperwork involved in
making these smaller loans (up to
$350,000 for SBA Express and up to
$500,000 for Export Express).
The Export Express Loan Program
provides lenders with a maximum
guaranty of 90% for loans of $350,000
or less and 75% for loans over $350,000
up to $500,000, as well as the authority
to use their own forms, procedures and
policies to the maximum extent
possible. As with SBA Express, the
increased autonomy and authority
reduces redundancy in documentation,
time and costs associated with
underwriting smaller export loans.
Cost to deliver is an important
consideration for lenders when
assessing the benefits of participating
with SBA programs. Streamlined rules
result in increased lender participation,
particularly for community banks, credit
unions and other mission-based lenders
who generally serve more rural
communities and underserved
populations with smaller dollar loans.
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49011
While SBA does not have specific
statistics, cost savings to the lender
generally trickle down to the small
business Applicant. Further, providing
plain language regulatory guidance for
the SBA Express and Export Express
Loan Programs will reduce improper
payment risk for lenders and SBA by
ensuring that lenders are fully informed
and understand the program
requirements.
3. What alternatives have been
considered?
SBA has provided guidance on the
SBA Express and Export Express Loan
Programs in SOP 50 10, Lender and
Development Company Programs, SOP
50 57, 7(a) Loan Servicing and
Liquidation, SOP 50 53, Lender
Supervision and Enforcement, and 51
00, On-Site Reviews and Examinations,
and official Agency notices. The Agency
recognizes, however, that regulations
are important for the proper
implementation of the two programs.
Executive Order 13563
This executive order supplements and
reaffirms the principles and
requirements in E.O. 12866, including
the requirement to provide the public
with an opportunity to participate in the
regulatory process. In compliance with
the executive order, a description of the
need for this regulatory action and
benefits and costs associated with this
action, including possible distributional
impacts are included above in the
Regulatory Impact Analysis. The
Agency has participated in public
forums and meetings, which have
included outreach to many of its
program participants to seek valuable
insight, guidance, and suggestions for
program reform. Some of the proposed
changes in this rule are a direct result
of the feedback SBA has received from
program participants.
Executive Order 13771
This proposed rule is not expected to
be an E.O. 13771 regulatory action
because this proposed rule is not
significant under E.O. 12866.
Executive Order 12988
This action meets applicable
standards set forth in Sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform, to minimize litigation,
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce
burden. The action does not have
retroactive or preemptive effect.
Executive Order 13132
SBA has determined that this
proposed rule would not have
substantial, direct effects on the States,
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
49012
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, for the
purposes of Executive Order 13132,
SBA has determined that this proposed
rule has no federalism implications
warranting preparation of a federalism
assessment.
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.,
Ch. 35
SBA has determined that this
proposed rule would impose additional
reporting or recordkeeping requirements
under the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA). Applicants for SBA Express and
Export Express loans, as well as SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders,
use the same forms as all other 7(a)
loans in order to apply for an SBA
guaranteed loan. These forms include:
SBA Form 1919, Borrower Information
Form; SBA Form 1920, Lender’s
Application for Guaranty; SBA Form
1971, Religious Eligibility Worksheet
(for those businesses that may have a
religious aspect); and SBA Form 2237
(to request modifications to an approved
loan). These forms are all OMBapproved forms under OMB Control
number 3245–0348. SBA Form 1920
would need to be revised due to the
proposed new regulation at § 120.102,
which would require Lenders to analyze
the personal resources of certain owners
of the Applicant business to determine
if they have liquid assets that can
provide some or all of the desired
financing. The change would have a de
minimis impact on Lenders since the
personal resource analysis is already
part of the credit analysis Lenders
currently conduct in determining an
Applicant’s eligibility for SBA financial
assistance. SBA Form 1920 is completed
by the Lender, not by the Applicant.
The rule also proposes changes that
would require revisions to SBA Form
159, Fee Disclosure and Compensation
Agreement (OMB Control number 3245–
0201), which is used to collect
information from Lenders and Agents
on the fees that they charge to
Applicants for assistance with obtaining
an SBA-guaranteed loan. SBA Form 159
is also used to collect information from
Lenders on referral fees that it pays to
Referral Agents in connection with an
SBA-guaranteed loan. The specific
proposed revisions to SBA Form 159
would implement the proposed changes
to §§ 120.221, 103.4(g), and 103.5 that
limit the amount and types of fees that
may be charged to an Applicant. The
proposed revisions to SBA Form 159
would reduce the hour burden for
Lenders because they will no longer
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
have to itemize the fees charged to
Applicants in excess of $2,500, but
merely disclose the amount charged.
The revisions would have no material
effect on the reporting burden for
Agents. They will continue to report on
all fees imposed on Applicants as they
do now. The proposed changes to SBA
Forms 1920 and 159 will be submitted
to OMB as part of a broader,
comprehensive revision of the forms
that is not affected by this proposed
rule, but is part of the Agency’s efforts
to streamline and simplify the
information collected from Applicants
and Lenders. SBA will make it clear in
the final rule that the specific revisions
affected by this proposed rule will not
take effect until the rule is finalized.
SBA invites comments on the proposed
changes to the underlying regulations
that would impact these forms by the
deadline for comments noted in the
DATES section.
Finally, this proposed rule proposes
to put into the regulations the existing
requirement for SBLCs to submit to SBA
for review and approval on an annual
basis the validation of any credit scoring
model they are using in connection with
SBA Express and Export Express loans.
This reporting requirement will be
included in OMB-approved collection,
SBA Lender Reporting Requirements
(OMB Approval Number 3245–0365).
This information collection expires
September 30, 2018 and will be
submitted to OMB for renewal prior to
that date. The proposed regulatory
change does not impact that
requirement; it merely codifies the
requirement in the regulation instead of
the SOP.
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–
612
When an agency issues a rulemaking
proposal, the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, requires the
agency to ‘‘prepare and make available
for public comment an initial regulatory
analysis’’ which will ‘‘describe the
impact of the proposed rule on small
entities.’’ Section 605 of the RFA allows
an agency to certify a rule, in lieu of
preparing an analysis, if the proposed
rulemaking is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Although the rulemaking will impact all
of the approximately 4,500 7(a) Lenders,
all of the approximately 214 CDCs, all
of the approximately 146 Microloan
Intermediaries, all of the approximately
33 ILP Intermediaries, and all of the
approximately 32 Sureties that
participate in the SBG Program, SBA
does not believe the impact will be
significant because this proposal
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
modifies existing regulations and
procedures to provide bright-line
guidance.
SBA has determined that by
proposing a limit to fees that a Lender
or an Agent may charge to a small
business Applicant or Borrower for SBA
7(a) loans, small business borrowers
will be protected from incurring
excessive expense to obtain a loan. SBA
issued guaranties on 288,398 7(a) loans
from fiscal year 2013 through fiscal year
2017. Fees charged to the Borrower or
Applicant for packaging or other
services were disclosed on 21% of the
total 7(a) loans approved in that period.
Applicants or Borrowers were charged
fees that exceed the limits proposed in
this rulemaking on 3.8% of total 7(a)
loans approved.
Based on the analysis above, SBA has
determined that the proposed fee limits
will not cause undue financial burden
to the Lenders or Agents. Having this
bright-line test, Lenders, Borrowers, and
Agents will, in fact, save time and costs
in analyzing and documenting that fees
charged to the Applicant are reasonable.
SBA’s proposal to reinstate a personal
resources test will have no impact,
either directly or indirectly, to
Applicants for 7(a) or 504 loans.
Currently, the regulation (13 CFR
120.101) and program guidance require
SBA Lenders to analyze the ability of
the business to obtain credit from nonfederal sources, including the personal
resources of individuals and entities
that own 20 percent or more of the
Applicant business. The proposed
change reinstates a bright-line test for
SBA Lenders to appropriately consider
the personal resources of the principals.
SBA’s proposal to presume affiliation
between a small business Applicant and
another business from which the
Applicant has derived more than 85%
of its revenue over the previous three
fiscal years includes an exception for
new or start-up businesses. The
exception will require the new or startup Applicant to prepare a
diversification plan demonstrating how
it plans to become less dependent on
any single source of income. This
requirement to create a diversification
plan may create an additional regulatory
burden on those Applicants eligible for
the exception. However, SBA considers
this impact to be de minimis to the
overall cost and time burden of the
Applicant in preparing an application
and business plan.
SBA believes that this proposed rule
encompasses best practice guidance that
aligns with the Agency’s mission to
increase access to capital for small
businesses and facilitate American job
preservation and creation with the
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
removal of unnecessary regulatory
requirements. For these reasons, SBA
has determined that there is no
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
SBA invites comment from members of
the public who believe there will be a
significant impact on sureties,
microloan intermediaries, participant
lenders, CDCs, or small businesses.
List of Subjects
13 CFR Part 103
Administrative practice and
procedure.
13 CFR Part 120
Community development,
Environmental protection, Equal
employment opportunity, Exports, Loan
programs—business, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Small
businesses.
13 CFR Part 121
Loan programs—business, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Small
businesses.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, SBA proposes to amend 13
CFR parts 103, 120 and 121 as follows:
PART 103—STANDARDS FOR
CONDUCTING BUSINESS WITH SBA
1. The authority citation for part 103
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 634, 642.
2. Amend § 103.4 by revising
paragraph (g) to read as follows:
■
§ 103.4 What is ‘‘good cause’’ for
suspension or revocation?
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Acting as an Agent (including a
Lender Service Provider) for an SBA
Lender and an Applicant on the same
SBA business loan and receiving
compensation from both the Applicant
and SBA Lender.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 103.5 by revising
paragraph (b) and the last sentence of
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 103.5 How does SBA regulate an Agent’s
fees and provision of service?
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Total compensation charged by an
Agent or Agents to an Applicant for
services rendered in connection with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan must
be reasonable. In cases where the
compensation exceeds the amount SBA
deems reasonable, the Agent(s) must
reduce the charge and refund to the
Applicant any sum in excess of the
amount SBA deems reasonable. SBA
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
considers the following amounts to be
reasonable for the total compensation
that an Applicant can be charged by an
Agent or Agents:
(1) For loans up to and including
$350,000: A maximum of up to 2.5% of
the loan amount, or $7,000, whichever
is less;
(2) For loans $350,001–$1,000,000: A
maximum of up to 2% of the loan
amount, or $15,000, whichever is less;
and
(3) For loans over $1,000,000: A
maximum of up to 1.5% of the loan
amount, or $30,000, whichever is less.
(c) * * * However, such
compensation may not be charged to an
Applicant or Borrower.
PART 120—BUSINESS LOANS
4. The authority citation for part 120
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 634(b)(6), (b)(7),
(b)(14), (h), and note, 636(a), (h) and (m), 650,
687(f), 696(3), and 697(a) and (e); Pub. L.
111–5, 123 Stat. 115; Pub. L. 111–240, 124
Stat. 2504.
■
5. Add § 120.102 to read as follows:
§ 120.102 Funds not available from
alternative sources, including the personal
resources of owners.
(a) An Applicant for a business loan
must show that the desired funds are
not available from the resources of any
individual or entity owning 20 percent
or more of the Applicant. SBA will
require the use of liquid assets from any
such owner as an injection to reduce the
SBA loan amount when that owner’s
liquid assets exceed the amounts
specified in paragraphs (a)(1) through
(3) of this section. When the total
financing package (i.e., any SBA loans
and any other financing, including loans
from any other source, requested by the
Applicant business at or about the same
time):
(1) Is $350,000 or less, each 20
percent owner of the Applicant must
inject any liquid assets that are in excess
of one and three-quarter times the total
financing package, or $200,000,
whichever is greater;
(2) Is between $350,001 and
$1,000,000, each 20 percent owner of
the Applicant must inject any liquid
assets that are in excess of one and onehalf times the total financing package, or
$1,000,000, whichever is greater;
(3) Exceeds $1,000,000, each 20
percent owner of the Applicant must
inject any liquid assets that are in excess
of one times the total financing package,
or $2,500,000, whichever is greater.
(b) Any liquid assets in excess of the
applicable amount set forth in
paragraph (a) of this section must be
PO 00000
Frm 00024
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49013
used to reduce the SBA loan amount.
These funds must be injected prior to
the disbursement of the proceeds of any
SBA financing. In extraordinary
circumstances, SBA may, in its sole
discretion, permit exceptions to the
required injection of an owner’s excess
liquid assets.
(c) For purposes of this section,
‘‘liquid assets’’ means cash or cash
equivalents, including savings accounts,
CDs, stocks, bonds, or other similar
assets. Equity in real estate holdings and
other fixed assets are not to be
considered liquid assets. In addition,
the liquid assets of any 20 percent
owner who is an individual include the
liquid assets of the owner’s spouse and
any minor children.
(d) SBA Lenders must document their
analysis and determination in the loan
file.
■ 6. Amend § 120.130 by revising
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 120.130 Restrictions on uses of
proceeds.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Floor plan financing or other
revolving line of credit, except under
§ 120.340, § 120.390, or § 120.444;
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Amend § 120.221 by revising the
section heading and paragraphs (a) and
(b) to read as follows:
§ 120.221 Fees and expenses that the
Lender may collect from an Applicant or
Borrower.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Fees that can be collected from the
Applicant for assistance in obtaining a
loan. The Lender may collect a fee from
an Applicant for assistance with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan. The
fee may not exceed $2,500 for a loan up
to and including $350,000 and may not
exceed $5,000 for a loan over $350,000.
The Lender must advise the Applicant
in writing that the Applicant is not
required to obtain or pay for unwanted
services. In cases where the
compensation exceeds what SBA deems
reasonable, the Lender must reduce the
charge and refund to the Applicant any
amount in excess of what SBA deems
reasonable. If the Lender charges the
Applicant a fee for assistance with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan, the
fee must be disclosed to SBA in
accordance with § 103.5 and
documented in accordance with Loan
Program Requirements.
(b) Extraordinary servicing. Subject to
prior written SBA approval, if all or part
of a loan will have extraordinary
servicing needs, the Lender may charge
extraordinary servicing fees in excess of
2 percent per year on the outstanding
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
49014
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
balance of the part requiring special
servicing for certain revolving lines of
credit made under § 120.390 and on
Export Working Capital Program loans
(as allowed under § 120.344(b)),
provided the fees are reasonable and
prudent.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 120.222
[Amended]
8. Amend § 120.222 by removing the
word ‘‘in’’ before the words ‘‘any
premium received’’.
■
§ 120.344
§ 120.441 SBA Express and Export
Express Loan Programs.
[Amended]
9. Amend § 120.344(b) by removing
the period at the end of the paragraph
and adding ‘‘, provided the fees are
reasonable and prudent.’’
■ 10. Revise § 120.350 to read as
follows:
■
§ 120.350
Policy.
(a) Section 7(a)(15) of the Act
authorizes SBA to guarantee a loan to a
qualified employee trust (‘‘ESOP’’) to:
(1) Help finance the growth of the
employer small business; or
(2) Purchase ownership or voting
control of the employer.
(b) Applications for SBA-guaranteed
loans to a qualified employee trust may
not be processed under a Lender’s
delegated authority.
■ 11. Amend § 120.432 by adding a
sentence at the end of paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 120.432 Under what circumstances does
this subpart permit sales of, or sales of
participating interests in, 7(a) loans?
(a) * * * This paragraph applies to all
7(a) loans purchased from the FDIC (as
receiver, conservator, or other liquidator
of a failed insured depository
institution), whether through a loan sale
where SBA has not already purchased
the guarantee or through a whole bank
transfer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Amend § 120.440 by revising
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 120.440 How does a 7(a) Lender obtain
delegated authority?
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
*
*
*
*
*
(c) If delegated authority is approved
or renewed, Lender must execute a
supplemental guarantee agreement,
which will specify a term not to exceed
two years. As provided in
§ 120.442(c)(2)(i), when SBA renews a
Lender’s authority to participate in SBA
Express, SBA may grant a longer term,
but not to exceed three years. For
approval or renewal of any delegated
authority, SBA may grant shortened
approvals or renewals based on risk or
any of the other delegated authority
criteria. Lenders with less than three
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
years of SBA lending experience will be
limited to an initial term of one year or
less.
■ 13. Add a new undesignated center
heading after § 120.440 to read as
follows:
‘‘SBA EXPRESS AND EXPORT
EXPRESS LOAN PROGRAMS’’.
■ 14. Add §§ 120.441 through 120.447
to read as follows:
(a) SBA Express. Under the SBA
Express Loan Program (SBA Express),
designated Lenders (SBA Express
Lenders) process, close, service, and
liquidate SBA-guaranteed 7(a) loans
using their own loan analyses,
procedures, and documentation to the
maximum extent practicable, with
reduced requirements for submitting
documentation to, and prior approval
by, SBA. These loan analyses,
procedures, and documentation must
meet prudent lending standards; be
consistent with those an SBA Express
Lender uses for its similarly-sized, nonSBA guaranteed commercial loans; and
conform to all requirements imposed
upon Lenders generally and SBA
Express Lenders in particular by Loan
Program Requirements, as such
requirements are issued and revised by
SBA from time to time, unless
specifically identified by SBA as
inapplicable to SBA Express loans. In
return for the expanded authority and
autonomy provided by the program,
SBA Express Lenders agree to accept a
maximum SBA guaranty of 50 percent
of the SBA Express loan amount.
(b) Export Express. The Export
Express Loan Program (Export Express)
is designed to help current and
prospective small exporters. It is subject
to the same loan processing, making,
closing, servicing, and liquidation
requirements, as well as the same
interest rates and applicable fees, as
SBA Express, except as otherwise
provided in Loan Program
Requirements.
§ 120.442 Process to obtain or renew SBA
Express or Export Express authority.
The decision to grant or renew SBA
Express or Export Express authority will
be made by the appropriate SBA official
in accordance with Delegations of
Authority, and is final. If SBA Express
or Export Express authority is approved
or renewed, the Lender must execute a
supplemental guarantee agreement
before the Lender’s SBA Express or
Export Express authority will become
effective.
(a) Criteria and process for initial
approval of SBA Express or Export
PO 00000
Frm 00025
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Express authority. A Lender that wishes
to participate in SBA Express or Export
Express must submit a written request
to SBA.
(1) Existing 7(a) Lenders. In evaluating
an existing 7(a) Lender’s application for
SBA Express or Export Express
authority, SBA will consider the criteria
and follow the procedures set forth in
§ 120.440.
(2) Lending institutions that do not
currently participate with SBA. Lending
institutions that do not currently
participate with SBA must become 7(a)
Lenders to participate in SBA Express
and/or Export Express. Such institutions
may request SBA 7(a) lending and SBA
Express and/or Export Express authority
simultaneously. In evaluating such
institutions, in addition to the criteria
set forth in §§ 120.410 and 120.440, SBA
will consider whether the institution:
(i) Has acceptable experience with
small commercial loans, including an
acceptable number of performing small
commercial loans outstanding at its
most recent fiscal year end; and
(ii) Has received appropriate training
on SBA’s policies and procedures.
(b) Criteria and process for renewal of
SBA Express or Export Express
authority. In renewing a Lender’s SBA
Express or Export Express authority and
determining the term of the renewal,
SBA will consider the criteria and
follow the process set forth in § 120.440
and also will consider whether the
Lender:
(1) Can effectively process, make,
close, service, and liquidate SBA
Express or Export Express loans, as
applicable;
(2) Has received a major substantive
objection regarding renewal from the
Field Office(s) covering the territory
where the Lender generates significant
numbers of SBA Express or Export
Express loans, as applicable; and
(3) Has received acceptable review
results on the SBA Express or Export
Express portion, as applicable, of any
SBA-administered Lender reviews.
(c) Term.—(1) Initial Approval. SBA
may approve a Lender’s authority to
participate in SBA Express or Export
Express for a maximum term of two
years. SBA may approve a shorter term
or limit a Lender’s maximum SBA
Express or Export Express loan volume
if, in SBA’s sole discretion, a Lender’s
qualifications, performance, experience
with SBA lending, or other factors so
warrant.
(2) Renewal.—(i) SBA Express. SBA
may renew a Lender’s authority to
participate in SBA Express for two years
or, in SBA’s sole discretion, a maximum
of three years if a Lender’s
qualifications, performance, experience
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
with SBA lending, or other factors so
warrant.
(ii) Export Express. SBA may renew a
Lender’s authority to participate in
Export Express for a maximum term of
two years.
(iii) SBA may renew a Lender’s
authority to participate in SBA Express
or Export Express for a shorter term or
limit a Lender’s maximum SBA Express
or Export Express loan volume if, in
SBA’s sole discretion, a Lender’s
qualifications, performance, experience
with SBA lending, or other factors so
warrant.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
§ 120.443 SBA Express and Export
Express loan processing requirements.
(a) SBA Express and Export Express
loans are subject to all of the
requirements set forth in Subparts A
and B of this part, unless such
requirements are specifically identified
by SBA as inapplicable.
(b) Certain types of loans and loan
programs are not eligible for SBA
Express or Export Express, as detailed in
official SBA policy and procedures,
including but not limited to:
(1) A loan that would reduce the
Lender’s existing credit exposure to a
single Borrower, including its affiliates
as defined in § 121.301(f) of this
chapter;
(2) A loan to a business that has an
outstanding 7(a) loan where the
Applicant is unable to certify that the
loan is current at the time of approval
of the SBA Express or Export Express
loan;
(3) A loan that would have as its
primary collateral real estate or personal
property that do not meet SBA’s
environmental requirements; and
(4) Complex loan structures or
eligibility situations.
(c) SBA has authorized SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders to make the
credit decision without prior SBA
review. Lenders must not make an SBA
guaranteed loan that would be available
on reasonable terms from either the
Lender itself or another source without
an SBA guaranty. The credit analysis
must demonstrate that there is
reasonable assurance of repayment. SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders
must use appropriate and prudent credit
analysis processes and procedures that
are generally accepted in the
commercial lending industry and are
consistent with those used for their
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed
commercial loans. As part of their
prudent credit analysis, SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders may use a
business credit scoring model (such a
model cannot rely solely on consumer
credit scores) to assess the credit history
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
of the Applicant and/or repayment
ability if they do so for their similarlysized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial
loans. SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders must validate (and document)
with appropriate statistical
methodologies that their credit analysis
procedures are predictive of loan
performance, and they must provide
that documentation to SBA upon
request. SBLCs must provide such credit
scoring model validation and
documentation to SBA for review and
approval on an annual basis.
(d) SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders are responsible for all loan
decisions, including eligibility for 7(a)
loans (including size), creditworthiness
and compliance with Loan Program
Requirements. SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders also are responsible for
confirming that all loan closing
decisions are correct and that they have
complied with all requirements of law
and Loan Program Requirements.
(e) SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders must ensure all required forms
are obtained and are complete and
properly executed. Appropriate
documentation must be maintained in
the Lender’s loan file, including
adequate information to support the
eligibility of the Applicant and the loan.
§ 120.444 Eligible uses of SBA Express
and Export Express loan proceeds.
(a) SBA Express.—(1) SBA Express
loan proceeds must be used exclusively
for eligible business-related purposes, as
described in §§ 120.120 and 120.130.
(2) Revolving lines of credit are
eligible for SBA Express, provided they
comply with official SBA policy and
procedures.
(b) Export Express. (1) Export Express
loans must be used for an export
development activity, which includes
the following:
(i) Obtaining a Standby Letter of
Credit when required as a bid bond,
performance bond, or advance payment
guarantee;
(ii) Participation in a trade show that
takes place outside the United States;
(iii) Translation of product brochures
or catalogues for use in markets outside
the United States;
(iv) Obtaining a general line of credit
for export purposes;
(v) Performing a service contract for
buyers located outside the United
States;
(vi) Obtaining transaction-specific
financing associated with completing
export orders;
(vii) Purchasing real estate or
equipment to be used in the production
of goods or services for export;
(viii) Providing term loans and other
financing to enable a small business
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49015
concern, including an export trading
company and an export management
company, to develop a market outside
the United States; and
(ix) Acquiring, constructing,
renovating, modernizing, improving or
expanding a production facility or
equipment to be used in the United
States in the production of goods or
services for export.
(2) Revolving lines of credit for export
purposes are eligible for Export Express,
provided they comply with official SBA
policy and procedures.
(3) Export Express loans may not be
used to finance overseas operations,
except for the marketing and/or
distribution of products/services
exported from the U.S.
(4) Export Express Lenders are
responsible for ensuring that U.S.
companies are authorized to conduct
business with the Persons and countries
to which the Borrower will be
exporting.
(c) An SBA Express or Export Express
Lender may use loan proceeds to
refinance certain outstanding debts,
subject to official SBA policy and
procedures. However, an SBA Express
or Export Express Lender may not
refinance its own existing SBAguaranteed debt under SBA Express or
Export Express.
§ 120.445 Terms and conditions of SBA
Express and Export Express loans.
SBA Express and Export Express
loans are subject to the same terms and
conditions as other 7(a) loans except as
set forth in this section:
(a) Maximum loan amount and
maximum aggregate loan amount.
(1) SBA Express. The maximum loan
amount for an SBA Express loan is set
forth in section 7(a)(31)(D) of the Small
Business Act. The aggregate amount of
all outstanding SBA Express loans to a
single Borrower, including the
Borrower’s affiliates as defined in
§ 121.301(f) must not exceed the
statutory maximum.
(2) Export Express. The maximum
loan amount for an Export Express loan
is set forth in section 7(a)(34)(C)(i) of the
Small Business Act. The aggregate
amount of all outstanding Export
Express loans to a single Borrower,
including the Borrower’s affiliates as
defined in § 121.301(f), must not exceed
the statutory maximum.
(b) Maximum SBA guarantee.—(1)
SBA Express. The maximum SBA
guarantee on an SBA Express loan is 50
percent of the SBA Express loan
amount. In addition, the guaranteed
amount of all SBA Express loans to a
single Borrower, including the
Borrower’s affiliates, counts toward the
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
49016
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
maximum guaranty amount as described
in § 120.151.
(2) Export Express. The maximum
SBA guarantee on an Export Express
loan of $350,000 or less is 90 percent
and for a loan over $350,000 is 75
percent of the Export Express loan
amount. In addition, the guaranteed
amount of all Export Express loans to a
single Borrower, including the
Borrower’s affiliates, counts toward the
maximum guaranty amount as described
in § 120.151.
(c) Maturity.—(1) SBA Express. SBA
Express loans must have a stated
maturity and the maximum maturities
are the same as any other 7(a) loan,
except that revolving SBA Express loans
are limited to a maximum of 10 years,
as described more fully in official SBA
policy and procedures.
(2) Export Express. Export Express
loans must have a stated maturity and
the maximum maturities are the same as
any other 7(a) loan, except that
revolving Export Express loans are
limited to a maximum maturity of 7
years, as described more fully in official
SBA policy and procedures.
(d) Interest rates.—(1) SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders may charge
up to 4.5% over the prime rate on loans
over $50,000 and up to 6.5% over the
prime rate for loans of $50,000 or less,
regardless of the maturity of the loan.
The prime rate will be that which is in
effect on the first business day of the
month, as printed in a national financial
newspaper published each business
day.
(2) For variable interest rate loans,
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders are not required to use the base
rate identified in § 120.214(c). SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders
may use the same base rate of interest
they use on their similarly-sized, nonSBA guaranteed commercial loans, as
well as their established change
intervals, payment accruals, and other
interest rate terms. However, the interest
rate must never exceed the maximum
allowable interest rate stated in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section.
Additionally, the loan may be sold on
the Secondary Market only if the base
rate is one of the base rates allowed in
§ 120.214(c).
(3) The amount of interest SBA will
pay to a Lender following default of an
SBA Express or Export Express loan is
capped at the maximum interest rates
for the standard 7(a) loan program set
forth in §§ 120.213 through 120.215.
(e) Collateral.—(1) With the exception
of paragraphs (e)(2) and (e)(3) of this
section, to the maximum extent
practicable, SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders must follow the same
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
collateral policies and procedures that
they have established and implemented
for their similarly-sized, non-SBA
guaranteed commercial loans, including
those concerning identification of
collateral. Such policies and procedures
must be commercially reasonable and
prudent.
(2) SBA may establish a threshold
below which SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders will not be required to
take collateral to secure an SBA Express
or Export Express loan. Such a
threshold will be described more fully
in official SBA policy and procedures.
(3) Export Express lines of credit over
$25,000 used to support the issuance of
a standby letter of credit must have
collateral (cash, cash equivalent or
project) that will provide coverage for at
least 25% of the issued standby letter of
credit amount.
(f) Insurance. SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders must follow the same
policies they have established and
implemented for their similarly-sized,
non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans.
(g) Sale on the secondary market. SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders
may sell the guaranteed portion of an
SBA Express or Export Express term
loan on the secondary market under the
policies and procedures described in
Subpart F of this part. SBA Express or
Export Express Lenders may not sell the
guaranteed portion of an SBA Express or
Export Express revolving line of credit
on the secondary market.
(h) Loan increases. With SBA’s prior
written consent, an SBA Express or
Export Express Lender may increase an
SBA Express or Export Express loan
based on the needs of the Borrower and
its credit situation, as further specified
in Loan Program Requirements.
§ 120.446 SBA Express and Export
Express loan closing, servicing, liquidation
and litigation requirements.
(a) Closing. Except as set forth in this
paragraph, SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders must close their SBA
Express and Export Express loans using
the same documentation and procedures
that they use for their similarly-sized,
non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans.
Such documentation and procedures
must comply with law, prudent lending
practices, and Loan Program
Requirements. When closing an SBA
Express or Export Express loan, the
Lender must require the Borrower to
execute a promissory note that is legally
enforceable and assignable. Before the
first disbursement of any SBA Express
or Export Express loan proceeds, the
Lender must obtain all required
collateral, including obtaining valid and
enforceable security interests in such
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
collateral, and also must meet all other
required pre-closing loan conditions as
set forth in official SBA policy and
procedures.
(b) Servicing, Liquidation, and
Litigation. Servicing, liquidation, and
litigation responsibilities for SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders are
set forth in Subpart E of this Part.
(c) SBA’s purchase of the guaranteed
portion of an SBA Express or Export
Express loan. (1) SBA will purchase the
guaranteed portion of an SBA Express or
Export Express loan in accordance with
§ 120.520 and official SBA policy and
procedures. An SBA Express or Export
Express Lender may not request
purchase of the guaranty based solely on
a violation of a non-financial default
provision.
(2) How much SBA will pay upon
purchase?—(i) SBA Express. SBA will
pay a maximum of 50 percent of the
total principal balance of the SBA
Express loan outstanding after
liquidation, including up to 120 days of
interest at the rate in effect at the time
of the earliest uncured default (if
liquidation proceeds collected by the
SBA Express Lender were insufficient
for the Lender to recover a full 120 days
of interest).
(ii) Export Express. SBA will pay a
maximum of 75 or 90 percent (as
applicable) of the total principal balance
of the Export Express loan outstanding
after liquidation, including up to 120
days of interest at the rate in effect at the
time of the earliest uncured default (if
liquidation proceeds collected by the
Export Express Lender were insufficient
for the Lender to recover a full 120 days
of interest).
(3) Release of SBA liability under its
guarantee. SBA will be released from its
liability to purchase the guaranteed
portion of an SBA Express or Export
Express loan, either in whole or in part,
in SBA’s sole discretion, under any of
the circumstances described in
§ 120.524.
§ 120.447 Lender oversight of SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders.
SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders are subject to the same riskbased lender oversight as 7(a) Lenders,
including the supervision and
enforcement provisions, in accordance
with Subpart I of this Part.
§ 120.707
[Amended]
15. Amend the last sentence of
§ 120.707(b) by removing the word ‘‘six’’
and add in its place ‘‘seven’’.
■ 16. Amend § 120.712 as follows:
■ a. Revise paragraph (b)(1); and
■ b. In paragraph (d) remove the number
‘‘25’’ and add in its place the number
‘‘50’’.
■
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 189 / Friday, September 28, 2018 / Proposed Rules
The revision and addition read as
follows:
§ 120.712 How does an Intermediary get a
grant to assist Microloan borrowers?
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) Up to 50 percent of the grant funds
may be used to provide information and
technical assistance to prospective
Microloan borrowers; provided,
however, that no more than 5 percent of
the grant funds may be used to market
or advertise the products and services of
the Microloan Intermediary directly
related to the Microloan Program; and
*
*
*
*
*
§ 120.840
[Amended]
17. Amend § 120.840 by removing the
term ‘‘D/FA’’ from the second sentence
of paragraph (b) and adding in its place
the phrase ‘‘appropriate SBA official in
accordance with Delegations of
Authority’’.
■
PART 121—SMALL BUSINESS SIZE
REGULATIONS
18. The authority citation for Part 121
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632, 634(b)(6), 662,
and 649a(9).
19. Amend § 121.301 by:
a. Revising paragraph (f)(4);
b. Redesignating paragraphs (f)(5),
(f)(6), and (f)(7) as paragraphs (f)(7),
(f)(8), and (f)(9) respectively;
■ c. Adding new paragraphs (f)(5) and
(f)(6) and revising the redesignated
(f)(7).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
■
§ 121.301 What size standards and
affiliation principles are applicable to
financial assistance programs?
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS1
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(4) Affiliation based on identity of
interest. (i) Affiliation may arise among
two or more individuals or firms with
an identity of interest. Individuals or
firms that have identical or substantially
identical business or economic interests
(such as close relatives, individuals or
firms with common investments, or
firms that are economically dependent
through contractual or other
relationships) may be treated as one
party with such interests aggregated.
Where SBA determines that such
interests should be aggregated, an
individual or firm may rebut that
determination with evidence showing
that the interests deemed to be one are
in fact separate.
(ii) Affiliation arises when there is an
identity of interest between close
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:53 Sep 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
relatives, as defined in § 120.10 of this
chapter, with identical or substantially
identical business or economic interests
(such as where the close relatives
operate concerns in the same or similar
industry in the same geographic area).
(iii) Affiliation arises through
common investments where the same
individuals or firms together own a
substantial portion of multiple
concerns, and concerns owned by such
investors conduct business with each
other (such as subcontracts or joint
ventures), or share resources,
equipment, locations or employees with
one another, or provide loan guaranties
or other financial or managerial support
to each other.
(iv) SBA will find affiliation based
upon economic dependence if the
concern in question derived more than
85% of its receipts from another
concern over the previous three fiscal
years, unless the concern has been in
business for a short amount of time and
has a plan to lessen its dependence on
the other concern.
(5) Affiliation based on the newly
organized concern rule. Affiliation may
arise where current or former officers,
directors, principal stockholders,
managing members, or key employees of
one concern organize a new concern in
the same or related industry or field of
operation, and serve as the new
concern’s officers, directors, principal
stockholders, managing members, or key
employees, and the original concern is
furnishing or will furnish the new
concern with contracts, financial or
technical assistance, indemnification on
bid or performance bonds, and/or other
facilities, whether for a fee or otherwise.
A concern may rebut such an affiliation
determination by demonstrating a clear
line of fracture between the two
concerns. For the purpose of this rule,
a ‘‘key employee’’ is an employee who,
because of his/her position in the
concern, has a critical influence in or
substantive control over the operations
or management of the concern. A
concern will be considered ‘‘new’’ for
the purpose of this rule if it has been
actively operating continuously for two
years or less.
(6) Affiliation based on totality of the
circumstances. In determining whether
affiliation exists, SBA will consider the
totality of the circumstances, and may
find affiliation even though no single
factor is sufficient to constitute
affiliation.
(7) Affiliation based on franchise
agreements. (i) The restraints imposed
on a franchisee by its franchise
agreement generally will not be
considered in determining whether the
franchisor is affiliated with an applicant
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
49017
franchisee provided the applicant
franchisee has the right to profit from its
efforts and bears the risk of loss
commensurate with ownership. SBA
will only consider the franchise
agreements of the applicant concern.
SBA will maintain a centralized list of
franchise and other similar agreements
that are eligible for SBA financial
assistance, which will identify any
additional documentation necessary to
resolve any eligibility or affiliation
issues between the franchisor and the
small business applicant.
(ii) For purposes of this section,
‘‘franchise’’ means any continuing
commercial relationship or
arrangement, whatever it may be called,
that meets the Federal Trade
Commission definition of ‘‘franchise’’ in
16 CFR 436.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 20. Amend § 121.302 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as follows:
§ 121.302 When does SBA determine the
size status of an applicant?
(a) The size status of an applicant for
SBA financial assistance is determined
as of the date the application for
financial assistance is accepted for
processing by SBA, except for
applications under the Preferred
Lenders Program (PLP), the SBA
Express Loan Program (SBA Express),
the Export Express Loan Program
(Export Express), the Disaster Loan
Program, the SBIC Program, and the
New Markets Venture Capital (NMVC)
Program.
(b) For PLP, SBA Express, and Export
Express, size is determined as of the
date of approval of the loan by the
Lender.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: September 18, 2018.
Linda E. McMahon,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018–20869 Filed 9–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2018–0803; Product
Identifier 2018–NM–098–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; The Boeing
Company Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\28SEP1.SGM
28SEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 189 (Friday, September 28, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 49001-49017]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-20869]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
13 CFR Parts 103, 120 and 121
RIN 3245-AG74
Express Loan Programs; Affiliation Standards
AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA or Agency) is
proposing to amend various regulations governing its business loan
programs, including the SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs
and the Microloan and Development Company (504) loan programs.
DATES: SBA must receive comments to the proposed rule on or before
November 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by RIN: 3245-AG74, by
any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Kimberly Chuday or Thomas Heou, Office of Financial
Assistance, Office of Capital Access, Small Business Administration,
409 Third Street SW, Washington, DC 20416.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Kimberly Chuday or Thomas Heou,
Office of Financial Assistance, Office of Capital Access, 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
Kimberly Chuday or Thomas Heou, Office of Financial Assistance, Office
of Capital Access, 409 Third Street SW, Washington, DC 20416. 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: Robert Carpenter, Acting Chief, 7(a)
Program and Policy Branch, Office of Financial Assistance, Office of
Capital Access, Small Business Administration, 409 Third Street SW,
Washington, DC 20416; telephone: (202) 205-7654; email://[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background Information
The SBA Express Loan Program (SBA Express) is established in
section 7(a)(31) of the Small Business Act (the Act) (15 U.S.C.
636(a)(31)). Under SBA Express, designated Lenders (SBA Express
Lenders) are permitted to use, to the maximum extent practicable, their
own analyses, procedures, and documentation in making, closing,
servicing, and liquidating SBA Express loans. They also have reduced
requirements for submitting documentation to SBA and obtaining the
Agency's prior approval. These loan analyses, procedures, and
documentation must meet prudent lending standards; be consistent with
those the Lenders use for their similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed
commercial loans; and conform to all requirements imposed upon Lenders
generally and SBA Express Lenders in particular by Loan Program
Requirements (as defined in 13 CFR 120.10), as such requirements are
issued and revised by SBA from time to time, unless specifically
identified by SBA as inapplicable to SBA Express loans. In exchange for
the increased authority and autonomy provided under the SBA Express
Program, SBA Express Lenders agree to accept a maximum guaranty of 50
percent.
The Export Express Loan Program (Export Express) is established in
section 7(a)(34) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 636(a)(34)). This program is
designed to help SBA meet the export financing needs of small
businesses. Although it is a separate program, Export Express is
generally subject to the same loan processing, making, closing,
servicing, and liquidation requirements as well as the same interest
rates and applicable fees as SBA Express. However, Export Express loans
have a higher maximum loan amount than is available under SBA Express,
and a maximum guaranty percentage of 75 or 90 percent, depending on the
amount of the Export Express loan.
A. Proposed Amendments
This proposed rule would:
1. Incorporate into the regulations governing the 7(a) Loan Program
the requirements specifically applicable to the SBA Express and Export
Express Loan Programs in order to provide additional clarity for SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders;
2. Add a new regulation to require certain owners of the small
business Applicant to inject excess liquid assets into the business to
reduce the amount of SBA-guaranteed funds that otherwise would be
needed;
[[Page 49002]]
3. Revise the regulations concerning allowable fees for the 7(a)
Loan Program to limit the fees payable by the small business Applicant
and to clarify what SBA considers reasonable with respect to such fees;
4. Amend the regulation that explains the Agency's policy governing
SBA-guaranteed loans to qualified employee trusts to require that all
such applications be processed under non-delegated procedures;
5. Incorporate a change to implement SBA's long-standing policy
regarding the responsibility of a Lender for the contingent liabilities
(including repairs and denials) for Lenders purchasing 7(a) loans from
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) (as receiver,
conservator, or other liquidator of a failed insured depository
institution), whether such loans are acquired through a loan sale where
SBA has not already purchased the guaranty or through a whole bank
transfer;
6. Revise the regulations governing the use of microloan grant
funds by Microloan Intermediaries and extend the maximum maturity of a
microloan;
7. Modify the affiliation principles applicable to SBA's financial
assistance programs to include additional circumstances when a small
business Applicant will be deemed to be affiliated with another entity
for purposes of determining the small business Applicant's size;
8. Amend the regulation identifying when the size status of an
Applicant for financial assistance is determined with respect to
applications under the SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs;
and
9. Make technical corrections to the regulation identifying
prohibited fees in the 7(a) Loan Program and the regulation discussing
the application for the Accredited Lenders Program (ALP) in the 504
Loan Program, as well as conforming amendments to two existing
regulations for consistency with the proposed regulations governing SBA
Express and Export Express, and a conforming amendment to one existing
regulation for consistency with the proposed changes to the allowable
fees that may be charged in connection with a 7(a) loan.
B. Affected Programs
The SBA programs affected by this proposed rule are:
1. The 7(a) Loan Program authorized pursuant to Section 7(a) of the
Act (15 U.S.C. 636(a));
2. The Business Disaster Loan Programs (collectively, the Economic
Injury Disaster Loans, Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster
Loans, and Physical Disaster Business Loans) authorized pursuant to
Section 7(b) of the Act;
3. The Microloan Program authorized pursuant to Section 7(m) of the
Act (15 U.S.C. 636(m));
4. The Intermediary Lending Pilot (ILP) Program authorized pursuant
to Section 7(l) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 636(l));
5. The Surety Bond Guarantee Program authorized pursuant to Part B
of Title IV of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C.
694b et seq.); and
6. The Development Company Program (the 504 Loan Program)
authorized pursuant to Title V of the Small Business Investment Act of
1958 (15 U.S.C. 695 et seq.).
(The 7(a), Microloan, ILP, and 504 Loan Programs are collectively
referred to as the Business Loan Programs.)
The Agency requests comments on all aspects of the regulatory
revisions in this proposed rule and on any related issues affecting the
Business Loan, Surety Bond Guarantee, and Business Disaster Loan
Programs.
II. Summary of Proposed Changes
A. Business Loan Programs
1. SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs
Sections 120.441 through 120.447 SBA Express and Export Express Loan
Programs
SBA proposes adding a new undesignated center heading entitled
``SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs'' and several new
regulations that describe the two loan programs and the specific
requirements applicable to them, as described more fully below. These
proposed regulations are drafted based on the current statutory limits
applicable to the SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs. In the
event that the SBA Express or Export Express statutory loan limits are
increased by Congress, SBA will revise the regulations, including
making necessary changes to mitigate any additional risk associated
with an increase in loan size.
Section 120.441 SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs. SBA
proposes adding a regulation providing general descriptions of the SBA
Express and Export Express Loan Programs.
Section 120.442 Process to obtain or renew SBA Express or Export
Express authority. SBA proposes adding a regulation that sets forth the
criteria and process to obtain or renew SBA Express or Export Express
authority. In evaluating an existing 7(a) Lender's application for SBA
Express or Export Express authority, SBA will consider the delegated
authority criteria and follow the procedures set forth in Sec.
120.440. Lending institutions that do not currently participate with
SBA may apply to be SBA Express and/or Export Express Lenders, but must
become 7(a) Lenders in order to participate in SBA Express and/or
Export Express. Such institutions may request SBA 7(a) lending and SBA
Express and/or Export Express authority simultaneously. In evaluating
such institutions, in addition to the criteria set forth in Sec. Sec.
120.410 (requirements for all participating Lenders) and 120.440
(delegated authority criteria), SBA will consider whether the
institution has acceptable experience making small commercial loans,
and whether its employees have received appropriate training on SBA's
policies and procedures. Currently, SBA considers a Lender to have
acceptable experience making small commercial loans when the Lender has
at least 20 commercial loans of $350,000 or less with acceptable
performance.
As set forth in Sec. 120.440, the decision to grant SBA Express or
Export Express authority will be made by the appropriate SBA official
in accordance with Delegations of Authority, and is final. If SBA
Express or Export Express authority is approved, SBA will provide the
Lender with the appropriate supplemental guarantee agreement, which the
Lender must execute and return to SBA before the Lender's SBA Express
or Export Express authority will become effective.
In renewing a Lender's SBA Express or Export Express authority and
determining the term of the renewal, SBA will consider the criteria and
follow the process set forth in Sec. 120.440. Currently, in renewing a
Lender's Export Express authority, SBA also will consider whether the
Export Express Lender can effectively process, make, close, service,
and liquidate Export Express loans; has received a major substantive
objection regarding renewal from the Field Office(s) covering the
territory where the Lender generates significant numbers of Export
Express loans; and has received acceptable review results on the Export
Express portion of any SBA-administered Lender reviews. In this rule,
SBA proposes to incorporate the additional considerations identified
above for Export Express authority, but modify them to apply to both
SBA Express and Export Express authority. Thus, in addition to the
criteria set out in Sec. 120.440, SBA also would consider whether the
Lender can effectively process, make, close, service, and liquidate SBA
Express or Export Express
[[Page 49003]]
loans, as applicable; has received a major substantive objection
regarding renewal from the Field Office(s) covering the territory where
the Lender generates significant numbers of SBA Express or Export
Express loans, as applicable; and has received acceptable review
results on the SBA Express or Export Express portion, as applicable, of
any SBA-administered Lender reviews.
SBA may approve a Lender's initial application for authority to
participate in SBA Express or Export Express for a maximum term of two
years. SBA may approve a lesser term or limit a Lender's maximum SBA
Express or Export Express loan volume if, in SBA's sole discretion, a
Lender's qualifications, performance, experience with SBA lending, or
other factors so warrant (e.g., Lenders with little or no experience
with SBA lending).
SBA is proposing to include in the regulations that the Agency may
renew a Lender's authority to participate in SBA Express for a maximum
term of three years if, in SBA's sole discretion, a Lender's
qualifications, performance, SBA experience, or other factors so
warrant. Although renewals of other types of delegated authority (e.g.,
Preferred Lender Program (PLP)) are for a maximum term of two years,
SBA is proposing a longer renewal term for Lenders participating in SBA
Express because SBA Express Lenders have accepted more of the risk in
their SBA Express loans than other SBA Lenders, including Export
Express Lenders.
SBA may renew a Lender's authority to participate in Export Express
for a maximum term of two years. SBA may approve a shorter renewal term
or limit a Lender's maximum SBA Express or Export Express loan volume
if, in SBA's sole discretion, a Lender's qualifications, performance,
experience with SBA lending, or other factors so warrant.
SBA is proposing a conforming amendment to the delegated authority
criteria regulation at Sec. 120.440(c) to clarify that a Lender's
authority to participate in SBA Express may be renewed for a maximum
term of three years. In addition, SBA is proposing some technical
corrections to Sec. 120.440(c).
Section 120.443 SBA Express and Export Express loan processing
requirements. SBA proposes adding a regulation that sets forth the
requirements for loan processing under the SBA Express and Export
Express loan programs. The regulations applicable to all Business Loans
in Subparts A and B of Part 120, and 7(a) Loans specifically, govern
the making of SBA Express and Export Express loans, unless specifically
identified by SBA as inapplicable. For example, the same types of
businesses that are ineligible for 7(a) loans under Sec. 120.110 also
are ineligible for SBA Express and Export Express loans. SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders must follow all 7(a) eligibility
requirements and maintain appropriate documentation supporting their
eligibility determination in the loan file.
Certain types of loans and loan programs are not eligible for
processing under a Lender's delegated authority (including under a
Lender's SBA Express or Export Express authority), as described in
SBA's Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) 50 10 (Lender and Development
Company Loan Programs). These loans currently include, but are not
limited to: Special purpose loans (e.g., Disabled Assistance Loans,
loans to Employee Stock Ownership Plans or equivalent trusts, Pollution
Control Loans, or CAPLines); a loan that would reduce an SBA Express or
Export Express Lender's existing credit exposure for a single Borrower,
including its affiliates as defined in 13 CFR 121.301(f); a loan to a
business that has an outstanding 7(a) loan where the Applicant is
unable to certify that the loan is current at the time the SBA Express
or Export Express Lender approves the SBA Express or Export Express
loan; a loan that would have as its primary collateral real estate or
personal property that will not meet SBA's environmental requirements;
and complex loan structures or eligibility situations.
For all other loans, SBA has authorized SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders to make the credit decision without prior SBA review
(i.e., using the Lender's delegated authority). As with all 7(a) loans,
Lenders must not make an SBA-guaranteed loan that would be available on
reasonable terms from either the Lender itself or another non-federal
source without an SBA guaranty. In addition, the Lender's credit
analysis must demonstrate that there is reasonable assurance of
repayment. SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must use appropriate
and prudent credit analysis processes and procedures that are generally
accepted in the commercial lending industry and consistent with those
used for their similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans. As
part of their prudent credit analysis, SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders may use a business credit scoring model (such a model cannot
rely solely on consumer credit scores) to assess the credit history of
the Applicant and/or repayment ability if they do so for their
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans. If used, the
business credit scoring results must be documented in each loan file
and available for SBA review. Lenders that do not use credit scoring
for their similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans may not
use credit scoring for SBA Express or Export Express. Although Small
Business Lending Companies (SBLCs), as defined in Sec. 120.10, do not
make non-SBA guaranteed loans, SBA has determined that they may use
credit scoring as part of their prudent credit analysis for their SBA
Express or Export Express loans.
All SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must validate (and
document) with appropriate statistical methodologies that their credit
analysis procedures are predictive of loan performance, and they must
provide that documentation to SBA upon request. SOP 50 10 includes the
requirement that SBLCs provide credit scoring model validation to SBA
for review and approval on an annual basis.
The credit decision, including for example, how much to factor in a
past bankruptcy and whether to require an equity injection (outside of
any injection of excess personal resources under the proposed new Sec.
120.102, as discussed below), is left to the business judgment of the
SBA Express or Export Express Lender. Also, if the SBA Express or
Export Express Lender requires an equity injection and, as part of its
standard processes for its similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed loans
verifies the equity injection, it must do so for its SBA Express or
Export Express loans. SBLCs must follow the written policies and
procedures that have been reviewed by SBA. While the credit decision is
left to the business judgment of the SBA Express or Export Express
Lender, early loan defaults will be reviewed by SBA pursuant to SOP 50
57 (7(a) Loan Servicing and Liquidation).
SBA Express and Export Express Lenders are responsible for all loan
decisions, including eligibility for 7(a) loans (including size),
creditworthiness and compliance with all Loan Program Requirements (as
defined in Sec. 120.10). SBA Express and Export Express Lenders also
are responsible for confirming that all loan closing decisions are
correct and that they have complied with all requirements of law and
Loan Program Requirements.
SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must ensure all required
forms are obtained and are complete and properly executed. Appropriate
documentation must be maintained in the Lender's loan file, including
[[Page 49004]]
adequate information to support the eligibility of the Applicant and
the loan.
Section 120.444 Eligible uses of SBA Express and Export Express
loan proceeds. SBA is proposing to add a regulation to identify the
eligible uses of loan proceeds for SBA Express and Export Express
loans. Under SBA Express, loan proceeds must be used exclusively for
eligible business-related purposes, as described in 13 CFR 120.120 and
120.130, which set forth the eligible uses of loan proceeds for 7(a)
loans. In addition, it is the SBA Express Lender's responsibility to
take reasonable steps to ensure and document that the loan proceeds are
used exclusively for business-related purposes.
Notwithstanding 13 CFR 120.130(c), revolving lines of credit are
eligible for SBA Express, subject to certain conditions related to
maturities and disbursement as set forth in SOP 50 10. Currently, SBA
Express revolving loans have a maximum maturity of 10 years and must be
structured with a term-out period that is not less than the draw
period, with no draws permitted during the term-out period. For
example, an SBA Express loan can have an eight year maturity with a two
year draw period and a term-out period of six years. Conversely, a loan
with an eight year maturity cannot have a draw period of six years and
term-out period of two years. Further, as set forth in 13 CFR part 120,
subpart F, revolving loans cannot be sold on the secondary market. (SBA
is proposing a conforming amendment to Sec. 120.130(c) (``Restrictions
on uses of proceeds'') to include a reference to this new Sec. 120.444
to clarify that revolving lines of credit are an eligible use of 7(a)
loan proceeds under SBA Express and Export Express.)
SBA Express and Export Express Lenders may refinance certain
outstanding debts with SBA Express or Export Express loans, under the
conditions set forth in SOP 50 10. An SBA Express Lender may refinance
an existing non-SBA guaranteed loan held by another lender with an SBA
Express loan if the Lender determines that the existing debt no longer
meets the needs of the Applicant and, for certain types of debt, the
new loan will provide a 10 percent improvement in the debt service
coverage ratio. An SBA Express Lender may refinance its own non-SBA
guaranteed debt, provided that: (1) The Lender determines that the
existing debt no longer meets the needs of the Applicant; (2) the new
loan will provide a 10 percent improvement in the debt service coverage
ratio (for certain types of loans as explained in SOP 50 10); (3) the
debt to be refinanced is, and has been, current for the past 36 months
(``current'' means no required payment has been more than 29 days past
due); and (4) the Lender's credit exposure to the Applicant will not be
reduced. Existing SBA-guaranteed loans may not be refinanced under SBA
Express, unless: (1) The transaction is the purchase of an existing
business that has an existing SBA loan that is not with the requesting
SBA Express Lender; or (2) the Applicant needs additional financing and
the existing Lender is unable or unwilling to increase the existing SBA
loan or make a second loan, and (3) the new loan will provide a 10
percent improvement in debt service coverage. An SBA Express Lender may
not refinance its own existing SBA-guaranteed debt under SBA Express.
Export Express loans must be used for an export development
activity, which is defined in section 7(a)(34)(A)(i) of the Act and
includes the following:
(1) Obtaining a Standby Letter of Credit when required as a bid
bond, performance bond, or advance payment guarantee;
(2) Participation in a trade show that takes place outside the
United States;
(3) Translation of product brochures or catalogues for use in
markets outside the United States;
(4) Obtaining a general line of credit for export purposes;
(5) Performing a service contract for buyers located outside the
United States;
(6) Obtaining transaction-specific financing associated with
completing export orders;
(7) Purchasing real estate or equipment to be used in the
production of goods or services for export;
(8) Providing term loans and other financing to enable a small
business concern, including an export trading company and an export
management company, to develop a market outside the United States; and
(9) Acquiring, constructing, renovating, modernizing, improving or
expanding a production facility or equipment to be used in the United
States in the production of goods or services for export.
As noted above, Export Express loans may be used to refinance
certain outstanding debts, under the conditions set forth in SOP 50 10.
Specifically, Export Express loans may be used to refinance existing
non-SBA guaranteed debt, whether held by another lender or by the
Export Express Lender, if the Export Express Lender follows the
guidance for refinancing under SBA Express and verifies and documents
that the new loan will be used to finance an export development
activity. Export Express loans may be used to refinance an existing
Export Express loan held by another Export Express Lender only if the
original Export Express Lender is unable or unwilling to increase or
make a second Export Express loan, which must be documented in the loan
file. An Export Express Lender may not refinance one of its own Export
Express loans with a new Export Express loan.
Export Express loans may not be used to finance overseas
operations, except for the marketing and/or distribution of products/
services exported from the United States.
Export Express Lenders are responsible for ensuring that U.S.
companies are authorized to conduct business with the Persons and
countries to which the Borrower will be exporting. Specific guidance as
to how Export Express Lenders will be expected to do so will be
included in SOP 50 10.
Specific documentation requirements related to the use of proceeds
for Export Express loans are described more fully in SOP 50 10.
Section 120.445 Terms and conditions of SBA Express and Export
Express loans. While generally the terms and conditions applicable to
7(a) loans also apply to SBA Express and Export Express loans, there
are some differences. SBA is proposing to add a new regulation to
identify those terms and conditions of SBA Express and Export Express
loans that are unique to these two programs, including maximum loan
amounts and guaranty percentages, maturities, interest rates,
collateral and insurance requirements, allowable fees and requirements
concerning loan increases. With respect to the maximum loan amounts,
the proposed rule refers to the maximum loan amount for each program as
set forth in the applicable section of the Small Business Act (sections
7(a)(31)(D) and 7(a)(34)(C)(i), respectively). Currently, the maximum
loan amount for SBA Express is $350,000 and the maximum loan amount for
Export Express is $500,000.
With respect to collateral, currently, for loans of $25,000 or
less, SBA Express and Export Express Lenders are not required to take
collateral to secure the loan. For loans over $25,000, SBA Express and
Export Express Lenders must, to the maximum extent practicable, follow
the written collateral policies and procedures that they have
established and implemented for their similarly-sized, non-SBA
guaranteed commercial loans, except for Export Express lines of credit
over $25,000 used to support the issuance of a
[[Page 49005]]
standby letter of credit. Export Express lines of credit over $25,000
used to support the issuance of a standby letter of credit must have
collateral (cash, cash equivalent or project) that will provide
coverage for at least 25% of the issued standby letter of credit
amount.
SBA proposes to incorporate these collateral requirements into new
Sec. 120.445(e), with the exception of the dollar thresholds. Rather
than include the current thresholds in the proposed rule, SBA is
proposing to include language in the regulation giving the Agency the
ability to establish a threshold below which SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders will not be required to take collateral to secure an
SBA Express or Export Express loan. The threshold would be described
more fully in SOP 50 10. This will provide the Agency with the
flexibility to adjust the threshold if necessary.
Additionally, this proposed regulation provides that SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders may sell the guaranteed portions of SBA
Express and Export Express term loans on the secondary market in
accordance with 13 CFR subpart F, but may not sell the guaranteed
portions of SBA Express or Export Express revolving lines of credit on
the secondary market.
SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must pay the same fees to
SBA that all 7(a) Lenders pay, which are identified in Sec. 120.220.
The fees and expenses that 7(a) Lenders may collect from an Applicant
or Borrower are set forth in the regulation at Sec. 120.221.
Currently, with the exception of renewal fees, SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders may charge an Applicant or Borrower on an SBA Express
or Export Express loan the same types of fees they charge on their
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans, provided that the
fees are directly related to the service provided and are reasonable
and customary for the services performed. The fees charged on SBA
Express or Export Express loans may not be higher than those charged on
the Lender's similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans. In
this rule, SBA proposes to require SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders to comply with the same rules that apply to all other 7(a)
Lenders with respect to the fees that may be collected from an
Applicant or Borrower on SBA Express and Export Express loans. As noted
above, the regulation at Sec. 120.221 sets forth the fees and expenses
that 7(a) Lenders may collect from an Applicant or Borrower. In
addition, 13 CFR part 103 of the regulations governs Agents, including
their fees and provision of services. As discussed more fully in
Section 3 below, SBA is proposing changes to Sec. Sec. 120.221,
103.4(g), and 103.5 with respect to the fees that may be collected from
an Applicant or Borrower by a 7(a) Lender or Agent. These changes will
be applicable to all 7(a) loans, including SBA Express and Export
Express loans.
Consistent with SBA Loan Program Requirements, if an SBA Express or
Export Express Lender requests that SBA honor its guaranty, the Agency
will not purchase any portion of the loan balance that consists of fees
charged to the borrower, with the exception of the SBA guaranty fee.
Also, as set forth in Sec. 120.222, SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders and their Associates are prohibited from sharing any premium
received from the sale of an SBA guaranteed loan in the secondary
market with a Service Provider, packager, or other loan-referral
source. Lenders may be subject to enforcement or other appropriate
action, including suspension or revocation of their privilege to sell
loans in the secondary market, in the event of a violation of this
prohibition.
Because SBA will require SBA Express and Export Express Lenders to
comply with the same rules that apply to all other 7(a) Lenders with
respect to the fees and expenses that may be collected from an
Applicant or Borrower in connection with an SBA-guaranteed loan
(including SBA Express and Export Express loans), SBA is not including
language regarding fees in proposed Sec. 120.445.
Section 120.446 SBA Express and Export Express loan closing,
servicing, liquidation, and litigation requirements. SBA proposes to
add a new regulation providing that SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders must close, service, liquidate, and litigate their SBA Express
and Export Express loans using the same documentation and procedures
they use for their similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial
loans, which must comply with law, prudent lending practices, and Loan
Program Requirements. Additionally, the proposed regulation provides
that SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must comply with the loan
servicing and liquidation responsibilities set forth for 7(a) Lenders
in 13 CFR part 120, subpart E and other Loan Program Requirements.
Additional guidance on loan closing, servicing, liquidation and
litigation is provided in SOPs 50 10 and 50 57.
The proposed regulation also describes the circumstances under
which SBA will honor the guaranty on SBA Express and Export Express
Loans. As is true for 7(a) loans generally, SBA will purchase the
guaranteed portion of an SBA Express or Export Express loan in
accordance with Sec. 120.520 and other Loan Program Requirements, in
particular SOP 50 57. In accordance with Sec. 120.520(a)(1), for loans
approved on or after May 14, 2007, unless the Borrower filed for
bankruptcy, the SBA Express or Export Express Lender may request that
SBA honor the guaranty on the loan if there is an uncured payment
default of more than 60 days and the Lender has liquidated the business
personal property collateral securing the defaulted loan. In accordance
with Sec. 120.520(a)(2) and SOP 50 57, for loans approved before May
14, 2007, an SBA Express Lender must liquidate all collateral for the
loan and pursue all cost-effective means of recovery to collect the
debt before the Lender can request that SBA honor its guaranty. For
Export Express loans, however, the Lender does not have to liquidate
all of the collateral and pursue all cost-effective means of recovery
prior to requesting that SBA honor its guaranty if the outstanding
principal balance is $50,000 or less or there is protracted litigation
or other circumstances that will extend the liquidation process. It is
important to note that, while non-financial default provisions are
allowed under SBA Express and Export Express under certain conditions
set forth in SOP 50 10, an SBA Express or Export Express Lender may not
request purchase of the guaranty based solely on a violation of a non-
financial default provision.
SBA will be released of its liability on an SBA Express or Export
Express loan guaranty in accordance with Sec. 120.524.
Section 120.447 Lender oversight of SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders. SBA proposes to add a new regulation explaining that SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders are subject to the same risk-based
lender oversight as 7(a) Lenders, including supervision and enforcement
provisions, in accordance with 13 CFR part 120, subpart I. Additional
guidance concerning Lender supervision and enforcement is provided in
SOPs 50 53 (Lender Supervision and Enforcement) and 51 00 (On-Site
Lender Reviews/Examinations).
2. Credit Elsewhere and the Personal Resources of Owners of the Small
Business Applicant
Section 120.102 Funds not available from alternative sources,
including the personal resources of owners. Effective April 21, 2014,
SBA removed Sec. 120.102 from the regulations, thereby eliminating
what was commonly known as the ``personal resources test'' from the
[[Page 49006]]
requirements to determine eligibility for the Business Loan Programs.
This regulation required certain owners of the Applicant business to
inject personal liquid assets into the business to reduce the amount of
SBA-guaranteed funds that would otherwise be needed. The Agency
eliminated this requirement in 2014 because it was concerned, at that
time, that even borrowers whose principals had significant personal
resources may have been unable to obtain long-term fixed asset
financing from private sources at reasonable rates. The Agency also
questioned whether the existence of personal resources directly
correlated to the ability to obtain commercial credit on reasonable
terms. In addition, the Agency determined that financing more robust
borrowers in the program would offset some of the risks to SBA.
However, SBA is now concerned that borrowers with large amounts of
personal assets are receiving government-backed loans. In order to
ensure that SBA financial assistance is provided only to those small
businesses that are unable to obtain credit from alternative sources
without a government guaranty, including the personal resources of the
owners of the small business, SBA proposes to reinstitute a personal
resources test.
SBA proposes to add a regulation that would require SBA Lenders
(i.e., both 7(a) Lenders and Certified Development Companies (CDCs)) to
analyze the resources of individuals and entities that own 20 percent
or more of the Applicant business in order to determine if any of the
owners have liquid assets available that can provide some or all of the
desired financing. (The resources of an owner who is an individual
include the resources of the owner's spouse and minor children.) When
an owner of 20 percent or more has liquid assets that exceed stated
thresholds, SBA is proposing to require an injection of cash from any
such owner to reduce the SBA loan amount. Specifically, when the total
financing package (i.e., any SBA loans and any other financing,
including loans from any other source, requested by the Applicant
business at or about the same time):
(1) Is $350,000 or less, each 20 percent owner of the Applicant
must inject any liquid assets that are in excess of one and three-
quarter times the total financing package, or $200,000, whichever is
greater;
(2) Is between $350,001 and $1,000,000, each 20 percent owner of
the Applicant must inject any liquid assets that are in excess of one
and one-half times the total financing package, or $1,000,000,
whichever is greater;
(3) Exceeds $1,000,000, each 20 percent owner of the Applicant must
inject any liquid assets that are in excess of one times the total
financing package, or $2,500,000, whichever is greater.
SBA, in its sole discretion, may permit exceptions to the required
injection of an owner's excess liquid assets only in extraordinary
circumstances, such as when the excess funds are needed for medical
expenses of a family member or education/college expenses for children.
3. Permissible Fees That a Lender or Agent May Collect From an
Applicant or Borrower in Connection With a 7(a) Loan Application.
The regulations governing permissible fees a Lender may collect
from a loan Applicant or Borrower in connection with an SBA-guaranteed
loan are set forth in Sec. 120.221. In addition, the regulations
governing Agents, including their fees and provision of services, are
set forth in 13 CFR part 103. Based on feedback obtained when
conducting lender oversight activities and the numerous questions SBA
receives concerning permissible fees, it is apparent that there is a
significant amount of confusion surrounding who may charge an Applicant
fees in connection with an SBA-guaranteed loan, what fees may be
charged to the Applicant, what fees may be charged to the Lender, and
what is a ``reasonable fee.'' In addition, in many cases, Applicants
are being charged multiple fees by multiple providers (e.g., the Lender
and a third party), on the same loan. On numerous occasions, SBA has
had to require that a Lender or Agent refund amounts to an Applicant or
Borrower that the Agency deemed were unreasonable or prohibited.
The regulations governing Agents, including their fees and
provision of services to either an Applicant or a Lender are set forth
in Part 103, not in Part 120 of the regulations. The regulations in
Part 103 provide key definitions, including but not limited to Agents,
Lender Service Providers, Packagers and Referral Agents. (See Sec.
103.1.) The definition of a Referral Agent in Sec. 103.1(f) states
that a Referral Agent may be compensated by either an Applicant or a
Lender. Thus, Agents are permitted to charge an Applicant a referral
fee, while Lenders are not. In addition, while SBA permits Lenders to
engage with Lender Service Providers (LSPs) (as defined in Sec.
103.1(d)) to assist the Lender with lender functions in connection with
SBA-guaranteed loans, the cost of the LSP services may not be charged
to the Applicant or Borrower. (See Sec. 103.5(c).) To further
complicate matters, the regulation at Sec. 103.4(g) states that a
Lender Service Provider may not act as both a Lender Service Provider
or Referral Agent and a Packager for an Applicant on the same SBA
business loan and receive compensation for such activity from both the
Applicant and Lender. However, that regulation provides a limited
exception to this ``two master'' prohibition when an Agent acts as a
Packager and is compensated by the Applicant for packaging services,
and the same Agent also acts as a Referral Agent and is compensated by
the Lender for referral activities in connection with the same loan
application, provided the packaging services are disclosed to the
Lender and the referral services are disclosed to the Applicant.
In order to simplify who may charge fees to the Applicant and/or
the Lender, and to limit the total amount of fees that an Applicant may
be charged in order to obtain an SBA-guaranteed loan, SBA proposes to
revise certain portions of the regulations at Sec. Sec. 120.221,
103.4, and 103.5.
Section 120.221 Fees and expenses which the Lender may collect from
a loan Applicant or Borrower. Currently, Sec. 120.221(a) permits a
Lender to charge an Applicant reasonable fees (customary for similar
Lenders in the geographic area where the loan is being made) for
packaging and other services. Under the current regulation, SBA permits
Lenders to charge an Applicant a reasonable fee to assist the Applicant
with the preparation of the application and supporting materials.
However, SBA does not permit Lenders (or their Associates) to charge an
Applicant a commitment, broker, referral, or similar fee.
SBA proposes to amend Sec. 120.221(a) to limit the total fees an
Applicant can be charged by a Lender for assistance in obtaining an
SBA-guaranteed loan. Regardless of what the fee is called (e.g., a
packaging fee, application fee, etc.), the Lender would be permitted to
collect a fee from the Applicant that is no more than $2,500 for a loan
up to and including $350,000 and no more than $5,000 for a loan over
$350,000. With the exception of necessary out-of-pocket costs, such as
filing or recording fees permitted in Sec. 120.221(c), this is the
only fee that a Lender may collect directly or indirectly from an
Applicant for assistance with obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan. In
addition, the Lender may not split a loan into two loans for the
purpose of charging an additional fee to an Applicant. If there is a
[[Page 49007]]
legitimate business need for the Applicant's loan request to be split
into two loans (e.g., a term loan and a line of credit), the Lender may
only charge the Applicant one fee within the maximums set forth above,
based on the combined loan amounts. For example, if the Applicant needs
a $2 million term loan to purchase real estate and a building and a
$350,000 line of credit for working capital, the Lender may charge one
fee for both loans not to exceed $5,000.
SBA considers these fees to be reasonable for the services provided
by a Lender to an Applicant for assistance with obtaining an SBA-
guaranteed loan. SBA will monitor these fees and, if adjustments are
necessary, SBA may revise these amounts from time to time.
If the Lender charges the Applicant a fee for assistance with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan, the Lender must disclose the fee to
the Applicant and SBA by completing the Compensation Agreement (SBA
Form 159) in accordance with the regulation at Sec. 103.5 and the
procedures set forth in SOP 50 10.
SBA also proposes to amend Sec. 120.221(b) to permit extraordinary
servicing fees in excess of 2 percent for Export Working Capital
Program (EWCP) loans and Working Capital CAPLines that are disbursed
based on a Borrowing Base Certificate. In these programs, the fees
charged must be reasonable and prudent based on the level of
extraordinary effort required, and cannot be higher than the fees
charged on the Lender's similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial
loans. In addition, the fees charged cannot exceed the actual cost of
the extra service provided. (SBA is proposing a conforming amendment to
Sec. 120.344(b) to ensure extraordinary servicing fees charged on EWCP
loans are reasonable and prudent.)
The remaining sections of Sec. 120.221 (sections (c) through (e))
remain unchanged. Thus, in appropriate circumstances as set forth in
current Sec. Sec. 120.221(c) through (e) and further clarified in SOP
50 10, a Lender may charge an Applicant or Borrower out of pocket
expenses, a late payment fee, and for legal services charged on an
hourly basis.
Section 103.4 What is ``good cause'' for suspension or revocation?
As noted above, the regulation at Sec. 103.4(g) currently permits a
limited exception to the ``two master'' prohibition when an Agent acts
as a Packager and is compensated by the Applicant for packaging
services, and the same Agent also acts as a Referral Agent and is
compensated by the Lender for those activities in connection with the
same loan application. SBA believes there is, at a minimum, an
appearance of a conflict of interest when an Agent represents both the
Applicant and the SBA Lender on the same loan application. In addition,
the definition of an ``Associate'' of a SBA Lender set forth in Sec.
120.10 includes ``an agent involved in the loan process.'' Therefore,
an LSP or Referral Agent acting on behalf of the SBA Lender meets the
definition of an Associate of the SBA Lender and is prohibited under
current Loan Program Requirements from charging the Applicant certain
fees or expenses in connection with an SBA-guaranteed loan. Further,
when conducting Lender oversight activities, SBA has observed numerous
instances where Applicants have been erroneously charged for services
that were provided for the SBA Lender, not the Applicant. In order to
prevent any conflicts of interest from arising and to ensure the
Applicants are not improperly charged for services provided to the SBA
Lender, SBA proposes to eliminate the limited exception to the ``two
master prohibition'' and prevent an Agent, including an LSP, from
providing services to both the Applicant and the SBA Lender and being
compensated by both parties in connection with the same loan
application. SBA proposes to use the defined term ``SBA Lender'' in the
revised regulation to clarify that it applies to both 7(a) Lenders and
CDCs. SBA also proposes to revise the remaining text of Sec. 103.4(g)
for clarity.
Section 103.5 How does SBA regulate an Agent's fees and provision
of service? The regulation at Sec. 103.5 sets forth, among other
things, the requirement for all Agents to disclose to SBA the
compensation received for services provided to an Applicant and
requires that fees charged must be considered reasonable by SBA. In an
effort to clarify what SBA considers reasonable and to prevent
Applicants from being overcharged by Agents, SBA proposes to amend this
section to limit the total fees that an Agent may charge an Applicant
in connection with obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan.
SBA proposes the following limitations on the fees that an Agent
may charge an Applicant:
(1) For loans up to and including $350,000: A maximum of up to 2.5%
of the loan amount, or $7,000, whichever is less;
(2) For loans $350,001-$1,000,000: A maximum of up to 2% of the
loan amount, or $15,000, whichever is less; and
(3) For loans over $1,000,000: A maximum of up to 1.5% of the loan
amount, or $30,000, whichever is less.
If an Agent provides more than one service (e.g., packaging and
referral services), only one fee would be permitted for all services
performed by the Agent. Further, if more than one Agent (e.g., a
Packager and a Referral Agent) provides assistance to the Applicant in
obtaining the loan, the amount of all fees that the Applicant may be
required to pay would be combined to meet the maximum allowable fee set
by SBA. (However, a fee charged to the Applicant by the Lender in
accordance with proposed Sec. 120.221(a) will not be counted toward
the maximum allowable fee for an Agent or Agents.) These maximum limits
would apply regardless of whether the Agent's fee is based on a
percentage of the loan amount or on an hourly basis.
SBA considers these fees to be reasonable for the services provided
by an Agent or Agents to an Applicant in connection with obtaining an
SBA-guaranteed loan. SBA will monitor these fees and, if adjustments
are necessary, SBA may revise these amounts from time to time by
publishing a notice with request for comments in the Federal Register.
If an Agent or Agents charge an Applicant fees in connection with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan, the Agent or Agents must disclose the
fees to SBA by completing a Compensation Agreement (SBA Form 159) in
accordance with the regulation at Sec. 103.5 and must provide
supporting documentation as set forth in SOP 50 10.
Additionally, SBA proposes to remove the word ``directly'' from the
last sentence of Sec. 103.5(c) to clarify that compensation paid by
the Lender to a Lender Service Provider may not be charged to
Applicants, either directly or indirectly.
4. Loans to Qualified Employee Trusts
The regulations governing SBA-guaranteed loans to qualified
employee trusts or ``ESOPs'' are set forth in Sec. Sec. 120.350
through 120.354. Currently, the regulation at Sec. 120.350 describes
the Agency's policy concerning such loans and states that SBA is
authorized under section 7(a)(15) of the Act to provide guaranteed
loans to ESOPs to help finance the growth of the employer small
business or to purchase ownership or voting control of the employer.
Because of the complex nature of these transactions, SBA is proposing
to amend the regulation at Sec. 120.350 to require such applications
to
[[Page 49008]]
be processed only on a non-delegated basis.
5. A Lender's Responsibility When Purchasing 7(a) Loans From the FDIC
as Receiver, Conservator, or Other Liquidator of a Failed Financial
Institution
Generally, when the FDIC takes over a failed insured depository
institution, it sells the 7(a) loan assets of the institution to either
an Assuming Institution (through a purchase and assumption transaction)
or to an investor in one or more FDIC loan sales. SBA has a long-
standing policy of holding Assuming Institutions and investors
responsible for the contingent liabilities (including repairs and
denials) associated with 7(a) loans originated by failed insured
depository institutions, whether the 7(a) loans are purchased by a
Lender through an FDIC loan sale where SBA has not already purchased
the guaranty or to an Assuming Institution through a whole bank
transfer.
Under Sec. 120.432(a), for 7(a) loan sales that do not involve the
FDIC (i.e., the sale of a Lender's entire interest in a 7(a) loan to
another Lender), SBA holds a purchasing Lender responsible for the
contingent liabilities associated with the 7(a) loans acquired (even if
the guaranteed portion of the loan has already been sold on the
secondary market). SBA is proposing to amend the regulation at Sec.
120.432(a) to implement its long-established policy for 7(a) loans
acquired by Lenders from the FDIC (as receiver, conservator, or other
liquidator of a failed insured depository institution).
6. Microloan Program
Section 120.707 What conditions apply to loans by Intermediaries to
Microloan borrowers? In order to provide more flexibility for the
Microloan borrower, SBA proposes to revise the regulation at Sec.
120.707(b) to increase the maximum maturity of a loan from an
Intermediary to a Microloan borrower from six years to seven years.
This change would allow for a longer repayment period for these small
loans.
Section 120.712 How does an Intermediary get a grant to assist
Microloan borrowers? SBA proposes to revise the regulation at Sec.
120.712(b) to incorporate recent statutory changes to the percentage of
grant funds that may be used by the Intermediary for marketing,
managerial, and technical assistance to prospective Microloan borrowers
from 25 percent to 50 percent. The balance of grant funds must be used
to provide technical assistance to actual borrowers (i.e., small
businesses that have received loan funds from the Intermediary). In
Sec. 120.712(d), SBA proposes to incorporate an identical recent
statutory change to the percentage of grant funds the Intermediary may
use to contract with third parties to provide technical assistance to
Microloan borrowers. In addition, SBA proposes to revise Sec.
120.712(b) to limit the amount of grant funds that an Intermediary may
use to market or advertise the Microloan program to prospective
borrowers to no more than 5 percent of the amount of the grant. None of
the grant funds may be used by the Intermediary to market or advertise
its non-SBA products or services. Furthermore, in accordance with the
Office of Management and Budget guidance for grants and agreements set
forth in 2 CFR 200.403 and 200.404, the amount of grant funds used by
the Intermediary to market or advertise the Microloan program to
prospective borrowers must be reasonable.
7. Technical Corrections
Section 120.222 Prohibition on sharing premiums for secondary
market sales. SBA proposes a technical correction to Sec. 120.222 to
remove an extra word (``in'') that was inserted in error.
Section 120.840 Accredited Lenders Program (ALP). In Sec.
120.840(b), SBA is proposing to replace the reference to the Director,
Office of Financial Assistance with ``appropriate SBA official in
accordance with Delegations of Authority.''
B. Affiliation Principles for the Business Loan, Business Disaster
Loan, and Surety Bond Guarantee Programs
Section 121.301 What size standards and affiliation principles are
applicable to financial assistance programs? SBA proposes to amend the
affiliation principles applicable to Applicants for assistance in the
financial assistance programs set forth in Sec. 121.301(f).
Specifically, SBA proposes to expand the principle of affiliation
arising from ``identity of interest'' to include common investments and
economic dependence through contractual or other relationships between
any two or more individuals or businesses, reinstate the ``newly
organized concern'' rule, reinstate the ``totality of the
circumstances'' analysis when determining affiliation between an
Applicant for financial assistance and other entities, and clarify
affiliation based on a franchise or license agreement.
Currently, the regulation at Sec. 121.301(f)(4) defines
affiliation based on ``identity of interest'' for the Business Loan,
Business Disaster Loan, and Surety Bond Guarantee Programs as arising
only when there are ``close relatives'' with identical or substantially
identical business or economic interests (such as where the close
relatives operate concerns in the same or similar industry in the same
geographic area). Prior to 2016, this regulation also defined
affiliation to include identity of interest based on other grounds,
including common investments or economic dependence among other parties
(not just close relatives). The current regulation also differs from
the principles of affiliation SBA uses for all its other programs, all
of which include common investments and economic dependence as grounds
for affiliation. By limiting the regulation to close relatives only,
SBA has allowed businesses that are economically dependent on one
another to be treated as independent businesses (i.e., not affiliated)
for the purposes of the programs referenced in this paragraph. SBA has
also allowed individuals with multiple common investments to have their
ownership interests be considered separately in the Business Loan
Programs, whereas other SBA programs would find those individuals to
have an identity of interest. SBA believes the 2016 regulatory change
should be reversed in order to better reflect the controlling effect of
an identity of interest through common investments or economic
dependence and to conform more closely to other SBA programs.
Accordingly, SBA is now proposing to expand this regulation to include
affiliation between individuals or firms that have identical or
substantially identical business or economic interests (individuals or
firms with common investments, or firms that are economically dependent
through contractual or other relationships).
Under the proposed rule, SBA would find affiliation based on common
investments under the identity of interest rule when multiple entities
are owned by the same individuals or firms, and the entities owned by
such investors conduct business with each other or share resources. In
order to find an identity of interest between investors, the common
investments would need to be substantial, either in number of
investments or total value. As an example, in the Size Appeal of W.
Harris, Government Services Contractor, Inc., SBA No. SIZ-5717 (2016),
SBA found two individuals to have an identity of interest based on
common
[[Page 49009]]
investments where they each owned 50% of one firm, and split the
ownership of a second firm on a 55%/45% basis. While there were only
two common investments, based on the fact that the two individuals'
combined ownership of the two firms was 100%, their common investments
were deemed to be substantial in value. Because of the substantial
common investments, the two firms were affiliated with each other and
with a firm wholly owned by one of the individuals. The proposed rule
adopts the standard in W. Harris with the following modification: Under
the proposed rule, SBA would consider businesses to be affiliated based
on common investments only if they conduct business with each other, or
share resources, equipment, locations or employees; or provide loan
guaranties or other financial or managerial support to each other.
As a hypothetical example, ABC Company is owned by four unrelated
individuals: Ann owns 60% of the business; Barbara owns 15%; Charlie
owns 15%; and David owns 10%. ABC Company applies for a 504 loan to
acquire land and build a hotel. XYZ Company is owned by the same four
unrelated individuals, but in different ownership percentages: Ann owns
10% of the business; Barbara owns 60%; Charlie owns 15%; and David owns
15%. XYZ Company, a management company, applies for a 7(a) loan for
working capital. DEF Company also is owned by the same four unrelated
individuals in different ownership percentages, but with a new member
as well: Ann owns 5% of the business; Barbara owns 10%; Charlie owns
55%; David owns 15%; and Ella owns 15%. DEF Company applies for a 504
loan to acquire land and build a hotel. XYZ Company has agreements with
ABC Company and DEF Company to manage both of the hotels. Under the
proposed rule, SBA will consider Ann, Barbara, Charlie and David to
have an identity of interest because of their substantial common
investments in the three companies, and the fact that XYZ Company
manages the hotels owned by ABC Company and DEF Company. Any firm in
which Ann, Barbara, Charlie, or David individually or collectively own
more than 50% also will be considered affiliated with ABC Company, XYZ
Company, and DEF Company, if the business owned by Ann, Barbara,
Charlie, or David conducts business or shares resources with, or
provides financial or managerial support to, any of the co-owned firms.
Any other businesses in which Ella may have an ownership interest,
however, will not be considered affiliated because Ella only has a
small ownership percentage in DEF Company.
Also under the proposed identity of interest rule, if a small
business Applicant derived more than 85% of its revenue from another
business over the previous three fiscal years, SBA would find that the
small business Applicant is economically dependent on the other
business and, therefore, that the two businesses are affiliated. For
example, Company A manufactures tires and has a contract with Company B
to supply the vast majority of Company B's tires. The sales to Company
B accounted for 86%-88% of Company A's revenues over the previous three
fiscal years. Under the proposed rule, Company A would be economically
dependent on Company B and the two businesses would be deemed
affiliated. The proposed rule departs from SBA's other programs in
using a higher threshold of 85% of the Applicant's revenues to
establish economic dependence, rather than 70%. SBA believes the higher
threshold is more appropriate to establish affiliation in the programs
discussed in this Section II.B. As in SBA's other programs, this basis
of affiliation would include an exception for a business that is new or
a start-up. New or start-up businesses may only have a few customers or
obtained a few contracts, and do not have as many partners and clients
as established businesses. In order to be eligible for the exception
for new or start-up businesses, these businesses would need to have a
plan to diversify and become less dependent on one entity. For example,
in the matter of Size Appeal of Argus And Black, Inc., SBA No. SIZ-
5204, 2011 WL 1168302 (February 22, 2011), the SBA Office of Hearings
and Appeals held that where a small business has only recently begun
operations either initially or after a period of dormancy, and is
dependent upon its alleged affiliate for only one small contract of
short duration, which by itself could not sustain a business, a finding
of economic dependence is not warranted.
SBA recognizes that, if the proposed identity of interest rule is
adopted as final, SBA Lenders may need assistance in applying the rule
to certain agricultural business relationships or agreements. In
particular, the agreement between a poultry farmer and a large poultry
producer (integrator) may be critical to the determination of whether
the farmer is an independent small business but, due to the complexity
of the typical integrator agreement, SBA Lenders may be uncertain as to
the correct outcome of the affiliation analysis for such a business
relationship. SBA is considering reviewing these agreements and making
the affiliation determination itself so that SBA Lenders will not be
reluctant to make loans to small poultry farmers operating under such
agreements. SBA will provide further information on this in the final
rule, if necessary.
Additionally, SBA proposes to add the newly organized concern rule
to Sec. 121.301(f), which will create uniformity among SBA's various
affiliation rules. The newly organized concern rule applied to the
Business Loan Programs prior to the 2016 rule change, but was removed
at SBA's own initiative. Under the proposed newly organized concern
rule, a newly organized spin-off company may be found affiliated with
the original company where all of the following conditions are met: (1)
Former or current officers, directors, principal stockholders, managing
members, general partners, or key employees of one concern organize a
new concern; (2) the new concern is in the same or related industry or
field of operation; (3) the individuals who organized the new concern
serve as the new concern's officers, directors, principal stockholders,
managing members, general partners, or key employees; and (4) the
original concern is furnishing or will furnish the new concern with
contracts, financial or technical assistance, indemnification on bid or
performance bonds, and/or other facilities, whether for a fee or
otherwise. The proposed rule would define a key employee to be an
employee who, because of his or her position in the concern, has a
critical influence in or substantive control over the operations or
management of the concern. The proposed rule further defines a ``newly
organized'' concern to be one that has been actively operating
continuously for two years or less. The proposed newly organized
concern basis of affiliation would be a rebuttable presumption that may
be rebutted if there is a clear line of fracture between the new
concern and the other firm.
Finally, SBA proposes to amend Sec. 121.301(f) by adding a new
paragraph 6 to explain that, when making affiliation determinations,
SBA will consider the totality of the circumstances, and may find
affiliation even though no single factor is sufficient to constitute
affiliation. The totality of the circumstances criterion for
determining affiliation was removed in 2016 in response to comments
received on the proposed revisions to the affiliation rules. Commenters
requested that SBA either eliminate the criterion
[[Page 49010]]
or provide examples of when it would be used. SBA stated that,
generally, examples of when this criterion was used involved negative
control or control through management agreements. Rather than include
examples in the rule, SBA provided additional specific guidance in
Sec. Sec. 121.301(f)(1) and (f)(3) to address negative control and
control through management agreements. However, SBA now believes that
there are other examples of when affiliation may be present and,
therefore, is reinstating the totality of the circumstances criterion.
Examples of affiliation between small businesses based on the
totality of the circumstances include:
(1) SBA found a newly established firm to be affiliated with the
firm owned by its 40% owner where both firms were construction
companies; they had similar names (Specialized Services, Inc. and
Specialized Veterans, LLC); the 40% owner provided a $300,000 initial
capital contribution compared to the 60% owner's $1,000 contribution;
the majority owner was previously the Chief Operating Officer of the
affiliate; the majority owner had no construction experience; and the
affiliate provided indemnification to the firm's surety. (Size Appeal
of Specialized Veterans, LLC, SBA No. SIZ-5138 (2010).)
(2) SBA found a newly established firm to be affiliated with its
minority owner, an entity in the same line of business, where the other
owners were previously key employees of the affiliate; the affiliate
provided guarantees for the firm's financing and required the firm to
seek the affiliate's approval before undertaking long-term commitments;
the affiliate supplied the firm with machines and equipment for free;
the affiliate promised the firm a large amount of business; and the
sales the firm made to the affiliate accounted for the vast majority,
86%-88%, of its revenues. (Size Appeal of Pointe Precision, LLC, SBA
No. SIZ-4466 (2001).)
SBA notes that a business found affiliated under the totality of
the circumstances test (or any other ground of affiliation) in the
Business Loan Programs may challenge the determination by requesting a
formal size determination from SBA's Office of Government Contracting
in accordance with 13 CFR 121.1001(b)(1)(i). A business can appeal a
formal size determination to SBA's Office of Hearings and Appeals in
accordance with 13 CFR 121.1101.
Finally, SBA proposes to revise Sec. 121.301(f)(5) to clarify that
the term ``franchise'' has the meaning given by the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) in its definition of ``franchise'' as set forth in 16
CFR 436. SBA proposes to cross reference the FTC definition of
``franchise'' in the regulation to clarify that the regulation applies
to all agreements or relationships, whatever they may be called, that
meet the FTC definition of a franchise. All such agreements will be
referred to in the regulation as ``franchise agreements'' and the
parties to such agreements will be referred to as ``franchisor'' and
``franchisee.'' Further, SBA proposes to add to this regulation a
statement that SBA will maintain a centralized list of franchise and
other similar agreements that are eligible for SBA financial
assistance. SBA will make this centralized list available to SBA
Lenders and the public. The proposed changes discussed in this
paragraph are consistent with SBA's current policy and procedure.
Although not included in the regulations, SBA is providing below a
description of the franchise procedures currently in effect for lending
to franchisees in the Business Loan Programs. As of January 1, 2018,
SBA created the SBA Franchise Directory (the ``Directory'') of all
franchise and other brands reviewed by SBA that are eligible for SBA
financial assistance. The Directory only includes business models that
SBA determines are eligible under SBA's affiliation rules and other
eligibility criteria. If the Applicant's brand meets the FTC definition
of a franchise, it must be on the Directory in order to obtain SBA
financing. (To help minimize confusion over brands that may appear to
be franchises but that do not meet the FTC definition, SBA includes
such brands on the Directory at their request if they are eligible in
all other respects.) SBA Lenders are able to rely on the Directory and
no longer need to review franchise or other brand documentation for
affiliation or eligibility.
The Directory will continue to be maintained on SBA's website at
www.sba.gov. It will contain the following information:
(1) Whether the brand meets the FTC definition of a franchise;
(2) The SBA Franchise Identifier Code, if applicable (a code will
only be issued if the agreement meets the FTC definition of a
franchise);
(3) Whether an addendum is needed in order to resolve any
affiliation issues as a result of provisions in the franchise agreement
and, if so, whether the franchisor will use the SBA Addendum to
Franchise Agreement (SBA Form 2462) or an SBA Negotiated Addendum (with
respect to an SBA Negotiated Addendum, the Directory will reference the
addendum most recently negotiated with SBA, which will not be earlier
than 2015); and
(4) Whether there are additional issues the Lender must consider
with respect to the brand (e.g., documentation that the business will
be open to all, review of any third party management agreement to
ensure Applicant is not a passive business or affiliated with the
management company).
For applications involving a franchise or similar relationship that
meets the FTC definition of a franchise, before submitting the
application to SBA for non-delegated processing or approving the loan
under the SBA Lender's delegated authority, the SBA Lender must check
the Directory to determine if it includes the Applicant's brand. If the
Applicant's brand is on the Directory, the SBA Lender may proceed with
submitting the application to SBA for non-delegated processing, or
approving the loan under its delegated authority. If the Applicant's
brand is not on the Directory, the SBA Lender cannot submit the
application to SBA for non-delegated processing, or approve the loan
under its delegated authority. (See, SOP 50 10 for a full discussion of
the procedures for processing franchise loans.)
Section 121.302 When does SBA determine the size status of an
applicant? SBA proposes to incorporate the SBA Express and Export
Express programs into this regulation to clarify that, with respect to
applications for financial assistance under these programs, size is
determined as of the date of approval of the loan by the SBA Express or
Export Express Lender.
Compliance With Executive Orders 12866, 12988, 13132, 13563, and 13771,
the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C., Ch. 35), and the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612).
Executive Order 12866
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that this
proposed rule is not a ``significant'' regulatory action for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866. However, SBA has drafted a
Regulatory Impact Analysis in the next section. This is not a major
rule under the Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 800.
Regulatory Impact Analysis
1. Is there a need for this regulatory action?
The Agency believes it is necessary to provide regulatory guidance
for SBA Express and Export Express loans, which are authorized by
statute. Current
[[Page 49011]]
regulatory guidance provides an extensive framework for the delivery of
SBA's 7(a) guaranteed loans through participating private sector
lenders. However, currently there are not regulations identifying the
specific Loan Program Requirements applicable to SBA Express and Export
Express. Congress has authorized SBA to permit qualified lenders to
make SBA Express and Export Express loans using, to the maximum extent
practicable, their own analyses, procedures, and documentation. It is
necessary to provide clear and succinct regulatory guidance for lenders
to encourage participation in extending these smaller dollar loans, and
to enable these lenders to extend credit with confidence in their
ability to rely on payment by SBA of the guaranty if necessary.
The Small Business 7(a) Lending Oversight Reform Act of 2018 was
signed into law on June 21, 2018. As part of this legislation, Congress
has authorized the Agency to direct the methods by which Lenders
determine whether a borrower is able to obtain credit elsewhere. SBA
will be implementing that legislation in a separate rulemaking, but in
this rule SBA proposes to reinstate a personal resources test in an
effort to provide clear direction to SBA Lenders when analyzing whether
a borrower has credit available elsewhere on reasonable terms from non-
Federal or alternative sources.
The statutory changes in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2018 (Pub. L. 115-141) regarding the Microloan Program require
amendments to existing regulations for the percentage of grant funds
that may be used by the Microloan Intermediary for marketing,
managerial, and technical assistance to prospective Microloan
borrowers. Existing regulations must be revised as proposed to reflect
the statutory changes.
Further, the Agency believes it needs to streamline and reduce
regulatory burdens to facilitate robust participation in the business
loan programs that assist small and underserved U.S. businesses. For
that reason, SBA is proposing the changes to the regulatory provisions
related to allowable fees that a Lender or Agent may collect from an
Applicant for financial assistance. The proposed changes are needed to
simplify the regulations regarding fees that may be collected from an
Applicant. The proposal would establish clear limits on the amount of
fees that may be charged by a Lender and/or an Agent. In addition, the
proposed changes to the affiliation principles applicable to the
Business Loan, Disaster Loan, and Surety Bond Guarantee Programs are
needed in order to simplify and clarify the determination of
eligibility of a business as a small concern.
2. What are the potential benefits and costs of this regulatory action?
SBA does not anticipate any additional costs or impact on the
subsidy to operate the business loan programs under these proposed
regulations. SBA anticipates that providing clear regulatory guidance
for the SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs will result in an
increase in the number of participating lenders and loans in both
programs, which would mean increased access to capital for small
businesses. SBA does not anticipate any additional cost from the
addition of the SBA Express and Export Express regulations because both
programs have been in use and performing for over 5 years.
Additionally, portfolio performance of both programs, including
prepayment, default and recovery behaviors is already being captured in
the 7(a) program's annual subsidy calculation.
In return for the additional autonomy and authority granted under
SBA Express, Lenders who participate in the SBA Express program agree
to receive a maximum guaranty of 50% on loans of $350,000 or less. The
ability for SBA Express Lenders to use the same forms, procedures and
policies that they already follow for their similarly-sized, non-SBA
guaranteed commercial loans removes an additional layer of documents
and permits a lender to move more quickly to a decision and funding of
small dollar small business loans. This reduces the time and costs, as
well as the paperwork involved in making these smaller loans (up to
$350,000 for SBA Express and up to $500,000 for Export Express).
The Export Express Loan Program provides lenders with a maximum
guaranty of 90% for loans of $350,000 or less and 75% for loans over
$350,000 up to $500,000, as well as the authority to use their own
forms, procedures and policies to the maximum extent possible. As with
SBA Express, the increased autonomy and authority reduces redundancy in
documentation, time and costs associated with underwriting smaller
export loans.
Cost to deliver is an important consideration for lenders when
assessing the benefits of participating with SBA programs. Streamlined
rules result in increased lender participation, particularly for
community banks, credit unions and other mission-based lenders who
generally serve more rural communities and underserved populations with
smaller dollar loans. While SBA does not have specific statistics, cost
savings to the lender generally trickle down to the small business
Applicant. Further, providing plain language regulatory guidance for
the SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs will reduce improper
payment risk for lenders and SBA by ensuring that lenders are fully
informed and understand the program requirements.
3. What alternatives have been considered?
SBA has provided guidance on the SBA Express and Export Express
Loan Programs in SOP 50 10, Lender and Development Company Programs,
SOP 50 57, 7(a) Loan Servicing and Liquidation, SOP 50 53, Lender
Supervision and Enforcement, and 51 00, On-Site Reviews and
Examinations, and official Agency notices. The Agency recognizes,
however, that regulations are important for the proper implementation
of the two programs.
Executive Order 13563
This executive order supplements and reaffirms the principles and
requirements in E.O. 12866, including the requirement to provide the
public with an opportunity to participate in the regulatory process. In
compliance with the executive order, a description of the need for this
regulatory action and benefits and costs associated with this action,
including possible distributional impacts are included above in the
Regulatory Impact Analysis. The Agency has participated in public
forums and meetings, which have included outreach to many of its
program participants to seek valuable insight, guidance, and
suggestions for program reform. Some of the proposed changes in this
rule are a direct result of the feedback SBA has received from program
participants.
Executive Order 13771
This proposed rule is not expected to be an E.O. 13771 regulatory
action because this proposed rule is not significant under E.O. 12866.
Executive Order 12988
This action meets applicable standards set forth in Sections 3(a)
and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize
litigation, eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden. The action does not
have retroactive or preemptive effect.
Executive Order 13132
SBA has determined that this proposed rule would not have
substantial, direct effects on the States,
[[Page 49012]]
on the relationship between the national government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, for the purposes of Executive Order
13132, SBA has determined that this proposed rule has no federalism
implications warranting preparation of a federalism assessment.
Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C., Ch. 35
SBA has determined that this proposed rule would impose additional
reporting or recordkeeping requirements under the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA). Applicants for SBA Express and Export Express loans, as well
as SBA Express and Export Express Lenders, use the same forms as all
other 7(a) loans in order to apply for an SBA guaranteed loan. These
forms include: SBA Form 1919, Borrower Information Form; SBA Form 1920,
Lender's Application for Guaranty; SBA Form 1971, Religious Eligibility
Worksheet (for those businesses that may have a religious aspect); and
SBA Form 2237 (to request modifications to an approved loan). These
forms are all OMB-approved forms under OMB Control number 3245-0348.
SBA Form 1920 would need to be revised due to the proposed new
regulation at Sec. 120.102, which would require Lenders to analyze the
personal resources of certain owners of the Applicant business to
determine if they have liquid assets that can provide some or all of
the desired financing. The change would have a de minimis impact on
Lenders since the personal resource analysis is already part of the
credit analysis Lenders currently conduct in determining an Applicant's
eligibility for SBA financial assistance. SBA Form 1920 is completed by
the Lender, not by the Applicant.
The rule also proposes changes that would require revisions to SBA
Form 159, Fee Disclosure and Compensation Agreement (OMB Control number
3245-0201), which is used to collect information from Lenders and
Agents on the fees that they charge to Applicants for assistance with
obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan. SBA Form 159 is also used to collect
information from Lenders on referral fees that it pays to Referral
Agents in connection with an SBA-guaranteed loan. The specific proposed
revisions to SBA Form 159 would implement the proposed changes to
Sec. Sec. 120.221, 103.4(g), and 103.5 that limit the amount and types
of fees that may be charged to an Applicant. The proposed revisions to
SBA Form 159 would reduce the hour burden for Lenders because they will
no longer have to itemize the fees charged to Applicants in excess of
$2,500, but merely disclose the amount charged. The revisions would
have no material effect on the reporting burden for Agents. They will
continue to report on all fees imposed on Applicants as they do now.
The proposed changes to SBA Forms 1920 and 159 will be submitted to OMB
as part of a broader, comprehensive revision of the forms that is not
affected by this proposed rule, but is part of the Agency's efforts to
streamline and simplify the information collected from Applicants and
Lenders. SBA will make it clear in the final rule that the specific
revisions affected by this proposed rule will not take effect until the
rule is finalized. SBA invites comments on the proposed changes to the
underlying regulations that would impact these forms by the deadline
for comments noted in the DATES section.
Finally, this proposed rule proposes to put into the regulations
the existing requirement for SBLCs to submit to SBA for review and
approval on an annual basis the validation of any credit scoring model
they are using in connection with SBA Express and Export Express loans.
This reporting requirement will be included in OMB-approved collection,
SBA Lender Reporting Requirements (OMB Approval Number 3245-0365). This
information collection expires September 30, 2018 and will be submitted
to OMB for renewal prior to that date. The proposed regulatory change
does not impact that requirement; it merely codifies the requirement in
the regulation instead of the SOP.
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612
When an agency issues a rulemaking proposal, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, requires the agency to
``prepare and make available for public comment an initial regulatory
analysis'' which will ``describe the impact of the proposed rule on
small entities.'' Section 605 of the RFA allows an agency to certify a
rule, in lieu of preparing an analysis, if the proposed rulemaking is
not expected to have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Although the rulemaking will impact all of
the approximately 4,500 7(a) Lenders, all of the approximately 214
CDCs, all of the approximately 146 Microloan Intermediaries, all of the
approximately 33 ILP Intermediaries, and all of the approximately 32
Sureties that participate in the SBG Program, SBA does not believe the
impact will be significant because this proposal modifies existing
regulations and procedures to provide bright-line guidance.
SBA has determined that by proposing a limit to fees that a Lender
or an Agent may charge to a small business Applicant or Borrower for
SBA 7(a) loans, small business borrowers will be protected from
incurring excessive expense to obtain a loan. SBA issued guaranties on
288,398 7(a) loans from fiscal year 2013 through fiscal year 2017. Fees
charged to the Borrower or Applicant for packaging or other services
were disclosed on 21% of the total 7(a) loans approved in that period.
Applicants or Borrowers were charged fees that exceed the limits
proposed in this rulemaking on 3.8% of total 7(a) loans approved.
Based on the analysis above, SBA has determined that the proposed
fee limits will not cause undue financial burden to the Lenders or
Agents. Having this bright-line test, Lenders, Borrowers, and Agents
will, in fact, save time and costs in analyzing and documenting that
fees charged to the Applicant are reasonable.
SBA's proposal to reinstate a personal resources test will have no
impact, either directly or indirectly, to Applicants for 7(a) or 504
loans. Currently, the regulation (13 CFR 120.101) and program guidance
require SBA Lenders to analyze the ability of the business to obtain
credit from non-federal sources, including the personal resources of
individuals and entities that own 20 percent or more of the Applicant
business. The proposed change reinstates a bright-line test for SBA
Lenders to appropriately consider the personal resources of the
principals.
SBA's proposal to presume affiliation between a small business
Applicant and another business from which the Applicant has derived
more than 85% of its revenue over the previous three fiscal years
includes an exception for new or start-up businesses. The exception
will require the new or start-up Applicant to prepare a diversification
plan demonstrating how it plans to become less dependent on any single
source of income. This requirement to create a diversification plan may
create an additional regulatory burden on those Applicants eligible for
the exception. However, SBA considers this impact to be de minimis to
the overall cost and time burden of the Applicant in preparing an
application and business plan.
SBA believes that this proposed rule encompasses best practice
guidance that aligns with the Agency's mission to increase access to
capital for small businesses and facilitate American job preservation
and creation with the
[[Page 49013]]
removal of unnecessary regulatory requirements. For these reasons, SBA
has determined that there is no significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. SBA invites comment from members
of the public who believe there will be a significant impact on
sureties, microloan intermediaries, participant lenders, CDCs, or small
businesses.
List of Subjects
13 CFR Part 103
Administrative practice and procedure.
13 CFR Part 120
Community development, Environmental protection, Equal employment
opportunity, Exports, Loan programs--business, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Small businesses.
13 CFR Part 121
Loan programs--business, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Small businesses.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, SBA proposes to amend 13
CFR parts 103, 120 and 121 as follows:
PART 103--STANDARDS FOR CONDUCTING BUSINESS WITH SBA
0
1. The authority citation for part 103 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 634, 642.
0
2. Amend Sec. 103.4 by revising paragraph (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 103.4 What is ``good cause'' for suspension or revocation?
* * * * *
(g) Acting as an Agent (including a Lender Service Provider) for an
SBA Lender and an Applicant on the same SBA business loan and receiving
compensation from both the Applicant and SBA Lender.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 103.5 by revising paragraph (b) and the last sentence of
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 103.5 How does SBA regulate an Agent's fees and provision of
service?
* * * * *
(b) Total compensation charged by an Agent or Agents to an
Applicant for services rendered in connection with obtaining an SBA-
guaranteed loan must be reasonable. In cases where the compensation
exceeds the amount SBA deems reasonable, the Agent(s) must reduce the
charge and refund to the Applicant any sum in excess of the amount SBA
deems reasonable. SBA considers the following amounts to be reasonable
for the total compensation that an Applicant can be charged by an Agent
or Agents:
(1) For loans up to and including $350,000: A maximum of up to 2.5%
of the loan amount, or $7,000, whichever is less;
(2) For loans $350,001-$1,000,000: A maximum of up to 2% of the
loan amount, or $15,000, whichever is less; and
(3) For loans over $1,000,000: A maximum of up to 1.5% of the loan
amount, or $30,000, whichever is less.
(c) * * * However, such compensation may not be charged to an
Applicant or Borrower.
PART 120--BUSINESS LOANS
0
4. The authority citation for part 120 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 634(b)(6), (b)(7), (b)(14), (h), and note,
636(a), (h) and (m), 650, 687(f), 696(3), and 697(a) and (e); Pub.
L. 111-5, 123 Stat. 115; Pub. L. 111-240, 124 Stat. 2504.
0
5. Add Sec. 120.102 to read as follows:
Sec. 120.102 Funds not available from alternative sources, including
the personal resources of owners.
(a) An Applicant for a business loan must show that the desired
funds are not available from the resources of any individual or entity
owning 20 percent or more of the Applicant. SBA will require the use of
liquid assets from any such owner as an injection to reduce the SBA
loan amount when that owner's liquid assets exceed the amounts
specified in paragraphs (a)(1) through (3) of this section. When the
total financing package (i.e., any SBA loans and any other financing,
including loans from any other source, requested by the Applicant
business at or about the same time):
(1) Is $350,000 or less, each 20 percent owner of the Applicant
must inject any liquid assets that are in excess of one and three-
quarter times the total financing package, or $200,000, whichever is
greater;
(2) Is between $350,001 and $1,000,000, each 20 percent owner of
the Applicant must inject any liquid assets that are in excess of one
and one-half times the total financing package, or $1,000,000,
whichever is greater;
(3) Exceeds $1,000,000, each 20 percent owner of the Applicant must
inject any liquid assets that are in excess of one times the total
financing package, or $2,500,000, whichever is greater.
(b) Any liquid assets in excess of the applicable amount set forth
in paragraph (a) of this section must be used to reduce the SBA loan
amount. These funds must be injected prior to the disbursement of the
proceeds of any SBA financing. In extraordinary circumstances, SBA may,
in its sole discretion, permit exceptions to the required injection of
an owner's excess liquid assets.
(c) For purposes of this section, ``liquid assets'' means cash or
cash equivalents, including savings accounts, CDs, stocks, bonds, or
other similar assets. Equity in real estate holdings and other fixed
assets are not to be considered liquid assets. In addition, the liquid
assets of any 20 percent owner who is an individual include the liquid
assets of the owner's spouse and any minor children.
(d) SBA Lenders must document their analysis and determination in
the loan file.
0
6. Amend Sec. 120.130 by revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 120.130 Restrictions on uses of proceeds.
* * * * *
(c) Floor plan financing or other revolving line of credit, except
under Sec. 120.340, Sec. 120.390, or Sec. 120.444;
* * * * *
0
7. Amend Sec. 120.221 by revising the section heading and paragraphs
(a) and (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 120.221 Fees and expenses that the Lender may collect from an
Applicant or Borrower.
* * * * *
(a) Fees that can be collected from the Applicant for assistance in
obtaining a loan. The Lender may collect a fee from an Applicant for
assistance with obtaining an SBA-guaranteed loan. The fee may not
exceed $2,500 for a loan up to and including $350,000 and may not
exceed $5,000 for a loan over $350,000. The Lender must advise the
Applicant in writing that the Applicant is not required to obtain or
pay for unwanted services. In cases where the compensation exceeds what
SBA deems reasonable, the Lender must reduce the charge and refund to
the Applicant any amount in excess of what SBA deems reasonable. If the
Lender charges the Applicant a fee for assistance with obtaining an
SBA-guaranteed loan, the fee must be disclosed to SBA in accordance
with Sec. 103.5 and documented in accordance with Loan Program
Requirements.
(b) Extraordinary servicing. Subject to prior written SBA approval,
if all or part of a loan will have extraordinary servicing needs, the
Lender may charge extraordinary servicing fees in excess of 2 percent
per year on the outstanding
[[Page 49014]]
balance of the part requiring special servicing for certain revolving
lines of credit made under Sec. 120.390 and on Export Working Capital
Program loans (as allowed under Sec. 120.344(b)), provided the fees
are reasonable and prudent.
* * * * *
Sec. 120.222 [Amended]
0
8. Amend Sec. 120.222 by removing the word ``in'' before the words
``any premium received''.
Sec. 120.344 [Amended]
0
9. Amend Sec. 120.344(b) by removing the period at the end of the
paragraph and adding ``, provided the fees are reasonable and
prudent.''
0
10. Revise Sec. 120.350 to read as follows:
Sec. 120.350 Policy.
(a) Section 7(a)(15) of the Act authorizes SBA to guarantee a loan
to a qualified employee trust (``ESOP'') to:
(1) Help finance the growth of the employer small business; or
(2) Purchase ownership or voting control of the employer.
(b) Applications for SBA-guaranteed loans to a qualified employee
trust may not be processed under a Lender's delegated authority.
0
11. Amend Sec. 120.432 by adding a sentence at the end of paragraph
(a) to read as follows:
Sec. 120.432 Under what circumstances does this subpart permit sales
of, or sales of participating interests in, 7(a) loans?
(a) * * * This paragraph applies to all 7(a) loans purchased from
the FDIC (as receiver, conservator, or other liquidator of a failed
insured depository institution), whether through a loan sale where SBA
has not already purchased the guarantee or through a whole bank
transfer.
* * * * *
0
12. Amend Sec. 120.440 by revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 120.440 How does a 7(a) Lender obtain delegated authority?
* * * * *
(c) If delegated authority is approved or renewed, Lender must
execute a supplemental guarantee agreement, which will specify a term
not to exceed two years. As provided in Sec. 120.442(c)(2)(i), when
SBA renews a Lender's authority to participate in SBA Express, SBA may
grant a longer term, but not to exceed three years. For approval or
renewal of any delegated authority, SBA may grant shortened approvals
or renewals based on risk or any of the other delegated authority
criteria. Lenders with less than three years of SBA lending experience
will be limited to an initial term of one year or less.
0
13. Add a new undesignated center heading after Sec. 120.440 to read
as follows:
``SBA EXPRESS AND EXPORT EXPRESS LOAN PROGRAMS''.
0
14. Add Sec. Sec. 120.441 through 120.447 to read as follows:
Sec. 120.441 SBA Express and Export Express Loan Programs.
(a) SBA Express. Under the SBA Express Loan Program (SBA Express),
designated Lenders (SBA Express Lenders) process, close, service, and
liquidate SBA-guaranteed 7(a) loans using their own loan analyses,
procedures, and documentation to the maximum extent practicable, with
reduced requirements for submitting documentation to, and prior
approval by, SBA. These loan analyses, procedures, and documentation
must meet prudent lending standards; be consistent with those an SBA
Express Lender uses for its similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed
commercial loans; and conform to all requirements imposed upon Lenders
generally and SBA Express Lenders in particular by Loan Program
Requirements, as such requirements are issued and revised by SBA from
time to time, unless specifically identified by SBA as inapplicable to
SBA Express loans. In return for the expanded authority and autonomy
provided by the program, SBA Express Lenders agree to accept a maximum
SBA guaranty of 50 percent of the SBA Express loan amount.
(b) Export Express. The Export Express Loan Program (Export
Express) is designed to help current and prospective small exporters.
It is subject to the same loan processing, making, closing, servicing,
and liquidation requirements, as well as the same interest rates and
applicable fees, as SBA Express, except as otherwise provided in Loan
Program Requirements.
Sec. 120.442 Process to obtain or renew SBA Express or Export
Express authority.
The decision to grant or renew SBA Express or Export Express
authority will be made by the appropriate SBA official in accordance
with Delegations of Authority, and is final. If SBA Express or Export
Express authority is approved or renewed, the Lender must execute a
supplemental guarantee agreement before the Lender's SBA Express or
Export Express authority will become effective.
(a) Criteria and process for initial approval of SBA Express or
Export Express authority. A Lender that wishes to participate in SBA
Express or Export Express must submit a written request to SBA.
(1) Existing 7(a) Lenders. In evaluating an existing 7(a) Lender's
application for SBA Express or Export Express authority, SBA will
consider the criteria and follow the procedures set forth in Sec.
120.440.
(2) Lending institutions that do not currently participate with
SBA. Lending institutions that do not currently participate with SBA
must become 7(a) Lenders to participate in SBA Express and/or Export
Express. Such institutions may request SBA 7(a) lending and SBA Express
and/or Export Express authority simultaneously. In evaluating such
institutions, in addition to the criteria set forth in Sec. Sec.
120.410 and 120.440, SBA will consider whether the institution:
(i) Has acceptable experience with small commercial loans,
including an acceptable number of performing small commercial loans
outstanding at its most recent fiscal year end; and
(ii) Has received appropriate training on SBA's policies and
procedures.
(b) Criteria and process for renewal of SBA Express or Export
Express authority. In renewing a Lender's SBA Express or Export Express
authority and determining the term of the renewal, SBA will consider
the criteria and follow the process set forth in Sec. 120.440 and also
will consider whether the Lender:
(1) Can effectively process, make, close, service, and liquidate
SBA Express or Export Express loans, as applicable;
(2) Has received a major substantive objection regarding renewal
from the Field Office(s) covering the territory where the Lender
generates significant numbers of SBA Express or Export Express loans,
as applicable; and
(3) Has received acceptable review results on the SBA Express or
Export Express portion, as applicable, of any SBA-administered Lender
reviews.
(c) Term.--(1) Initial Approval. SBA may approve a Lender's
authority to participate in SBA Express or Export Express for a maximum
term of two years. SBA may approve a shorter term or limit a Lender's
maximum SBA Express or Export Express loan volume if, in SBA's sole
discretion, a Lender's qualifications, performance, experience with SBA
lending, or other factors so warrant.
(2) Renewal.--(i) SBA Express. SBA may renew a Lender's authority
to participate in SBA Express for two years or, in SBA's sole
discretion, a maximum of three years if a Lender's qualifications,
performance, experience
[[Page 49015]]
with SBA lending, or other factors so warrant.
(ii) Export Express. SBA may renew a Lender's authority to
participate in Export Express for a maximum term of two years.
(iii) SBA may renew a Lender's authority to participate in SBA
Express or Export Express for a shorter term or limit a Lender's
maximum SBA Express or Export Express loan volume if, in SBA's sole
discretion, a Lender's qualifications, performance, experience with SBA
lending, or other factors so warrant.
Sec. 120.443 SBA Express and Export Express loan processing
requirements.
(a) SBA Express and Export Express loans are subject to all of the
requirements set forth in Subparts A and B of this part, unless such
requirements are specifically identified by SBA as inapplicable.
(b) Certain types of loans and loan programs are not eligible for
SBA Express or Export Express, as detailed in official SBA policy and
procedures, including but not limited to:
(1) A loan that would reduce the Lender's existing credit exposure
to a single Borrower, including its affiliates as defined in Sec.
121.301(f) of this chapter;
(2) A loan to a business that has an outstanding 7(a) loan where
the Applicant is unable to certify that the loan is current at the time
of approval of the SBA Express or Export Express loan;
(3) A loan that would have as its primary collateral real estate or
personal property that do not meet SBA's environmental requirements;
and
(4) Complex loan structures or eligibility situations.
(c) SBA has authorized SBA Express and Export Express Lenders to
make the credit decision without prior SBA review. Lenders must not
make an SBA guaranteed loan that would be available on reasonable terms
from either the Lender itself or another source without an SBA
guaranty. The credit analysis must demonstrate that there is reasonable
assurance of repayment. SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must use
appropriate and prudent credit analysis processes and procedures that
are generally accepted in the commercial lending industry and are
consistent with those used for their similarly-sized, non-SBA
guaranteed commercial loans. As part of their prudent credit analysis,
SBA Express and Export Express Lenders may use a business credit
scoring model (such a model cannot rely solely on consumer credit
scores) to assess the credit history of the Applicant and/or repayment
ability if they do so for their similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed
commercial loans. SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must validate
(and document) with appropriate statistical methodologies that their
credit analysis procedures are predictive of loan performance, and they
must provide that documentation to SBA upon request. SBLCs must provide
such credit scoring model validation and documentation to SBA for
review and approval on an annual basis.
(d) SBA Express and Export Express Lenders are responsible for all
loan decisions, including eligibility for 7(a) loans (including size),
creditworthiness and compliance with Loan Program Requirements. SBA
Express and Export Express Lenders also are responsible for confirming
that all loan closing decisions are correct and that they have complied
with all requirements of law and Loan Program Requirements.
(e) SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must ensure all required
forms are obtained and are complete and properly executed. Appropriate
documentation must be maintained in the Lender's loan file, including
adequate information to support the eligibility of the Applicant and
the loan.
Sec. 120.444 Eligible uses of SBA Express and Export Express loan
proceeds.
(a) SBA Express.--(1) SBA Express loan proceeds must be used
exclusively for eligible business-related purposes, as described in
Sec. Sec. 120.120 and 120.130.
(2) Revolving lines of credit are eligible for SBA Express,
provided they comply with official SBA policy and procedures.
(b) Export Express. (1) Export Express loans must be used for an
export development activity, which includes the following:
(i) Obtaining a Standby Letter of Credit when required as a bid
bond, performance bond, or advance payment guarantee;
(ii) Participation in a trade show that takes place outside the
United States;
(iii) Translation of product brochures or catalogues for use in
markets outside the United States;
(iv) Obtaining a general line of credit for export purposes;
(v) Performing a service contract for buyers located outside the
United States;
(vi) Obtaining transaction-specific financing associated with
completing export orders;
(vii) Purchasing real estate or equipment to be used in the
production of goods or services for export;
(viii) Providing term loans and other financing to enable a small
business concern, including an export trading company and an export
management company, to develop a market outside the United States; and
(ix) Acquiring, constructing, renovating, modernizing, improving or
expanding a production facility or equipment to be used in the United
States in the production of goods or services for export.
(2) Revolving lines of credit for export purposes are eligible for
Export Express, provided they comply with official SBA policy and
procedures.
(3) Export Express loans may not be used to finance overseas
operations, except for the marketing and/or distribution of products/
services exported from the U.S.
(4) Export Express Lenders are responsible for ensuring that U.S.
companies are authorized to conduct business with the Persons and
countries to which the Borrower will be exporting.
(c) An SBA Express or Export Express Lender may use loan proceeds
to refinance certain outstanding debts, subject to official SBA policy
and procedures. However, an SBA Express or Export Express Lender may
not refinance its own existing SBA-guaranteed debt under SBA Express or
Export Express.
Sec. 120.445 Terms and conditions of SBA Express and Export Express
loans.
SBA Express and Export Express loans are subject to the same terms
and conditions as other 7(a) loans except as set forth in this section:
(a) Maximum loan amount and maximum aggregate loan amount.
(1) SBA Express. The maximum loan amount for an SBA Express loan is
set forth in section 7(a)(31)(D) of the Small Business Act. The
aggregate amount of all outstanding SBA Express loans to a single
Borrower, including the Borrower's affiliates as defined in Sec.
121.301(f) must not exceed the statutory maximum.
(2) Export Express. The maximum loan amount for an Export Express
loan is set forth in section 7(a)(34)(C)(i) of the Small Business Act.
The aggregate amount of all outstanding Export Express loans to a
single Borrower, including the Borrower's affiliates as defined in
Sec. 121.301(f), must not exceed the statutory maximum.
(b) Maximum SBA guarantee.--(1) SBA Express. The maximum SBA
guarantee on an SBA Express loan is 50 percent of the SBA Express loan
amount. In addition, the guaranteed amount of all SBA Express loans to
a single Borrower, including the Borrower's affiliates, counts toward
the
[[Page 49016]]
maximum guaranty amount as described in Sec. 120.151.
(2) Export Express. The maximum SBA guarantee on an Export Express
loan of $350,000 or less is 90 percent and for a loan over $350,000 is
75 percent of the Export Express loan amount. In addition, the
guaranteed amount of all Export Express loans to a single Borrower,
including the Borrower's affiliates, counts toward the maximum guaranty
amount as described in Sec. 120.151.
(c) Maturity.--(1) SBA Express. SBA Express loans must have a
stated maturity and the maximum maturities are the same as any other
7(a) loan, except that revolving SBA Express loans are limited to a
maximum of 10 years, as described more fully in official SBA policy and
procedures.
(2) Export Express. Export Express loans must have a stated
maturity and the maximum maturities are the same as any other 7(a)
loan, except that revolving Export Express loans are limited to a
maximum maturity of 7 years, as described more fully in official SBA
policy and procedures.
(d) Interest rates.--(1) SBA Express and Export Express Lenders may
charge up to 4.5% over the prime rate on loans over $50,000 and up to
6.5% over the prime rate for loans of $50,000 or less, regardless of
the maturity of the loan. The prime rate will be that which is in
effect on the first business day of the month, as printed in a national
financial newspaper published each business day.
(2) For variable interest rate loans, SBA Express and Export
Express Lenders are not required to use the base rate identified in
Sec. 120.214(c). SBA Express and Export Express Lenders may use the
same base rate of interest they use on their similarly-sized, non-SBA
guaranteed commercial loans, as well as their established change
intervals, payment accruals, and other interest rate terms. However,
the interest rate must never exceed the maximum allowable interest rate
stated in paragraph (d)(1) of this section. Additionally, the loan may
be sold on the Secondary Market only if the base rate is one of the
base rates allowed in Sec. 120.214(c).
(3) The amount of interest SBA will pay to a Lender following
default of an SBA Express or Export Express loan is capped at the
maximum interest rates for the standard 7(a) loan program set forth in
Sec. Sec. 120.213 through 120.215.
(e) Collateral.--(1) With the exception of paragraphs (e)(2) and
(e)(3) of this section, to the maximum extent practicable, SBA Express
and Export Express Lenders must follow the same collateral policies and
procedures that they have established and implemented for their
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans, including those
concerning identification of collateral. Such policies and procedures
must be commercially reasonable and prudent.
(2) SBA may establish a threshold below which SBA Express and
Export Express Lenders will not be required to take collateral to
secure an SBA Express or Export Express loan. Such a threshold will be
described more fully in official SBA policy and procedures.
(3) Export Express lines of credit over $25,000 used to support the
issuance of a standby letter of credit must have collateral (cash, cash
equivalent or project) that will provide coverage for at least 25% of
the issued standby letter of credit amount.
(f) Insurance. SBA Express and Export Express Lenders must follow
the same policies they have established and implemented for their
similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans.
(g) Sale on the secondary market. SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders may sell the guaranteed portion of an SBA Express or Export
Express term loan on the secondary market under the policies and
procedures described in Subpart F of this part. SBA Express or Export
Express Lenders may not sell the guaranteed portion of an SBA Express
or Export Express revolving line of credit on the secondary market.
(h) Loan increases. With SBA's prior written consent, an SBA
Express or Export Express Lender may increase an SBA Express or Export
Express loan based on the needs of the Borrower and its credit
situation, as further specified in Loan Program Requirements.
Sec. 120.446 SBA Express and Export Express loan closing, servicing,
liquidation and litigation requirements.
(a) Closing. Except as set forth in this paragraph, SBA Express and
Export Express Lenders must close their SBA Express and Export Express
loans using the same documentation and procedures that they use for
their similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans. Such
documentation and procedures must comply with law, prudent lending
practices, and Loan Program Requirements. When closing an SBA Express
or Export Express loan, the Lender must require the Borrower to execute
a promissory note that is legally enforceable and assignable. Before
the first disbursement of any SBA Express or Export Express loan
proceeds, the Lender must obtain all required collateral, including
obtaining valid and enforceable security interests in such collateral,
and also must meet all other required pre-closing loan conditions as
set forth in official SBA policy and procedures.
(b) Servicing, Liquidation, and Litigation. Servicing, liquidation,
and litigation responsibilities for SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders are set forth in Subpart E of this Part.
(c) SBA's purchase of the guaranteed portion of an SBA Express or
Export Express loan. (1) SBA will purchase the guaranteed portion of an
SBA Express or Export Express loan in accordance with Sec. 120.520 and
official SBA policy and procedures. An SBA Express or Export Express
Lender may not request purchase of the guaranty based solely on a
violation of a non-financial default provision.
(2) How much SBA will pay upon purchase?--(i) SBA Express. SBA will
pay a maximum of 50 percent of the total principal balance of the SBA
Express loan outstanding after liquidation, including up to 120 days of
interest at the rate in effect at the time of the earliest uncured
default (if liquidation proceeds collected by the SBA Express Lender
were insufficient for the Lender to recover a full 120 days of
interest).
(ii) Export Express. SBA will pay a maximum of 75 or 90 percent (as
applicable) of the total principal balance of the Export Express loan
outstanding after liquidation, including up to 120 days of interest at
the rate in effect at the time of the earliest uncured default (if
liquidation proceeds collected by the Export Express Lender were
insufficient for the Lender to recover a full 120 days of interest).
(3) Release of SBA liability under its guarantee. SBA will be
released from its liability to purchase the guaranteed portion of an
SBA Express or Export Express loan, either in whole or in part, in
SBA's sole discretion, under any of the circumstances described in
Sec. 120.524.
Sec. 120.447 Lender oversight of SBA Express and Export Express
Lenders.
SBA Express and Export Express Lenders are subject to the same
risk-based lender oversight as 7(a) Lenders, including the supervision
and enforcement provisions, in accordance with Subpart I of this Part.
Sec. 120.707 [Amended]
0
15. Amend the last sentence of Sec. 120.707(b) by removing the word
``six'' and add in its place ``seven''.
0
16. Amend Sec. 120.712 as follows:
0
a. Revise paragraph (b)(1); and
0
b. In paragraph (d) remove the number ``25'' and add in its place the
number ``50''.
[[Page 49017]]
The revision and addition read as follows:
Sec. 120.712 How does an Intermediary get a grant to assist
Microloan borrowers?
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) Up to 50 percent of the grant funds may be used to provide
information and technical assistance to prospective Microloan
borrowers; provided, however, that no more than 5 percent of the grant
funds may be used to market or advertise the products and services of
the Microloan Intermediary directly related to the Microloan Program;
and
* * * * *
Sec. 120.840 [Amended]
0
17. Amend Sec. 120.840 by removing the term ``D/FA'' from the second
sentence of paragraph (b) and adding in its place the phrase
``appropriate SBA official in accordance with Delegations of
Authority''.
PART 121--SMALL BUSINESS SIZE REGULATIONS
0
18. The authority citation for Part 121 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 632, 634(b)(6), 662, and 649a(9).
0
19. Amend Sec. 121.301 by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (f)(4);
0
b. Redesignating paragraphs (f)(5), (f)(6), and (f)(7) as paragraphs
(f)(7), (f)(8), and (f)(9) respectively;
0
c. Adding new paragraphs (f)(5) and (f)(6) and revising the
redesignated (f)(7).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 121.301 What size standards and affiliation principles are
applicable to financial assistance programs?
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(4) Affiliation based on identity of interest. (i) Affiliation may
arise among two or more individuals or firms with an identity of
interest. Individuals or firms that have identical or substantially
identical business or economic interests (such as close relatives,
individuals or firms with common investments, or firms that are
economically dependent through contractual or other relationships) may
be treated as one party with such interests aggregated. Where SBA
determines that such interests should be aggregated, an individual or
firm may rebut that determination with evidence showing that the
interests deemed to be one are in fact separate.
(ii) Affiliation arises when there is an identity of interest
between close relatives, as defined in Sec. 120.10 of this chapter,
with identical or substantially identical business or economic
interests (such as where the close relatives operate concerns in the
same or similar industry in the same geographic area).
(iii) Affiliation arises through common investments where the same
individuals or firms together own a substantial portion of multiple
concerns, and concerns owned by such investors conduct business with
each other (such as subcontracts or joint ventures), or share
resources, equipment, locations or employees with one another, or
provide loan guaranties or other financial or managerial support to
each other.
(iv) SBA will find affiliation based upon economic dependence if
the concern in question derived more than 85% of its receipts from
another concern over the previous three fiscal years, unless the
concern has been in business for a short amount of time and has a plan
to lessen its dependence on the other concern.
(5) Affiliation based on the newly organized concern rule.
Affiliation may arise where current or former officers, directors,
principal stockholders, managing members, or key employees of one
concern organize a new concern in the same or related industry or field
of operation, and serve as the new concern's officers, directors,
principal stockholders, managing members, or key employees, and the
original concern is furnishing or will furnish the new concern with
contracts, financial or technical assistance, indemnification on bid or
performance bonds, and/or other facilities, whether for a fee or
otherwise. A concern may rebut such an affiliation determination by
demonstrating a clear line of fracture between the two concerns. For
the purpose of this rule, a ``key employee'' is an employee who,
because of his/her position in the concern, has a critical influence in
or substantive control over the operations or management of the
concern. A concern will be considered ``new'' for the purpose of this
rule if it has been actively operating continuously for two years or
less.
(6) Affiliation based on totality of the circumstances. In
determining whether affiliation exists, SBA will consider the totality
of the circumstances, and may find affiliation even though no single
factor is sufficient to constitute affiliation.
(7) Affiliation based on franchise agreements. (i) The restraints
imposed on a franchisee by its franchise agreement generally will not
be considered in determining whether the franchisor is affiliated with
an applicant franchisee provided the applicant franchisee has the right
to profit from its efforts and bears the risk of loss commensurate with
ownership. SBA will only consider the franchise agreements of the
applicant concern. SBA will maintain a centralized list of franchise
and other similar agreements that are eligible for SBA financial
assistance, which will identify any additional documentation necessary
to resolve any eligibility or affiliation issues between the franchisor
and the small business applicant.
(ii) For purposes of this section, ``franchise'' means any
continuing commercial relationship or arrangement, whatever it may be
called, that meets the Federal Trade Commission definition of
``franchise'' in 16 CFR 436.
* * * * *
0
20. Amend Sec. 121.302 by revising paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as
follows:
Sec. 121.302 When does SBA determine the size status of an
applicant?
(a) The size status of an applicant for SBA financial assistance is
determined as of the date the application for financial assistance is
accepted for processing by SBA, except for applications under the
Preferred Lenders Program (PLP), the SBA Express Loan Program (SBA
Express), the Export Express Loan Program (Export Express), the
Disaster Loan Program, the SBIC Program, and the New Markets Venture
Capital (NMVC) Program.
(b) For PLP, SBA Express, and Export Express, size is determined as
of the date of approval of the loan by the Lender.
* * * * *
Dated: September 18, 2018.
Linda E. McMahon,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018-20869 Filed 9-27-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8025-01-P