Debt Refinancing in the 504 Loan Program, 70580-70586 [2023-22169]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 196 / Thursday, October 12, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
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Debt Refinancing in the 504 Loan
Program
U.S. Small Business
Administration.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SBA is adopting with changes
the interim final rule published in the
Federal Register on July 29, 2021. That
interim final rule implemented section
328 of the Economic Aid to Hard-Hit
Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and
Venues Act, which modified the
requirements for refinancing debt in the
504 Loan Program, as set forth in section
521(a) of title V of division E of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016
and section 502(7) of the Small Business
Investment Act of 1958. The
modifications included: increasing the
amount of existing indebtedness that
may be refinanced for 504 debt
refinancing involving expansions; and
for 504 debt refinancing not involving
expansions, removing two limitations
on the program, reinstating an alternate
job retention standard for the
refinancing project, revising the
definition of qualified debt, and
SUMMARY:
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removing the prohibition against
Certified Development Companies
(CDCs) participating in the Premier
Certified Lenders Program using their
delegated authority to make these loans.
DATES: The effective date of this final
rule is November 13, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Gregorius Suryadi, Senior Financial and
Loan Specialist, 504 Program Branch,
Office of Financial Assistance, Small
Business Administration, 409 3rd Street
SW, Washington, DC 20416; telephone:
(202) 205–6806; email:
gregorius.suryadi@sba.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background Information
The 504 Loan Program is an SBA
financing program authorized under
title V of the Small Business Investment
Act of 1958, 15 U.S.C. 695 et seq. The
core mission of the 504 Loan Program is
to provide long-term financing to small
businesses for the purchase or
improvement of land, buildings, and
major equipment, in an effort to
facilitate the creation or retention of jobs
and local economic development. Under
the 504 Loan Program, loans are made
to small business applicants by Certified
Development Companies (‘‘CDCs’’),
which are certified and regulated by
SBA to promote economic development
within their community. In general, a
project in the 504 Loan Program (a ‘‘504
Project’’) includes: a loan obtained from
a private sector lender with a senior lien
covering at least 50 percent of the
project cost; a loan obtained from a CDC
(a ‘‘504 Loan’’) with a junior lien
covering up to 40 percent of the total
cost (backed by a 100 percent SBAguaranteed debenture); and a
contribution from the Borrower of at
least 10 percent equity.
In addition, the 504 Loan Program
may be used to refinance debt under
two options authorized under section
502(7)(B) and (C) of the Small Business
Investment Act of 1958. First, if a 504
Project involves the expansion of the
small business, any amount of existing
indebtedness that does not exceed 50
percent of the project cost of the
expansion may be refinanced and added
to the project’s cost (Debt Refinancing
with Expansion) under the conditions
set forth in section 502(7)(B) and the
implementing regulations. See 13 CFR
120.882(e) and (f). Second, debt
refinancing is available for a 504 Project
that does not involve the expansion of
the small business under the
requirements set forth in section
502(7)(C) and 13 CFR 120.882(g) (Debt
Refinancing without Expansion).
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 196 / Thursday, October 12, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
Section 328(a) of the Economic Aid to
Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits,
and Venues Act (Economic Aid Act),
enacted December 27, 2020, Public Law
116–260, revised the conditions and
requirements for refinancing debt in the
504 Loan Program as follows:
(1) With respect to Debt Refinancing
with Expansion, 13 CFR 120.882(e), the
Economic Aid Act increased the amount
of existing indebtedness that may be
refinanced as part of a 504 Project from
not more than 50 percent of the project
cost of the expansion to not more than
100 percent of the project cost;
(2) With respect to Debt Refinancing
without Expansion, 13 CFR 120.882(g),
the Economic Aid Act:
(a) Eliminated the condition that this
program shall only be in effect in any
fiscal year during which the cost to the
Federal Government of making
guarantees under 13 CFR 120.882(g) and
under the 504 Loan Program is zero;
(b) Eliminated the requirement that a
CDC limit its financing under the 504
Loan Program so that, during any
Federal fiscal year, new financings
under 13 CFR 120.882(g) do not exceed
50% of the dollars the CDC loaned
under the 504 Loan Program, including
under 13 CFR 120.882(g), during the
previous fiscal year, unless otherwise
waived;
(c) Eliminated the prohibition against
Premier Certified Lender Program
(PCLP) CDCs using delegated authority
to approve loan applications for Debt
Refinancing without Expansion;
(d) Reinstated an alternate job
retention standard that was previously
removed from the Debt Refinancing
without Expansion Program by section
521 of division E of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2016 (2016
Consolidated Appropriations Act),
enacted on December 18, 2015, Public
Law 114–113;
(e) Revised the definition of
‘‘qualified debt’’ to mean debt that was
incurred not less than six months before
the date of application instead of two
years before the date of application;
(f) Removed from the definition of
‘‘qualified debt’’ condition that the debt
not be subject to a guarantee by a
Federal agency; and
(g) Eliminated from the definition of
‘‘qualified debt’’ the requirement that
the borrower be current on all payments
for not less than one year before the date
of the application for refinancing.
As described in the section-by-section
analysis below, SBA is issuing this final
rule to adopt the previously published
interim final rule and to conform the
current rules to the requirements of the
Economic Aid Act.
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II. Section-by-Section Analysis of
Comments and Changes
On July 29, 2021, SBA published in
the Federal Register an interim final
rule implementing section 328(a) of the
Economic Aid Act. 86 FR 40775.
Although effective immediately, the
interim final rule included a request for
comments seeking input from the
public. The comment period for the
interim final rule was open from July
29, 2021, until October 8, 2021. SBA
received 79 comments of which many
were duplicative. Of the unique
comments received, two were from
national trade associations, 68 were
from Certified Development Companies,
one (1) was from a bank, one (1) from
a private industry, and four (4) from
individuals. This section includes a
description of the comments received
and is organized by the rules being
revised. SBA received comments from a
national trade association and 63 CDCs
recommending changes beyond the
scope of this rule that will not be
addressed in this final rule.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 120.882(e). In the interim
final rule SBA revised this provision by
increasing the amount of existing
indebtedness that may be refinanced to
no more than 100 percent of the project
cost (from 50 percent of the project cost)
to conform with the amendments to
section 502(7)(B) of the Small Business
Investment Act made by section
328(a)(2)(A) of the Economic Aid Act.
SBA did not receive any comments on
this change and is adopting this change
as set forth in the interim final rule.
Section 120.882(g)(3). In the interim
final rule SBA removed the requirement
that the approval of a Refinancing
Project is subject to the requirement that
the cost to the Federal Government of
making guarantees under 13 CFR
120.882(g) and under the 504 Loan
Program is zero during the fiscal year in
which the guarantee is made in
accordance with section 328(a)(1) of the
Economic Aid Act, which repealed this
statutory requirement set forth in the
2016 Consolidated Appropriations Act.
In its place SBA inserted a provision
that set forth the conditions and
requirements that apply to the
refinancing of a loan that is subject to
a guarantee by a Federal agency or
department. As indicated above, the
Economic Aid Act removed the
prohibition against refinancing a loan
that is subject to a guarantee by a
Federal agency or department. Although
these loans may now be refinanced if
the refinancing project does not involve
expansion, the loan must comply with
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the following conditions and
requirements:
(1) for an existing 504 loan, either
both the Third Party Loan and the 504
loan must be refinanced, or the Third
Party Loan must have been paid in full;
and
(2) for an existing 7(a) loan, the CDC
must verify in writing that the present
lender is either unwilling or unable to
modify the current payment schedule.
In addition, in the case of same
institution debt, if the Third Party
Lender or the CDC affiliate as
authorized under 13 CFR 120.820 is the
7(a) lender, the loan will be eligible for
504 refinancing only if the lender is
unable to modify the terms of the
existing loan because a secondary
market investor will not agree to
modified terms.
(3) the refinancing of any federallyguaranteed loan must provide a
substantial benefit to the borrower.
‘‘Substantial benefit’’ means that the
portion of the new installment amount
attributable to the debt being refinanced
must be at least 10 percent less than the
existing installment amount(s).
Prepayment penalties (including any
subsidy recoupment fee), financing fees,
and other financing costs must be added
to the amount being refinanced in
calculating the percentage reduction in
the new installment payment. The
portion of the new installment amount
attributable to Eligible Business
Expenses will not need to be included
in this calculation. The rule allows the
Director, Office of Financial Assistance
(D/FA) or designee, to approve an
exception to the 10 percent reduction
requirement for good cause and does not
allow PCLP CDCs to use their delegated
authority to approve a loan requiring
this exception.
SBA received 66 comments on this
rule change, of which 50 supported the
rule change with modifications. There
were no comments opposing the rule
change.
A national trade association and its
member CDCs requested that SBA not
include in regulation any conditions or
requirements that restrict or limit the
ability to refinance a loan that is subject
to a guarantee by a Federal agency or
department as no such conditions or
restriction exists in statute or in the
Economic Aid Act (EAA) update.
The national trade association and its
member CDCs also recommended that
SBA remove the requirement that CDCs
obtain written verification of the
existing 7(a) lender’s inability or
unwillingness to modify the current
payment schedule as a requirement to
allowing the refinance of an existing
7(a) loan. The national trade association
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 196 / Thursday, October 12, 2023 / Rules and Regulations
asked that the ability to refinance an
existing 7(a) loan be unfettered and
guided by what is in the best interest of
the borrower.
Another national trade association
proposed safeguards of increasing the
substantial benefit requirement for both
7(a) and 504 programs, which include,
but are not limited to, the SBA issuing
specific guidance on the underwriting
for both programs. In addition, to
protect the borrower from paying
additional and significant fees, the
national trade association recommended
the SBA limit fees for new 504 loans.
SBA feels that increasing the substantial
benefit requirement as requested in a
rising interest rate environment would
not be in the best interest of the small
business borrower.
Based on the public comments
received, SBA is revising this rule to
remove the requirement that CDCs and
7(a) lenders be given the opportunity to
modify existing debt. Instead, SBA is
transferring the burden of contacting the
CDC or 7(a) lender whose debt is being
refinanced from the borrower to the
CDC that will be packaging the 504 loan
for the borrower. The revised rule
requires the CDC to notify in writing (by
email or letter) the existing CDC or 7(a)
lender to advise them in advance when
a government guaranteed loan is being
refinanced.
Section 120.882(g)(11). In the interim
final rule SBA removed the section that
states PCLP CDCs may not use delegated
authority to approve refinancing under
13 CFR 120.882(g), in accordance with
section 328(a) of the Economic Aid Act,
which removed this statutory
prohibition. In its place, the interim
final rule stated that PCLP CDCs may
not approve the refinancing of same
institution debt under their delegated
authority and must submit the loan to
SBA for approval. This requirement is
consistent with SBA’s long-standing
policy of prohibiting its participating
lenders from using their delegated
authority to approve the financing of
same institution debt due to the
potential conflict of interest and the risk
of the 504 loan proceeds being used to
shift to SBA a potential loss from the
existing debt. SBA did not receive any
comments on this change and is
adopting this change as set forth in the
interim final rule.
Section 120.882(g)(15). In the interim
final rule SBA redesignated paragraph
(g)(15), Definitions, as paragraph (g)(16),
and added a new paragraph (g)(15) to set
forth the alternate job retention standard
that was reinstated by section 328(a) of
the Economic Aid Act. Under this
alternate job retention standard, for a
Refinancing Project under 13 CFR
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120.882(g) the debt does not need to
meet the job creation or other economic
development objectives set forth in 13
CFR 120.861 or 120.862, provided that
the 504 loan does not exceed the
product obtained by multiplying the
number of employees of the borrower by
$75,000. On May 11, 2023, SBA
published in the Federal Register a
notice announcing an increase to the job
creation or retention standards for the
504 Loan Program to reflect increases in
the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for All
Urban Consumers. 88 FR 30379. This
included increasing the amount per Job
Opportunity that a 504 Loan Project
must create or retain from $75,000 to
$90,000. Accordingly, the amount set
forth in 13 CFR 120.882(g)(15) is
adjusted from $75,000 to $90,000.
The alternate job retention standard
provides that the number of employees
of a borrower is equal to the sum of:
(1) the number of full-time employees
of the borrower on the date on which
the borrower applies for a loan under
this subparagraph; and
(2) the product obtained by
multiplying:
(a) the number of part-time employees
of the borrower on the date on which
the borrower applies for a loan under
this subparagraph, by
(b) the quotient obtained by dividing
the average number of hours each parttime employee of the borrower works
each week by 40.
An example of how this standard is
calculated is included in the text of the
rule.
SBA did not receive any comments on
this adjustment. The final rule adopts
the interim final rule with one change,
namely an increase in the amount per
Job Opportunity that a 504 Loan Project
must create from $75,000 to $90,000 as
per SBA’s announcement in the Federal
Register on May 11, 2023.
Section 120.882(g)(16). As stated
above, SBA redesignated paragraph
(g)(15), Definitions, as paragraph (g)(16)
and made five changes to the definition
of ‘‘Qualified debt’’. First, paragraph (i)
of the definition of ‘‘Qualified debt’’
(redesignated as paragraph (A))
previously required that the debt must
not have been incurred less than two
years before the date of the application
for refinancing. However, section 328(a)
of the Economic Aid Act shortened this
period to six months before the date of
the application for refinancing.
Accordingly, SBA revised this
paragraph by replacing two years with
six months.
Second, paragraph (i) of the definition
of ‘‘Qualified debt’’ (redesignated as
paragraph (A)) previously allowed a
loan that was refinanced within the two
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years before the date of application (the
most recent loan) to be deemed incurred
not less than two years before the date
of the application provided that the
effect of the most recent loan was to
extend the maturity date without
advancing any additional proceeds.
With the minimum age of the qualified
debt shortened from two years to six
months, SBA believed that it was no
longer necessary to address this
situation and therefore SBA removed
the second and third sentences of
paragraph (i) (redesignated as paragraph
(A)).
Third, paragraph (ii) of the definition
of ‘‘Qualified debt’’ previously excluded
debt that was subject to a guarantee by
a Federal agency or department. As
stated above, section 328(a) of the
Economic Aid Act removed this
statutory exclusion and SBA
consequently removed this paragraph
and renumbered the remaining
paragraphs accordingly. The conditions
and requirements that apply to the
refinancing of a loan that is subject to
a Federal guarantee are set forth in
paragraph (g)(3).
Fourth, paragraph (vi) of the
definition of ‘‘Qualified debt’’
previously excluded a Third Party Loan
that is part of an existing 504 Project.
However, under the new paragraph
(g)(3), an existing 504 loan may be
refinanced when both the Third Party
Loan and the 504 loan are being
refinanced. Accordingly, SBA revised
this paragraph, which was redesignated
as paragraph (E), to incorporate this
exception to the general prohibition
against a qualified debt including a
Third Party Loan.
Fifth, paragraph (vii) of the definition
of ‘‘Qualified debt’’ previously reflected
the statutory requirement that, for the
debt to qualify for refinancing, the
applicant had to be current on all
payments due for not less than one year
preceding the date of application.
Because section 328(a) of the Economic
Aid Act removed this requirement from
section 502(7)(C) of the Small Business
Investment Act, SBA removed this
paragraph from the regulations. In
accordance with prudent lending
standards, SBA expects CDCs to
consider whether the applicant is
current on all payments due, and the
applicant’s history of delinquency, in its
credit analysis. SBA did not receive any
comments on these specific revisions
and is adopting the revisions as set forth
in the interim final rule.
SBA did however receive comments
from a national trade association and its
member CDCs requesting that SBA
lower the Qualified debt definition’s
standard of ‘‘substantially all (85% or
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more)’’ to a ‘‘majority’’ standard of 51%
or more to increase access to and
utilization of 504 debt refinancing. SBA
agrees that a decrease to the
‘‘substantially all’’ standard would
increase refinancing opportunities for
small businesses. Neither the Small
Business Act nor the Small Business
Investment Act define or test for
‘‘substantially all.’’ The 85%
‘‘substantially all’’ standard in
paragraph (g) was established with
regulations implementing section 1122
of the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010.
76 FR 9213. SBA is modifying the
‘‘substantially all’’ definition to 75%
from 85% with the remainder being
adjusted to 25% from 15%. SBA has
determined that ‘‘substantially all’’ is
not 51%.
Finally, the phrase ‘‘Same institution
debt’’ was previously used with Debt
Refinancing without Expansion only in
reference to the Third Party Loan, see 13
CFR 120.882(g)(13), and, thus, the
definition of ‘‘same institution debt’’
referenced only the Third Party Lender.
With the requirement in 13 CFR
120.882(g)(11) that PCLP CDCs cannot
use their delegated authority to approve
the refinancing of same institution debt
in the Debt Refinancing without
Expansion program, SBA revised the
definition of ‘‘Same institution debt’’ to
also mean the debt of the CDC (or its
affiliates) that is providing funds for the
refinancing. SBA did not receive any
comments on this change and is
adopting this change as set forth in the
interim final rule.
Section 120.883(e). SBA currently
allows certain administrative costs that
are not part of Project costs to be paid
with the proceeds of the 504 loan and
the Debenture. 13 CFR 120.882. This
includes CDC Closing Fees up to a
maximum of $2,500. 13 CFR 120.882(e).
Since the publication of the interim
final rule SBA conducted a series of
roundtable discussions with CDCs and
lenders at annual and regional events. In
alignment with the adjustment with jobs
created/retained due to the CPI, SBA
received multiple comments during the
regional roundtables for an inflation
adjustment also to update § 120.883,
Eligible administrative costs for 504
loans, in paragraph (e) which currently
limits of the amount of CDC closing fees
allowed to be included in 504 financing
portion of a project to be capped at
$2,500. In alignment with these changes
and in an attempt to keep the limit of
CDC closing costs relevant to
administrative costs, SBA is proposing
an increase to the legal fees. According
to the public comments, this cap does
not reflect current administrative costs
and creates a burden on the borrower to
pay for closing expenses from its own
account. In the final rule, SBA increases
the amount from $2,500 to $10,000.
Compliance With Executive Orders
12866, 12988, 13132, and 13563, the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C.
801–808), Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C., Ch. 35), and the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612)
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
The Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has determined that this rule
constitutes a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ for purposes of Executive
Orders 12866 and 13563. SBA, however,
is proceeding under the emergency
70583
provision at Executive Order 12866,
section 6(a)(3)(D), based on the need to
move expeditiously to mitigate the
current conditions arising from the
COVID–19 pandemic.
As shown in Table 1 below, during
the five-year period spanning fiscal year
(FY) 2018 and FY 2022, a total of 38,022
504 loans were approved for a total
gross approval amount as of September
30, 2022, of $32,965,182,830. In
addition, during this five-year period,
SBA approved 247 debt refinance with
expansion loans on average per year
with an average annual dollar volume of
$309,165,400, and approved 451 debt
refinance without expansion loans on
average per year with an average annual
dollar volume of $469,596. The
Economic Aid Act passage increased the
debt refinance with expansion from 50
percent of a project to 100 percent of a
project. Prior to this change, of the debt
refinance with expansion loans, only 16
refinanced a debt that equaled 50
percent of the expansion costs; if these
borrowers had been able to refinance
100 percent of the expansion costs
instead of 50 percent, and assuming that
all these borrowers did so, these
borrowers would have been able to
borrow $15 million more over five
years, or about $3 million more
annually. Since the passage of the
Economic Aid Act, and the issuance of
the interim final rule, there have been
746 504 loan refinancing with
expansion projects approved for a total
of $1,030,563,000 approved. This
legislative change has expanded the
access to capital to small business for
expansion projects that also need debt
refinancing.
TABLE 1—504 LOAN ACTIVITY FY 2018–FY 2022
Total Number of 504 Loans ..........................................
Total Dollar Volume of 504 Loans Approved ...............
Number of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion ...................
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion .........
Number of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion ..............
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion ....
FY 2018
FY 2019
FY 2020
FY 2021
FY 2022
FY 2023
5,874
$4,753,644,000
181
$212,098,000
181
$154,062,000
6,099
$4,958,552,000
181
$192,968,000
166
$154,842,000
7,119
$5,826,885,000
236
$296,392,000
386
$370,160,000
9,676
$8,218,105,540
301
$389,801,000
693
$709,020,000
9,254
$9,207,996,290
336
$454,568,000
829
$959,897,000
3,844
$3,533,163,000
109
$186,194,000
249
$270,151,000
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TABLE 2—504 LOAN ACTIVITY BY DEFINED COHORT AUGUST 2018–JULY 2023
Total Number of 504 Loans ........................................................................
Total Dollar Volume of 504 Loans Approved .............................................
Number of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion .................................................
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion .......................................
Number of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion ............................................
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion ..................................
Data as of 9/15/2023, total dollar
volume is lifetime gross approval
amount including increases.
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Aug’ 18–Jul’ 19
Aug’ 19–Jul’ 20
Aug’ 20–Jul’ 21
Aug’ 21–Jul’ 22
Aug’ 22–Jul’ 23
6,153
$5,063,078,000
183
$191,786,000
160
$157,880,000
6,836
$5,575,249,000
243
$309,027,000
302
$295,396,000
9,572
$7,934,192,540
295
$362,039,000
66
$601,831,000
9,392
$9,248,887,290
332
$446,975,000
934
$1,057,386,000
6,253
$6,624,952,000
183
$305,619,000
388
$432,638,000
This rule was necessary to implement
the Economic Aid Act and provide
economic relief to small businesses
adversely impacted by COVID–19. SBA
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anticipates that finalizing these changes
to the 504 debt refinancing programs
will continue to result in benefits to
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small businesses by providing greater
flexibility to restructure debt.
To assess the impact of the interim
final rule, SBA evaluated 504 loan
activity (including the number of loans
and dollar volume of both debt
refinance with and without expansion)
between August 2018 and July 2023.
Because the interim final rule was
published on July 29, 2021, with
immediate effectiveness, the first full
month during which the modifications
to 504 debt refinancing were available
was August 2021, with August 2021
through July 2022 being the first 12month period during which the
modifications to 504 debt refinancing
were available to 504 applicants. SBA
divided the data into five cohorts of 12
months each, with the first cohort
beginning in August 2018 and the last
cohort beginning August 2023. See
Table 2.
As an appropriate baseline for
evaluation of the impacts of the interim
final rule that would be made
permanent in this rule, SBA considers
the state of 504 lending for debt
refinance with expansion and without
expansion before July 2021. SBA
examines the 12-month periods from
August 1, 2018, through July 31, 2019,
to the period from August 1, 2022, to
July 31, 2023, noting that external
influences from the pandemic and from
the payments made on behalf of
borrowers by SBA under section 1112 of
the Coronavirus Aid Recovery, and
Economic Security Act (Section 1112
Payments) that ended in September
2021 occurred. The Section 1112
Payments required SBA to make
principal and interest payments on 504
loans for certain periods of time
depending on the when the 504 loan
was approved, which would have made
2018–19
%
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi with Expansion as Percentage of Dollar Volume of Total 504 Loans .............................................................
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi without Expansion as Percentage of
Dollar Volume of Total 504 Loans .......................................................
As indicated in the chart, the
percentages of 504 debt refinancing
loans with and without expansion are in
the recent period returning to the levels
seen prior to the publication of the
interim final rule in July 2021. For debt
refinancing without expansion, the
August 2020–July 2021 period was
elevated and the August 2021–July 2022
cohort was an outlier, but the next 12
months settled to a percentage that at a
level consistent with the periods before
the interim final rule and not indicative
of a significant impact. These two
cohorts with higher percentages were
during the pandemic and were covered,
at least in part, by Section 1112
Payments. The 12-month percentages of
504 debt refinancing with expansion did
not vary widely.
The interim final rule increased the
amounts on 504 debt refinancing with
and without expansion. Aggregate 504
lending over the period in question
ranged from approximately $5 billion to
almost $9.25 billion, with total 504
lending in the latest 12-month cohort at
about $6.6 billion. Even in the unlikely
scenario of the interim final rule as the
sole cause of an increase in total 504
lending from the low volume in the
examined period of $5 billion (in 2018–
19) to the latest 12-month total of $6.6
billion, the incremental impact, as
indicated by changes in the percentage
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a 504 loan an attractive option for small
businesses and consequently would
have increased 504 loan volume.
Further, interest rates on 504 loans in
these two periods differ, from a range of
approximately 4.0 to 5.0 percent in the
earlier period to rates up to 7.0 percent
in the later period, as do rates on
alternatives to 504 loans. These changes
mean that lending total volume
comparisons may not be appropriate for
assessment of impact. Because the major
changes in the interim final rule were
the increases in the amounts of existing
indebtedness that may be refinanced for
both 504 debt involving expansions and
504 debt not involving expansions, SBA
examined the percentages of 504
lending that were for these two types of
debt refinancing. The chart below shows
these percentages for five August-July
cohorts.
2019–20
%
2020–21
%
2021–22
%
2022–23
%
3.79
5.54
4.56
4.83
4.61
3.12
5.30
7.59
11.43
6.53
of total lending accounted for by each,
is under $100 million.
warrant the preparation of a Federalism
Assessment.
Congressional Review Act
Paperwork Reduction Act
OMB’s Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has determined that
this rule is not a major rule under
Subtitle E of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (also known as the Congressional
Review Act), 5 U.S.C. 804(2). Per the
above cost benefit analysis, the annual
effect on the economy is less than $100
million.
In order to implement the Act, SBA
determined that it was necessary to
modify SBA Form 1244, Application for
Section 504 Loans, which is currently
approved under OMB Control Number
3245–0071, to conform the form to the
revised requirements for debt
refinancing loans. The changes did not
add any new burdens for the
respondents, rather, in some instances,
the revisions will result in reduced
burden as applicants and CDCs no
longer have to submit certain
information.
(a) The information collection
previously required PCLP CDCs to
process all applications for debt
refinancing without expansion through
the Sacramento Loan Processing Center
(SLPC) and not through the PCLP CDC’s
delegated authority. As discussed above,
this requirement was removed by the
Economic Aid Act and, accordingly,
SBA removed the requirement from the
information collection when the interim
final rule (IFR) was released in 2021.
The final rule would result in no further
changes. This revision did not change
the information the PCLP CDC is
required to collect, only how the
application is processed. In addition,
consistent with the changes made by the
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
preemptive effect or retroactive effect.
Executive Order 13132
This rule does not have federalism
implications as defined in Executive
Order 13132. It will not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in the
Executive order. As such it does not
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ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
IFR, SBA added two questions to clarify
that, for debt refinancing without
expansion, PCLP CDCs must process
applications through the SLPC when the
application involves the refinancing of
same institution debt or, in cases
involving the refinancing of federallyguaranteed debt, the CDC is requesting
an exception to the requirement that the
new installment payment be at least
10% less than the existing installment
amount. No further changes are
necessary.
(b) With respect to the question
regarding whether the Applicant creates
or retains the required number of jobs
per debenture amount, an option has
been added for the Applicant to indicate
whether the project is eligible under the
504 debt refinance alternate job
standard reinstated by the Economic
Aid Act.
(c) Of the exhibits that are required,
Exhibit 20 required that if the debt had
been refinanced within two years of the
date of application, non-PCLP CDCs had
to submit with the application (and
PCLP CDCs had to retain in the loan
file) copies of the current debt and lien
instruments as well as copies of the debt
and lien instruments for the debt that
was replaced by the current debt. With
the minimum age of the qualified debt
shortened from two years to six months
by the Economic Aid Act, SBA revised
the form to remove the requirement that
these debt and lien instruments be
included as part of Exhibit 20.
In addition to the changes resulting
from this rule, SBA made the following
technical corrections and clarifying
changes to Form 1244: (1) SBA
corrected the description of which
exhibits the CDC must retain and which
the CDC must submit with the loan
application; (2) SBA added a separate
entry to facilitate disclosure of the use
of refinancing proceeds involving land
purchases only (the previous format of
‘‘Land/Building’’ did not clearly
indicate how information is to be
reported); and (3) under the list of
economic development objectives met
by the project, SBA added references to
‘‘base closures’’ and ‘‘minority-owned
business’’.
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–
612
When an agency issues a rulemaking,
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
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15:26 Oct 11, 2023
Jkt 262001
rulemaking is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The changes in the final rule are a
codification of new legislation and will
involve changes to regulations at 13 CFR
120.882, however there will be no
changes to SBA Form 1244, and the
burden hours to the small business
concern and the Certified Development
Company will remain the same. There
are no anticipated additional
compliance costs. Furthermore, SBA
does not anticipate that any changes to
the Eligible Project costs for 504 loans
regulations would have a significant
impact to a substantial number of small
businesses. This is because only a small
percentage of each year’s 504 loans
involve debt refinancing without
expansion. Each loan represents a
unique small business borrower because
these borrowers are only eligible to
refinance their debt once in a fiscal year
with the 504 Loan Program, and
therefore do not have multiple 504 debt
refinancing without expansion loans in
any given year. Based on the average
number of 504 loans from FY 2021–
2023, only 13% involved debt
refinancing without expansion.
Specifically, in FY 2021, out of 9,676
loans, 693 loans or 7% were for debt
refinancing without expansion. In FY
2022, this figure was 829 out of 9,254
or 9% 504 loans, while in FY 2023,
1,005 out of 4,451 or 23% of 504 loans
were for debt refinancing without
expansion. While the percentage of the
504 loan portfolio involving debt
refinancing without expansion
increased by 20% from FY 2021 to 2023,
this increase was due in part to the
Section 1112 Payments, and in part to
a rapidly increasing interest rate
environment. The Section 1112
Payments have sunset and SBA
anticipates some adjustment due to the
continued interest rate increases
planned by the Federal Reserve.
Because Section 1112 Payments have
sunset, SBA believes that the 504 debt
refinancing without expansion volume
will return to the pre-section 1112 level
of less than 10% of small entities. As
such, SBA concludes that the rule will
not impact a substantial number of
small entities.
While the economic implications of
the final rule are small and the data do
not reveal a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities, SBA anticipates a refinancing
growth rate more in alignment with prepandemic levels, with some adjustment
to the economic impact because the
final rule will expand program
eligibility. SBA analyzed potential
growth scenarios of up to 30% growth
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70585
in the 504 loan program, and even using
this impact model (actual growth has
never exceeded 15% in any prior fiscal
year) the total of 504 debt refinance
without expansion projects as a
percentage of either number of loans or
dollar volume of loans is not estimated
to exceed 16% of the overall portfolio.
When this percentage is applied to the
estimated number of loans (small
businesses impacted), this would result
in less than 1,100 small businesses
impacted. SBA estimates that the
average monthly savings for small
businesses that refinance their existing
loans through the 504 loan program
would be between $7,000 to $8,300 per
month, with a total estimated savings
over the life of the loan of between
$180,000 to $205,000. SBA determined
this estimate based on the historical
average of a 504 debt refinancing
without expansion loan averaging
$1,000,000 for each small business
applicant. SBA used the 504 July 2023
interest rates to calculate both the
monthly and total loan savings to each
small business concern. The lower end
of the $180,000 to $205,000 range
reflects the economic impact if a small
business concern refinanced for 20
years, while the higher end reflects the
economic impact of a small business
concern refinanced for 25 years. Small
business concerns do not use 10 year
504 loans for debt refinancing without
expansion, as their goal is to lower their
payments by not only taking advantage
of the 504 loan program’s fixed interest
rate, but also the longer 20 and 25-year
loan terms available.
For the reasons stated above, SBA
certifies that this action would not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects in 13 CFR Part 120
Loan programs-business, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Small
businesses.
Accordingly, the interim rule
amending 13 CFR part 120, which was
published at 86 FR 40775 on July 29,
2021, is adopted as final with the
following changes:
PART 120—BUSINESS LOANS
1. The authority citation for part 120
is revised 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 (7), and 697(a) and (e); sec.
521, Pub. L. 114–113, 129 Stat. 2242; sec.
328(a), Pub. L. 116–260, 134 Stat. 1182.
2. Amend § 120.882 as follows:
a. Revise paragraphs (g)(3) and (15);
and
■
■
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b. In paragraph (g)(16), in paragraph
(B) of the definition of Qualified debt,
remove ‘‘85%’’, ‘‘120.131 and
120.870(b)’’, and ‘‘120.131(b)’’ and add
in their places ‘‘75%’’, ‘‘§§ 120.131 and
120.870(b)’’, and ‘‘§ 120.131(b)’’,
respectively.
The revisions read as follows:
■
§ 120.882
loans.
Eligible Project costs for 504
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(3) A loan that is subject to a
guarantee by a Federal agency or
department may be refinanced under
the following conditions and
requirements:
(i) An existing 504 loan may be
refinanced if both the Third Party Loan
and the 504 Loan are being refinanced
or the Third Party Loan has been paid
in full. If the 504 Loan being refinanced
received approval through another CDC,
the CDC working on the current
refinancing must provide advance
notice to the other CDC in writing (by
email or letter).
(ii) An existing 7(a) loan may be
refinanced if the CDC notifies the 7(a)
lender in advance in writing (by email
or letter).
(iii) The refinancing will provide a
substantial benefit to the borrower. For
purposes of this paragraph (g)(3)(iii),
‘‘substantial benefit’’ means that the
portion of the new installment amount
attributable to the debt being refinanced
must be at least 10 percent less than the
existing installment amount(s).
Prepayment penalties (including
subsidy recoupment fees), financing
fees, and other financing costs must be
added to the amount being refinanced in
calculating the percentage reduction in
the new installment payment, but the
portion of the new installment amount
attributable to Eligible Business
Expenses (as described in paragraph
(g)(6)(ii) of this section) is not included
in this calculation. Exceptions to the 10
percent reduction requirement may be
approved by the Director, Office of
Financial Assistance (D/FA) or designee
for good cause. PCLP CDCs may not use
their delegated authority to approve a
loan requiring the exception in this
paragraph (g)(3)(iii).
*
*
*
*
*
(15) Notwithstanding § 120.860, a
debt may be refinanced under this
paragraph (g) if it does not meet the job
creation or other economic development
objectives set forth in § 120.861 or
§ 120.862. In such case, the 504 loan
may not exceed the product obtained by
multiplying the number of employees of
the Borrower by $90,000. The number of
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employees of the Borrower is equal to
the sum of:
(i) The number of full-time employees
of the Borrower on the date of the
application; and
(ii) The product obtained by
multiplying:
(A) The number of part-time
employees of the Borrower on the date
of the application; by
(B) The quotient obtained by dividing
the average number of hours each parttime employee of the Borrower works
each week by 40.
Example 1 to paragraph (g)(15): 30
full-time employees and 35 part-time
employees working 20 hours per week
is calculated as follows: 30 + (35 × (20/
40)) = 47.5. The maximum amount of
the 504 loan would be 47.5 multiplied
by $90,000, or $4,275,000.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 120.883 by revising
paragraph (e) to read as follows:
§ 120.883 Eligible administrative costs for
504 loans.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) CDC Closing Fee (see
§ 120.971(a)(2)) up to a maximum of
$10,000; and
*
*
*
*
*
Isabella Casillas Guzman,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2023–22169 Filed 10–11–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8026–09–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
28 CFR Part 68
[EOIR Docket No. 022–0010; AG Order No.
5812–2023]
RIN 1125–AB28
Office of the Chief Administrative
Hearing Officer, Review Procedures
Executive Office for
Immigration Review, Department of
Justice.
ACTION: Interim final rule; request for
comment.
AGENCY:
The Department of Justice
(‘‘Department’’) is revising its
regulations to provide that the Attorney
General may, in his discretion, review
decisions and orders of Administrative
Law Judges (‘‘ALJs’’) in the Office of the
Chief Administrative Hearing Officer
(‘‘OCAHO’’) in cases arising under
section 274B of the Immigration and
Nationality Act (‘‘INA’’ or ‘‘the Act’’).
This revision will ensure that the
adjudicatory process for section 274B
cases is consistent with the Supreme
SUMMARY:
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Court’s decision in the 2021 case United
States v. Arthrex, Inc., and will align
that process with similar processes for
discretionary review of decisions by
ALJs in OCAHO and throughout the
Executive Branch. It will not limit or
alter parties’ right to seek judicial
review of adverse decisions.
DATES:
Effective date: This rule is effective
October 12, 2023.
Comments: Electronic comments must
be submitted and written comments
must be postmarked or otherwise
indicate a shipping date on or before
December 11, 2023.
ADDRESSES: If you wish to provide
comment regarding this rulemaking, you
must submit comments, identified by
the agency name and reference RIN
1125–AB28 or EOIR Docket No. 022–
0010, by one of the two methods below.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
website’s instructions for submitting
comments. The electronic Federal
Docket Management System (FDMS) at
https://www.regulations.gov will accept
electronic comments until 11:59 p.m.
Eastern Time on December 11, 2023.
• Mail: Paper comments that
duplicate an electronic submission are
unnecessary. If you wish to submit a
paper comment in lieu of electronic
submission, please direct the mail/
shipment to: Raechel Horowitz, Chief,
Immigration Law Division, Office of
Policy, Executive Office for Immigration
Review, 5107 Leesburg Pike, Suite 1800,
Falls Church, VA 22041. To ensure
proper handling, please reference the
agency name and RIN 1125–AB28 or
EOIR Docket No. 022–0010 on your
correspondence. Mailed items must be
postmarked or otherwise indicate a
shipping date on or before the
submission deadline.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Raechel Horowitz, Chief, Immigration
Law Division, Office of Policy,
Executive Office for Immigration
Review, 5107 Leesburg Pike, Suite 1800,
Falls Church, VA 22041, telephone
(703) 305–0289 (not a toll-free call).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Public Participation
Interested persons are invited to
participate in this rulemaking by
submitting written data, views, or
arguments on all aspects of this interim
final rule (‘‘IFR’’) via one of the methods
and by the deadline stated above. The
Department also invites comments that
relate to the economic, environmental,
or federalism effects that might result
from this IFR. Comments that will
provide the most assistance to the
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 196 (Thursday, October 12, 2023)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 70580-70586]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-22169]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SMALL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
13 CFR Part 120
RIN 3245-AH78
Debt Refinancing in the 504 Loan Program
AGENCY: U.S. Small Business Administration.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: SBA is adopting with changes the interim final rule published
in the Federal Register on July 29, 2021. That interim final rule
implemented section 328 of the Economic Aid to Hard-Hit Small
Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act, which modified the requirements
for refinancing debt in the 504 Loan Program, as set forth in section
521(a) of title V of division E of the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2016 and section 502(7) of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958.
The modifications included: increasing the amount of existing
indebtedness that may be refinanced for 504 debt refinancing involving
expansions; and for 504 debt refinancing not involving expansions,
removing two limitations on the program, reinstating an alternate job
retention standard for the refinancing project, revising the definition
of qualified debt, and removing the prohibition against Certified
Development Companies (CDCs) participating in the Premier Certified
Lenders Program using their delegated authority to make these loans.
DATES: The effective date of this final rule is November 13, 2023.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gregorius Suryadi, Senior Financial
and Loan Specialist, 504 Program Branch, Office of Financial
Assistance, Small Business Administration, 409 3rd Street SW,
Washington, DC 20416; telephone: (202) 205-6806; email:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background Information
The 504 Loan Program is an SBA financing program authorized under
title V of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958, 15 U.S.C. 695 et
seq. The core mission of the 504 Loan Program is to provide long-term
financing to small businesses for the purchase or improvement of land,
buildings, and major equipment, in an effort to facilitate the creation
or retention of jobs and local economic development. Under the 504 Loan
Program, loans are made to small business applicants by Certified
Development Companies (``CDCs''), which are certified and regulated by
SBA to promote economic development within their community. In general,
a project in the 504 Loan Program (a ``504 Project'') includes: a loan
obtained from a private sector lender with a senior lien covering at
least 50 percent of the project cost; a loan obtained from a CDC (a
``504 Loan'') with a junior lien covering up to 40 percent of the total
cost (backed by a 100 percent SBA-guaranteed debenture); and a
contribution from the Borrower of at least 10 percent equity.
In addition, the 504 Loan Program may be used to refinance debt
under two options authorized under section 502(7)(B) and (C) of the
Small Business Investment Act of 1958. First, if a 504 Project involves
the expansion of the small business, any amount of existing
indebtedness that does not exceed 50 percent of the project cost of the
expansion may be refinanced and added to the project's cost (Debt
Refinancing with Expansion) under the conditions set forth in section
502(7)(B) and the implementing regulations. See 13 CFR 120.882(e) and
(f). Second, debt refinancing is available for a 504 Project that does
not involve the expansion of the small business under the requirements
set forth in section 502(7)(C) and 13 CFR 120.882(g) (Debt Refinancing
without Expansion).
[[Page 70581]]
Section 328(a) of the Economic Aid to Hard-Hit Small Businesses,
Nonprofits, and Venues Act (Economic Aid Act), enacted December 27,
2020, Public Law 116-260, revised the conditions and requirements for
refinancing debt in the 504 Loan Program as follows:
(1) With respect to Debt Refinancing with Expansion, 13 CFR
120.882(e), the Economic Aid Act increased the amount of existing
indebtedness that may be refinanced as part of a 504 Project from not
more than 50 percent of the project cost of the expansion to not more
than 100 percent of the project cost;
(2) With respect to Debt Refinancing without Expansion, 13 CFR
120.882(g), the Economic Aid Act:
(a) Eliminated the condition that this program shall only be in
effect in any fiscal year during which the cost to the Federal
Government of making guarantees under 13 CFR 120.882(g) and under the
504 Loan Program is zero;
(b) Eliminated the requirement that a CDC limit its financing under
the 504 Loan Program so that, during any Federal fiscal year, new
financings under 13 CFR 120.882(g) do not exceed 50% of the dollars the
CDC loaned under the 504 Loan Program, including under 13 CFR
120.882(g), during the previous fiscal year, unless otherwise waived;
(c) Eliminated the prohibition against Premier Certified Lender
Program (PCLP) CDCs using delegated authority to approve loan
applications for Debt Refinancing without Expansion;
(d) Reinstated an alternate job retention standard that was
previously removed from the Debt Refinancing without Expansion Program
by section 521 of division E of the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2016 (2016 Consolidated Appropriations Act), enacted on December 18,
2015, Public Law 114-113;
(e) Revised the definition of ``qualified debt'' to mean debt that
was incurred not less than six months before the date of application
instead of two years before the date of application;
(f) Removed from the definition of ``qualified debt'' condition
that the debt not be subject to a guarantee by a Federal agency; and
(g) Eliminated from the definition of ``qualified debt'' the
requirement that the borrower be current on all payments for not less
than one year before the date of the application for refinancing.
As described in the section-by-section analysis below, SBA is
issuing this final rule to adopt the previously published interim final
rule and to conform the current rules to the requirements of the
Economic Aid Act.
II. Section-by-Section Analysis of Comments and Changes
On July 29, 2021, SBA published in the Federal Register an interim
final rule implementing section 328(a) of the Economic Aid Act. 86 FR
40775. Although effective immediately, the interim final rule included
a request for comments seeking input from the public. The comment
period for the interim final rule was open from July 29, 2021, until
October 8, 2021. SBA received 79 comments of which many were
duplicative. Of the unique comments received, two were from national
trade associations, 68 were from Certified Development Companies, one
(1) was from a bank, one (1) from a private industry, and four (4) from
individuals. This section includes a description of the comments
received and is organized by the rules being revised. SBA received
comments from a national trade association and 63 CDCs recommending
changes beyond the scope of this rule that will not be addressed in
this final rule.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
Section 120.882(e). In the interim final rule SBA revised this
provision by increasing the amount of existing indebtedness that may be
refinanced to no more than 100 percent of the project cost (from 50
percent of the project cost) to conform with the amendments to section
502(7)(B) of the Small Business Investment Act made by section
328(a)(2)(A) of the Economic Aid Act. SBA did not receive any comments
on this change and is adopting this change as set forth in the interim
final rule.
Section 120.882(g)(3). In the interim final rule SBA removed the
requirement that the approval of a Refinancing Project is subject to
the requirement that the cost to the Federal Government of making
guarantees under 13 CFR 120.882(g) and under the 504 Loan Program is
zero during the fiscal year in which the guarantee is made in
accordance with section 328(a)(1) of the Economic Aid Act, which
repealed this statutory requirement set forth in the 2016 Consolidated
Appropriations Act.
In its place SBA inserted a provision that set forth the conditions
and requirements that apply to the refinancing of a loan that is
subject to a guarantee by a Federal agency or department. As indicated
above, the Economic Aid Act removed the prohibition against refinancing
a loan that is subject to a guarantee by a Federal agency or
department. Although these loans may now be refinanced if the
refinancing project does not involve expansion, the loan must comply
with the following conditions and requirements:
(1) for an existing 504 loan, either both the Third Party Loan and
the 504 loan must be refinanced, or the Third Party Loan must have been
paid in full; and
(2) for an existing 7(a) loan, the CDC must verify in writing that
the present lender is either unwilling or unable to modify the current
payment schedule. In addition, in the case of same institution debt, if
the Third Party Lender or the CDC affiliate as authorized under 13 CFR
120.820 is the 7(a) lender, the loan will be eligible for 504
refinancing only if the lender is unable to modify the terms of the
existing loan because a secondary market investor will not agree to
modified terms.
(3) the refinancing of any federally-guaranteed loan must provide a
substantial benefit to the borrower. ``Substantial benefit'' means that
the portion of the new installment amount attributable to the debt
being refinanced must be at least 10 percent less than the existing
installment amount(s). Prepayment penalties (including any subsidy
recoupment fee), financing fees, and other financing costs must be
added to the amount being refinanced in calculating the percentage
reduction in the new installment payment. The portion of the new
installment amount attributable to Eligible Business Expenses will not
need to be included in this calculation. The rule allows the Director,
Office of Financial Assistance (D/FA) or designee, to approve an
exception to the 10 percent reduction requirement for good cause and
does not allow PCLP CDCs to use their delegated authority to approve a
loan requiring this exception.
SBA received 66 comments on this rule change, of which 50 supported
the rule change with modifications. There were no comments opposing the
rule change.
A national trade association and its member CDCs requested that SBA
not include in regulation any conditions or requirements that restrict
or limit the ability to refinance a loan that is subject to a guarantee
by a Federal agency or department as no such conditions or restriction
exists in statute or in the Economic Aid Act (EAA) update.
The national trade association and its member CDCs also recommended
that SBA remove the requirement that CDCs obtain written verification
of the existing 7(a) lender's inability or unwillingness to modify the
current payment schedule as a requirement to allowing the refinance of
an existing 7(a) loan. The national trade association
[[Page 70582]]
asked that the ability to refinance an existing 7(a) loan be unfettered
and guided by what is in the best interest of the borrower.
Another national trade association proposed safeguards of
increasing the substantial benefit requirement for both 7(a) and 504
programs, which include, but are not limited to, the SBA issuing
specific guidance on the underwriting for both programs. In addition,
to protect the borrower from paying additional and significant fees,
the national trade association recommended the SBA limit fees for new
504 loans. SBA feels that increasing the substantial benefit
requirement as requested in a rising interest rate environment would
not be in the best interest of the small business borrower.
Based on the public comments received, SBA is revising this rule to
remove the requirement that CDCs and 7(a) lenders be given the
opportunity to modify existing debt. Instead, SBA is transferring the
burden of contacting the CDC or 7(a) lender whose debt is being
refinanced from the borrower to the CDC that will be packaging the 504
loan for the borrower. The revised rule requires the CDC to notify in
writing (by email or letter) the existing CDC or 7(a) lender to advise
them in advance when a government guaranteed loan is being refinanced.
Section 120.882(g)(11). In the interim final rule SBA removed the
section that states PCLP CDCs may not use delegated authority to
approve refinancing under 13 CFR 120.882(g), in accordance with section
328(a) of the Economic Aid Act, which removed this statutory
prohibition. In its place, the interim final rule stated that PCLP CDCs
may not approve the refinancing of same institution debt under their
delegated authority and must submit the loan to SBA for approval. This
requirement is consistent with SBA's long-standing policy of
prohibiting its participating lenders from using their delegated
authority to approve the financing of same institution debt due to the
potential conflict of interest and the risk of the 504 loan proceeds
being used to shift to SBA a potential loss from the existing debt. SBA
did not receive any comments on this change and is adopting this change
as set forth in the interim final rule.
Section 120.882(g)(15). In the interim final rule SBA redesignated
paragraph (g)(15), Definitions, as paragraph (g)(16), and added a new
paragraph (g)(15) to set forth the alternate job retention standard
that was reinstated by section 328(a) of the Economic Aid Act. Under
this alternate job retention standard, for a Refinancing Project under
13 CFR 120.882(g) the debt does not need to meet the job creation or
other economic development objectives set forth in 13 CFR 120.861 or
120.862, provided that the 504 loan does not exceed the product
obtained by multiplying the number of employees of the borrower by
$75,000. On May 11, 2023, SBA published in the Federal Register a
notice announcing an increase to the job creation or retention
standards for the 504 Loan Program to reflect increases in the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) for All Urban Consumers. 88 FR 30379. This included
increasing the amount per Job Opportunity that a 504 Loan Project must
create or retain from $75,000 to $90,000. Accordingly, the amount set
forth in 13 CFR 120.882(g)(15) is adjusted from $75,000 to $90,000.
The alternate job retention standard provides that the number of
employees of a borrower is equal to the sum of:
(1) the number of full-time employees of the borrower on the date
on which the borrower applies for a loan under this subparagraph; and
(2) the product obtained by multiplying:
(a) the number of part-time employees of the borrower on the date
on which the borrower applies for a loan under this subparagraph, by
(b) the quotient obtained by dividing the average number of hours
each part-time employee of the borrower works each week by 40.
An example of how this standard is calculated is included in the
text of the rule.
SBA did not receive any comments on this adjustment. The final rule
adopts the interim final rule with one change, namely an increase in
the amount per Job Opportunity that a 504 Loan Project must create from
$75,000 to $90,000 as per SBA's announcement in the Federal Register on
May 11, 2023.
Section 120.882(g)(16). As stated above, SBA redesignated paragraph
(g)(15), Definitions, as paragraph (g)(16) and made five changes to the
definition of ``Qualified debt''. First, paragraph (i) of the
definition of ``Qualified debt'' (redesignated as paragraph (A))
previously required that the debt must not have been incurred less than
two years before the date of the application for refinancing. However,
section 328(a) of the Economic Aid Act shortened this period to six
months before the date of the application for refinancing. Accordingly,
SBA revised this paragraph by replacing two years with six months.
Second, paragraph (i) of the definition of ``Qualified debt''
(redesignated as paragraph (A)) previously allowed a loan that was
refinanced within the two years before the date of application (the
most recent loan) to be deemed incurred not less than two years before
the date of the application provided that the effect of the most recent
loan was to extend the maturity date without advancing any additional
proceeds. With the minimum age of the qualified debt shortened from two
years to six months, SBA believed that it was no longer necessary to
address this situation and therefore SBA removed the second and third
sentences of paragraph (i) (redesignated as paragraph (A)).
Third, paragraph (ii) of the definition of ``Qualified debt''
previously excluded debt that was subject to a guarantee by a Federal
agency or department. As stated above, section 328(a) of the Economic
Aid Act removed this statutory exclusion and SBA consequently removed
this paragraph and renumbered the remaining paragraphs accordingly. The
conditions and requirements that apply to the refinancing of a loan
that is subject to a Federal guarantee are set forth in paragraph
(g)(3).
Fourth, paragraph (vi) of the definition of ``Qualified debt''
previously excluded a Third Party Loan that is part of an existing 504
Project. However, under the new paragraph (g)(3), an existing 504 loan
may be refinanced when both the Third Party Loan and the 504 loan are
being refinanced. Accordingly, SBA revised this paragraph, which was
redesignated as paragraph (E), to incorporate this exception to the
general prohibition against a qualified debt including a Third Party
Loan.
Fifth, paragraph (vii) of the definition of ``Qualified debt''
previously reflected the statutory requirement that, for the debt to
qualify for refinancing, the applicant had to be current on all
payments due for not less than one year preceding the date of
application. Because section 328(a) of the Economic Aid Act removed
this requirement from section 502(7)(C) of the Small Business
Investment Act, SBA removed this paragraph from the regulations. In
accordance with prudent lending standards, SBA expects CDCs to consider
whether the applicant is current on all payments due, and the
applicant's history of delinquency, in its credit analysis. SBA did not
receive any comments on these specific revisions and is adopting the
revisions as set forth in the interim final rule.
SBA did however receive comments from a national trade association
and its member CDCs requesting that SBA lower the Qualified debt
definition's standard of ``substantially all (85% or
[[Page 70583]]
more)'' to a ``majority'' standard of 51% or more to increase access to
and utilization of 504 debt refinancing. SBA agrees that a decrease to
the ``substantially all'' standard would increase refinancing
opportunities for small businesses. Neither the Small Business Act nor
the Small Business Investment Act define or test for ``substantially
all.'' The 85% ``substantially all'' standard in paragraph (g) was
established with regulations implementing section 1122 of the Small
Business Jobs Act of 2010. 76 FR 9213. SBA is modifying the
``substantially all'' definition to 75% from 85% with the remainder
being adjusted to 25% from 15%. SBA has determined that ``substantially
all'' is not 51%.
Finally, the phrase ``Same institution debt'' was previously used
with Debt Refinancing without Expansion only in reference to the Third
Party Loan, see 13 CFR 120.882(g)(13), and, thus, the definition of
``same institution debt'' referenced only the Third Party Lender. With
the requirement in 13 CFR 120.882(g)(11) that PCLP CDCs cannot use
their delegated authority to approve the refinancing of same
institution debt in the Debt Refinancing without Expansion program, SBA
revised the definition of ``Same institution debt'' to also mean the
debt of the CDC (or its affiliates) that is providing funds for the
refinancing. SBA did not receive any comments on this change and is
adopting this change as set forth in the interim final rule.
Section 120.883(e). SBA currently allows certain administrative
costs that are not part of Project costs to be paid with the proceeds
of the 504 loan and the Debenture. 13 CFR 120.882. This includes CDC
Closing Fees up to a maximum of $2,500. 13 CFR 120.882(e).
Since the publication of the interim final rule SBA conducted a
series of roundtable discussions with CDCs and lenders at annual and
regional events. In alignment with the adjustment with jobs created/
retained due to the CPI, SBA received multiple comments during the
regional roundtables for an inflation adjustment also to update Sec.
120.883, Eligible administrative costs for 504 loans, in paragraph (e)
which currently limits of the amount of CDC closing fees allowed to be
included in 504 financing portion of a project to be capped at $2,500.
In alignment with these changes and in an attempt to keep the limit of
CDC closing costs relevant to administrative costs, SBA is proposing an
increase to the legal fees. According to the public comments, this cap
does not reflect current administrative costs and creates a burden on
the borrower to pay for closing expenses from its own account. In the
final rule, SBA increases the amount from $2,500 to $10,000.
Compliance With Executive Orders 12866, 12988, 13132, and 13563, the
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801-808), Paperwork Reduction Act
(44 U.S.C., Ch. 35), and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-
612)
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) has determined that this
rule constitutes a ``significant regulatory action'' for purposes of
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563. SBA, however, is proceeding under the
emergency provision at Executive Order 12866, section 6(a)(3)(D), based
on the need to move expeditiously to mitigate the current conditions
arising from the COVID-19 pandemic.
As shown in Table 1 below, during the five-year period spanning
fiscal year (FY) 2018 and FY 2022, a total of 38,022 504 loans were
approved for a total gross approval amount as of September 30, 2022, of
$32,965,182,830. In addition, during this five-year period, SBA
approved 247 debt refinance with expansion loans on average per year
with an average annual dollar volume of $309,165,400, and approved 451
debt refinance without expansion loans on average per year with an
average annual dollar volume of $469,596. The Economic Aid Act passage
increased the debt refinance with expansion from 50 percent of a
project to 100 percent of a project. Prior to this change, of the debt
refinance with expansion loans, only 16 refinanced a debt that equaled
50 percent of the expansion costs; if these borrowers had been able to
refinance 100 percent of the expansion costs instead of 50 percent, and
assuming that all these borrowers did so, these borrowers would have
been able to borrow $15 million more over five years, or about $3
million more annually. Since the passage of the Economic Aid Act, and
the issuance of the interim final rule, there have been 746 504 loan
refinancing with expansion projects approved for a total of
$1,030,563,000 approved. This legislative change has expanded the
access to capital to small business for expansion projects that also
need debt refinancing.
Table 1--504 Loan Activity FY 2018-FY 2022
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2018 FY 2019 FY 2020 FY 2021 FY 2022 FY 2023
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Number of 504 Loans......................... 5,874 6,099 7,119 9,676 9,254 3,844
Total Dollar Volume of 504 Loans Approved......... $4,753,644,000 $4,958,552,000 $5,826,885,000 $8,218,105,540 $9,207,996,290 $3,533,163,000
Number of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion............ 181 181 236 301 336 109
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion..... $212,098,000 $192,968,000 $296,392,000 $389,801,000 $454,568,000 $186,194,000
Number of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion......... 181 166 386 693 829 249
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion.. $154,062,000 $154,842,000 $370,160,000 $709,020,000 $959,897,000 $270,151,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table 2--504 Loan Activity by Defined Cohort August 2018-July 2023
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aug' 18-Jul' 19 Aug' 19-Jul' 20 Aug' 20-Jul' 21 Aug' 21-Jul' 22 Aug' 22-Jul' 23
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Number of 504 Loans.......................................... 6,153 6,836 9,572 9,392 6,253
Total Dollar Volume of 504 Loans Approved.......................... $5,063,078,000 $5,575,249,000 $7,934,192,540 $9,248,887,290 $6,624,952,000
Number of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion............................. 183 243 295 332 183
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi With Expansion...................... $191,786,000 $309,027,000 $362,039,000 $446,975,000 $305,619,000
Number of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion.......................... 160 302 66 934 388
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi Without Expansion................... $157,880,000 $295,396,000 $601,831,000 $1,057,386,000 $432,638,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Data as of 9/15/2023, total dollar volume is lifetime gross
approval amount including increases.
This rule was necessary to implement the Economic Aid Act and
provide economic relief to small businesses adversely impacted by
COVID-19. SBA anticipates that finalizing these changes to the 504 debt
refinancing programs will continue to result in benefits to
[[Page 70584]]
small businesses by providing greater flexibility to restructure debt.
To assess the impact of the interim final rule, SBA evaluated 504
loan activity (including the number of loans and dollar volume of both
debt refinance with and without expansion) between August 2018 and July
2023. Because the interim final rule was published on July 29, 2021,
with immediate effectiveness, the first full month during which the
modifications to 504 debt refinancing were available was August 2021,
with August 2021 through July 2022 being the first 12-month period
during which the modifications to 504 debt refinancing were available
to 504 applicants. SBA divided the data into five cohorts of 12 months
each, with the first cohort beginning in August 2018 and the last
cohort beginning August 2023. See Table 2.
As an appropriate baseline for evaluation of the impacts of the
interim final rule that would be made permanent in this rule, SBA
considers the state of 504 lending for debt refinance with expansion
and without expansion before July 2021. SBA examines the 12-month
periods from August 1, 2018, through July 31, 2019, to the period from
August 1, 2022, to July 31, 2023, noting that external influences from
the pandemic and from the payments made on behalf of borrowers by SBA
under section 1112 of the Coronavirus Aid Recovery, and Economic
Security Act (Section 1112 Payments) that ended in September 2021
occurred. The Section 1112 Payments required SBA to make principal and
interest payments on 504 loans for certain periods of time depending on
the when the 504 loan was approved, which would have made a 504 loan an
attractive option for small businesses and consequently would have
increased 504 loan volume. Further, interest rates on 504 loans in
these two periods differ, from a range of approximately 4.0 to 5.0
percent in the earlier period to rates up to 7.0 percent in the later
period, as do rates on alternatives to 504 loans. These changes mean
that lending total volume comparisons may not be appropriate for
assessment of impact. Because the major changes in the interim final
rule were the increases in the amounts of existing indebtedness that
may be refinanced for both 504 debt involving expansions and 504 debt
not involving expansions, SBA examined the percentages of 504 lending
that were for these two types of debt refinancing. The chart below
shows these percentages for five August-July cohorts.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2018-19 % 2019-20 % 2020-21 % 2021-22 % 2022-23 %
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi with Expansion 3.79 5.54 4.56 4.83 4.61
as Percentage of Dollar Volume of Total 504
Loans.........................................
Dollar Volume of 504 Debt Refi without 3.12 5.30 7.59 11.43 6.53
Expansion as Percentage of Dollar Volume of
Total 504 Loans...............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As indicated in the chart, the percentages of 504 debt refinancing
loans with and without expansion are in the recent period returning to
the levels seen prior to the publication of the interim final rule in
July 2021. For debt refinancing without expansion, the August 2020-July
2021 period was elevated and the August 2021-July 2022 cohort was an
outlier, but the next 12 months settled to a percentage that at a level
consistent with the periods before the interim final rule and not
indicative of a significant impact. These two cohorts with higher
percentages were during the pandemic and were covered, at least in
part, by Section 1112 Payments. The 12-month percentages of 504 debt
refinancing with expansion did not vary widely.
The interim final rule increased the amounts on 504 debt
refinancing with and without expansion. Aggregate 504 lending over the
period in question ranged from approximately $5 billion to almost $9.25
billion, with total 504 lending in the latest 12-month cohort at about
$6.6 billion. Even in the unlikely scenario of the interim final rule
as the sole cause of an increase in total 504 lending from the low
volume in the examined period of $5 billion (in 2018-19) to the latest
12-month total of $6.6 billion, the incremental impact, as indicated by
changes in the percentage of total lending accounted for by each, is
under $100 million.
Congressional Review Act
OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs has determined
that this rule is not a major rule under Subtitle E of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (also known as the
Congressional Review Act), 5 U.S.C. 804(2). Per the above cost benefit
analysis, the annual effect on the economy is less than $100 million.
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 preemptive effect or retroactive effect.
Executive Order 13132
This rule does not have federalism implications as defined in
Executive Order 13132. It will not have substantial direct effects on
the States, on the relationship between the National Government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government, as specified in the Executive order. As
such it does not warrant the preparation of a Federalism Assessment.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In order to implement the Act, SBA determined that it was necessary
to modify SBA Form 1244, Application for Section 504 Loans, which is
currently approved under OMB Control Number 3245-0071, to conform the
form to the revised requirements for debt refinancing loans. The
changes did not add any new burdens for the respondents, rather, in
some instances, the revisions will result in reduced burden as
applicants and CDCs no longer have to submit certain information.
(a) The information collection previously required PCLP CDCs to
process all applications for debt refinancing without expansion through
the Sacramento Loan Processing Center (SLPC) and not through the PCLP
CDC's delegated authority. As discussed above, this requirement was
removed by the Economic Aid Act and, accordingly, SBA removed the
requirement from the information collection when the interim final rule
(IFR) was released in 2021. The final rule would result in no further
changes. This revision did not change the information the PCLP CDC is
required to collect, only how the application is processed. In
addition, consistent with the changes made by the
[[Page 70585]]
IFR, SBA added two questions to clarify that, for debt refinancing
without expansion, PCLP CDCs must process applications through the SLPC
when the application involves the refinancing of same institution debt
or, in cases involving the refinancing of federally-guaranteed debt,
the CDC is requesting an exception to the requirement that the new
installment payment be at least 10% less than the existing installment
amount. No further changes are necessary.
(b) With respect to the question regarding whether the Applicant
creates or retains the required number of jobs per debenture amount, an
option has been added for the Applicant to indicate whether the project
is eligible under the 504 debt refinance alternate job standard
reinstated by the Economic Aid Act.
(c) Of the exhibits that are required, Exhibit 20 required that if
the debt had been refinanced within two years of the date of
application, non-PCLP CDCs had to submit with the application (and PCLP
CDCs had to retain in the loan file) copies of the current debt and
lien instruments as well as copies of the debt and lien instruments for
the debt that was replaced by the current debt. With the minimum age of
the qualified debt shortened from two years to six months by the
Economic Aid Act, SBA revised the form to remove the requirement that
these debt and lien instruments be included as part of Exhibit 20.
In addition to the changes resulting from this rule, SBA made the
following technical corrections and clarifying changes to Form 1244:
(1) SBA corrected the description of which exhibits the CDC must retain
and which the CDC must submit with the loan application; (2) SBA added
a separate entry to facilitate disclosure of the use of refinancing
proceeds involving land purchases only (the previous format of ``Land/
Building'' did not clearly indicate how information is to be reported);
and (3) under the list of economic development objectives met by the
project, SBA added references to ``base closures'' and ``minority-owned
business''.
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612
When an agency issues a rulemaking, 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.
The changes in the final rule are a codification of new legislation
and will involve changes to regulations at 13 CFR 120.882, however
there will be no changes to SBA Form 1244, and the burden hours to the
small business concern and the Certified Development Company will
remain the same. There are no anticipated additional compliance costs.
Furthermore, SBA does not anticipate that any changes to the Eligible
Project costs for 504 loans regulations would have a significant impact
to a substantial number of small businesses. This is because only a
small percentage of each year's 504 loans involve debt refinancing
without expansion. Each loan represents a unique small business
borrower because these borrowers are only eligible to refinance their
debt once in a fiscal year with the 504 Loan Program, and therefore do
not have multiple 504 debt refinancing without expansion loans in any
given year. Based on the average number of 504 loans from FY 2021-2023,
only 13% involved debt refinancing without expansion. Specifically, in
FY 2021, out of 9,676 loans, 693 loans or 7% were for debt refinancing
without expansion. In FY 2022, this figure was 829 out of 9,254 or 9%
504 loans, while in FY 2023, 1,005 out of 4,451 or 23% of 504 loans
were for debt refinancing without expansion. While the percentage of
the 504 loan portfolio involving debt refinancing without expansion
increased by 20% from FY 2021 to 2023, this increase was due in part to
the Section 1112 Payments, and in part to a rapidly increasing interest
rate environment. The Section 1112 Payments have sunset and SBA
anticipates some adjustment due to the continued interest rate
increases planned by the Federal Reserve. Because Section 1112 Payments
have sunset, SBA believes that the 504 debt refinancing without
expansion volume will return to the pre-section 1112 level of less than
10% of small entities. As such, SBA concludes that the rule will not
impact a substantial number of small entities.
While the economic implications of the final rule are small and the
data do not reveal a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, SBA anticipates a refinancing growth rate
more in alignment with pre-pandemic levels, with some adjustment to the
economic impact because the final rule will expand program eligibility.
SBA analyzed potential growth scenarios of up to 30% growth in the 504
loan program, and even using this impact model (actual growth has never
exceeded 15% in any prior fiscal year) the total of 504 debt refinance
without expansion projects as a percentage of either number of loans or
dollar volume of loans is not estimated to exceed 16% of the overall
portfolio. When this percentage is applied to the estimated number of
loans (small businesses impacted), this would result in less than 1,100
small businesses impacted. SBA estimates that the average monthly
savings for small businesses that refinance their existing loans
through the 504 loan program would be between $7,000 to $8,300 per
month, with a total estimated savings over the life of the loan of
between $180,000 to $205,000. SBA determined this estimate based on the
historical average of a 504 debt refinancing without expansion loan
averaging $1,000,000 for each small business applicant. SBA used the
504 July 2023 interest rates to calculate both the monthly and total
loan savings to each small business concern. The lower end of the
$180,000 to $205,000 range reflects the economic impact if a small
business concern refinanced for 20 years, while the higher end reflects
the economic impact of a small business concern refinanced for 25
years. Small business concerns do not use 10 year 504 loans for debt
refinancing without expansion, as their goal is to lower their payments
by not only taking advantage of the 504 loan program's fixed interest
rate, but also the longer 20 and 25-year loan terms available.
For the reasons stated above, SBA certifies that this action would
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
List of Subjects in 13 CFR Part 120
Loan programs-business, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Small businesses.
Accordingly, the interim rule amending 13 CFR part 120, which was
published at 86 FR 40775 on July 29, 2021, is adopted as final with the
following changes:
PART 120--BUSINESS LOANS
0
1. The authority citation for part 120 is revised 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 (7), and 697(a)
and (e); sec. 521, Pub. L. 114-113, 129 Stat. 2242; sec. 328(a),
Pub. L. 116-260, 134 Stat. 1182.
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2. Amend Sec. 120.882 as follows:
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a. Revise paragraphs (g)(3) and (15); and
[[Page 70586]]
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b. In paragraph (g)(16), in paragraph (B) of the definition of
Qualified debt, remove ``85%'', ``120.131 and 120.870(b)'', and
``120.131(b)'' and add in their places ``75%'', ``Sec. Sec. 120.131
and 120.870(b)'', and ``Sec. 120.131(b)'', respectively.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 120.882 Eligible Project costs for 504 loans.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(3) A loan that is subject to a guarantee by a Federal agency or
department may be refinanced under the following conditions and
requirements:
(i) An existing 504 loan may be refinanced if both the Third Party
Loan and the 504 Loan are being refinanced or the Third Party Loan has
been paid in full. If the 504 Loan being refinanced received approval
through another CDC, the CDC working on the current refinancing must
provide advance notice to the other CDC in writing (by email or
letter).
(ii) An existing 7(a) loan may be refinanced if the CDC notifies
the 7(a) lender in advance in writing (by email or letter).
(iii) The refinancing will provide a substantial benefit to the
borrower. For purposes of this paragraph (g)(3)(iii), ``substantial
benefit'' means that the portion of the new installment amount
attributable to the debt being refinanced must be at least 10 percent
less than the existing installment amount(s). Prepayment penalties
(including subsidy recoupment fees), financing fees, and other
financing costs must be added to the amount being refinanced in
calculating the percentage reduction in the new installment payment,
but the portion of the new installment amount attributable to Eligible
Business Expenses (as described in paragraph (g)(6)(ii) of this
section) is not included in this calculation. Exceptions to the 10
percent reduction requirement may be approved by the Director, Office
of Financial Assistance (D/FA) or designee for good cause. PCLP CDCs
may not use their delegated authority to approve a loan requiring the
exception in this paragraph (g)(3)(iii).
* * * * *
(15) Notwithstanding Sec. 120.860, a debt may be refinanced under
this paragraph (g) if it does not meet the job creation or other
economic development objectives set forth in Sec. 120.861 or Sec.
120.862. In such case, the 504 loan may not exceed the product obtained
by multiplying the number of employees of the Borrower by $90,000. The
number of employees of the Borrower is equal to the sum of:
(i) The number of full-time employees of the Borrower on the date
of the application; and
(ii) The product obtained by multiplying:
(A) The number of part-time employees of the Borrower on the date
of the application; by
(B) The quotient obtained by dividing the average number of hours
each part-time employee of the Borrower works each week by 40.
Example 1 to paragraph (g)(15): 30 full-time employees and 35 part-
time employees working 20 hours per week is calculated as follows: 30 +
(35 x (20/40)) = 47.5. The maximum amount of the 504 loan would be 47.5
multiplied by $90,000, or $4,275,000.
* * * * *
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3. Amend Sec. 120.883 by revising paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 120.883 Eligible administrative costs for 504 loans.
* * * * *
(e) CDC Closing Fee (see Sec. 120.971(a)(2)) up to a maximum of
$10,000; and
* * * * *
Isabella Casillas Guzman,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2023-22169 Filed 10-11-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8026-09-P