While the Paycheck Protection Program’s deadline for new loan originations may have been extended to August 8, the federal program will eventually have to come to an end. And, when this all-consuming effort does eventually wrap, banks and credit unions will need to figure out how they will survive in a new normal.
That’s tricky when so much is uncertain, with COVID-19 once again surging through our communities, forcing dozens of states to begin shutting down or significantly pull back on phased reopenings.
Whatever the new normal looks like, there are at least three challenges we can already see forming that lenders will be faced with:
Overcoming any three of these challenges will be difficult, but there’s a logical path forward that banks and credit unions need to consider, and it’s embedded in that last challenge.
Lenders that decided to lean in on PPP will come to learn that they’ve already accomplished some of the most difficult parts of becoming an SBA lender--earning their E-Tran credentials and establishing an SBA lending process--with little left keeping them from transitioning from PPP into other SBA loan programs.
Now that the Program is wrapping, financial institutions that have E-Tran credentials and established processes--and those that adopted technology to help with PPP, especially--are in the perfect position to pivot to SBA 7(a) Express loans. And, banks and credit unions that used the Numerated Platform to originate PPP loans can enable SBA 7(a) Express loans on the platform, immediately, without further implementation.
PPP lenders who pivot to SBA 7(a) Express will find they are able to get acquainted with SBA lending without making a major investment, while benefiting from the steady demand created by a rebounding economy and loans that are at least partially backed by the federal government.
The main difference between an SBA 7(a) Express loan and other SBA 7(a) loans is that the7(a) Express is designed to help lenders issue smaller government-backed loans, that carry less risk, to qualifying businesses within 36 hours of submitting their application. It's also worth noting that 7(a) Express loans also carry less administrative costs to lenders than other 7(a) loans—for example, fewer forms are required of the borrower.
The SBA 7(a) Express loan program is just one component of the larger SBA lending program, but it’s one that consistently gets funding from the federal government and it’s actually the SBA loan that PPP loans were modeled after. This makes it an easy transition point for lenders that are interested in establishing more SBA lending options to their business customers.
To learn more about SBA 7(a) Express loans and how you can use the Numerated Platform for them, watch our 30-min on-demand Platform Demo focused on SBA 7(a) Express lending, now.