Ccwatercraft wrote:Dresden wrote:Ccwatercraft wrote:Annecdotal Update on PPP, my local email/chat group had a rash of PPP approvals yesterday, several happy business owners received their notice. Not sure on the exact % but it appears now that about 70% in my group have been approved now, which is double where we were before the 2nd wave of funding.
Unfortunately the one guy who likely was the most deserving of immediate help (several hair salon franchises) is still pending, go figure.
That's good. In my group I'd say it's about 40% right now. I've been told by B of A my application has been submitted to the SBA, so I'm just hoping that I got in the door before they slam it shut again.
Here's another example of how poorly conceived this thing is though- you are only allowed to use those funds, if you want them to be forgiven, to apply towards your payroll from the date you receive the funds, going forward 2 months. I've been paying my guys at least 50% of their normal pay for the past month and a half now. But I won't be able to use the loan money to apply towards those payrolls. And now we are set to go back to work on Monday, so I won't be needing it to cover sick pay going forward, even if I do get the loan.
You can tell that this thing was crafted by legislators (with help from lobbyists), and not by business owners, or else it would have been done completely differently.
It wont be an issue on our end to exceed the amount with payroll, it will take about 5 weeks.
I'm curious how you think it would/should have been different if written by business owners.
I could list about 10 things. For one, you should be allowed to use the money to cover payroll dating back to when the virus started affecting your business- i.e., when you started paying guys sick pay because your state was in lockdown. That's the most basic and easily understandable provision.
Secondly, if this was intended for the purposes of helping small businesses to stay afloat, any company that earned above a certain amount over the last few years should have been ineligible. The Lakers made 147 million on their last tax return. 147 million! Why do they need a govt. bailout to make it through this? Same with a company like AutoNation, which has hundreds of stores across the country- they applied for 277 million dollars in loans (and got 76 million). Is that a small business? At the very least, half the money should have been reserved for companies with fewer than 50 employees, and that should have been for a company total, not per location.
Thirdly, this was supposed to be for companies that had no other source of credit. Yet I think over 100 hundred publicly traded companies were approved, and countless start ups, which had access to millions in capital through private investors.
Fourth, if they knew they were going to run short on money, which business leaders predicted from the start, the people designing this should have at least tried to make it more equitable. They could have provided a 2 week window to apply, then divided the amount in the fund by the amount of loan requests, and funded every one with a credible application for that % of their request. That way all businesses are on an equal footing. You wouldn't have one business get nothing, while his two competitors around the block got 100% of their funding. That not only hurts not getting the funding, it also puts you at a disadvantage to your competition.
Fifth, I've read that banks were earning a larger % on the larger loans they gave out. Something like 5% on loans over a million, but just 3.5% on loans under 200K. I might be wrong on those numbers, but it was structured so that banks had an incentive to favor larger customers over the small guy.
Sixth, banks should never have been involved. So much of the success of your application seems to be how well connected you are to a financial institution. That's why so many start ups got funding- they work very closely with their banks. Similarly, banks are prone to want to help their bigger customers first, so they naturally favored those companies that do more business with them, and that have bigger accounts. I've also heard, anecdotally, that smaller banks are having much higher success rates than massive banks like B of A and WF.
I could go on, but those are enough. Just a few simple rules would have made the program do what is was supposed to do- help small businesses stay afloat. Anyone with half a brain could have predicted the results we are seeing, if these simple precautions were not put in place. And this is taxpayer money, too, that is being given away by the fistful to entities like the LA Lakers, who are spectacularly profitable. Why wouldn't you put in some simple, common sense safeguards to make sure this doesn't happen? It's like designing a road system, and not realizing you will need stop signs and red lights.