What to do when your bank changes the rules

Posted 07/12/10 6:46 AM by Cole Harmonson
Category: Business Financing

With the credit crunch and the lingering after effects, we’ve seen many banks essentially change the rules regarding who they will extend credit to, granted this was needed as many institutions had gotten away from the conservative underwriting that has made banking a safe and profitable business for many years. Most small companies realize that banks have become less of an option for credit, but we’re also seeing them change the rules on venture backed companies.

Before the credit mess, if you had substantial venture or angel backing, you could more easily obtain credit lines from banks, especially if they concentrated on your industry.

But now, with the more  conservative lending practices by the banks, they have reduced and cut credit lines altogether if you don’t fit their lending model any more. In other words, they look at your historical performance only, and if you’ve lost money, regardless of your capital backing, you’re in danger of having your credit lines reduced altogether.

In reality, this is probably what we want from our banks and financial markets. They are not in the business of risk taking and writing off bad debt, which is what got us in the trouble we’re in today.

However, companies need credit lines and cash flow to meet payroll, make expenditures, etc. So if the banks aren’t an option, where do you go if you don’t want to dilute yourself any further?

This is the situation that one of our Austin-based companies found themselves in this year. Their bank determined that they no longer qualified for their $400K credit line, and they had to search for new credit options.

Where a bank only looks at historical performance, we were able to negotiate a credit line based on future performance and accounts receivable performance without diluting the shareholder’s equity stake in the company. And, because we looked at their accounts receivables, we were able to extend $1M in credit.

The point is that there are options out there to gain the credit you need to operate your business without raising more capital and diluting your equity stake or being forced to slow your growth because of inadequate bank support.

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Recent Comments

Great post Cole. My sentiments exactly. There were not any winners in that scenario, and while both sides made mistakes, it was the Administration that ultimately let the situation slip into a "lose-lose" situation. So, now that the dust has settled, will the Raider Nation get behind the program and Coach Tuberville? Time will tell. Of course, if there are a lot "W's" in the stat columns, it will happen sooner rather than later, but it will take a while for me to trust our administration again. That lack of trust already has caused me to not dig as deep in my pocketbook when asked to renew my annual pledge. If Texas Tech Administrators and the powerful alumni that influence them truly want to have a quality program that can be competitive on a regional and national level with the UT's of the world, they'll have to leave that parochial West Texas attitude in the dust. That's not likely to happen anytime soon. That kind of thinking is part of the fabric of Lubbock and the Tech community.... permeating it like a West Texas sand storm.
- Rick L'Amie, TTU '82, '91

Even an Aggie didn't enjoy watching that train wreck - not good for the program, conf or state - u had the best tweets - objective & fair
- Ryan Schooler

Great observation Cole. As a CPA and having served as a CFO in several businesses, understanding where your cash flow is critical and too often overlooked. Companies need to keep an eye on immediate needs, and develop the ability to forecast for the near future.
- Ryan

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