November 22, 2024

You’re the Boss Blog: Not Just Talking the Talk in Washington

Searching for Capital

A broker assesses the small-business lending market.

Sunday night, I packed my bag and broke my own rules by dusting off my navy suit and a tie for what I feared would be another day of Washington blather. And then on Monday, I participated in what was billed as the Capital Access Innovation Summit, which was sponsored by the Small Business Administration and the Department of the Treasury. It was not what I expected.

In the morning, the plenary sessions featured bankers, government leaders, corporate executives, and alternative lenders sharing their carefully scripted messages with a group of about 150 of us who had gathered for the day. We were an interesting mix of small-business owners, S.B.A. officials, Treasury officials, bankers, alternative lenders, academics and various other folks in the small-business finance community. I was genuinely impressed by the group.

Among those I met were a few people and companies I had not previously encountered. Lending Club, for example, was there to discuss its plans to start financing small businesses over the next few months. If the plans come to fruition, it sounds as if the company will be lending at an annual percentage rate between 9 and 10 percent, which is a fraction of the price being charged by some of the current alternative lenders who also attended the event.

I enjoyed meeting the leader of the American Dream Fund, which has built a platform that matches entrepreneurs with various local and state grants and funds that can be tough to identify and find. And I was fascinated to meet the chief executive of a company, North End Financial, that provides collateral to banks that make loans to small businesses of less than $200,000. This is similar to the idea of a collateral exchange that I have blogged about.

The rhythm of the day changed dramatically in the afternoon when attendees got to choose break-out sessions. These offered conversations on many different topics. I think for the first time I appreciated some of the challenges that the political appointees struggle with as they try to drive change. I realized that many of them suffer frustrations similar to my own.

The discussions had a different vibe. Instead of contributing to an us-versus-them confrontation, we all rolled up our sleeves and tried to figure out the right things to do. It was nice to see Jacob Lew, the Treasury secretary, come into some of these sessions and listen intently. Some of my favorite discussions concerned the powerful economic impact likely to result if large corporations would simply pay their small-business suppliers faster and free up their cash flow. A program like this would be about Americans helping Americans, and might not require any legislation or tax policy.

I was also impressed by the conversation about the marketing challenges facing the S.B.A. The agency offers many programs that could work wonders for many small businesses — at rates that are reasonable and affordable. Unfortunately, many small-business owners either don’t know about these programs or they don’t know how to find lenders that facilitate them. My hope is that the sexiness of the new alternative lenders, many of whom played a role in the conference,  will not overshadow the more traditional programs that offer lower rates.

After some of my previous trips to Washington, I felt as if I had wasted my time. I left frustrated, wondering why I had bothered to make the trip. This time, as I took off my jacket, loosened my tie, and walked back to my hotel, I felt different. I hope the feeling lasts.

Ami Kassar founded MultiFunding, which is based near Philadelphia and helps small businesses find the right sources of financing for their companies.

Article source: http://boss.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/06/14/not-just-talking-the-talk-in-washington/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Your Money: Consumer Watchdog Is All Ears for Ideas

The new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau officially opens for business on Thursday, but for several months it has been soliciting ideas from the public.

In response, there was the predictable sniping, with some people taking to Twitter to ask if the bureau can protect people from the increasing federal debt caused by the creation of new agencies.

And there were the plaintive requests from people looking for help far beyond the bureau’s turf in financial services. Someone wondered about gym memberships, while somebody else asked the bureau to give pornography sites their own domain name suffixes.

But in the earliest Twitter posts, which I read end to end in a 140-character binge this week, there were also some thought-provoking ideas with real potential.

They may never come to fruition, if the Republicans succeed in stripping power from the bureau and running Elizabeth Warren — who has been overseeing the bureau but is probably not going to be its official director — out of town.

For now, however, the bureau is for real, and in an avalanche of Twitter messages, e-mails and blog comments on its Web site, consumers have shown a hunger for a financial cop on the beat.

Meanwhile, its openness thus far suggests the tantalizing possibility that it could be the nation’s first open-source regulator. So I picked the four most interesting ideas that people on Twitter suggested and took them to the bureau this week to see just how open it was to provocative suggestions.

SIMPLICITY Perhaps the most reasoned call to action came from Bill Mitchell (Twitter handle: @zipflash), an investment newsletter publisher and soon-to-be hedge fund manager in Irvine, Calif.

“My politics don’t really align with Elizabeth Warren’s,” he said. “But I sensed that she had a legitimate interest in trying to, at a minimum, improve efficiencies.”

So he took his best shot at helping her do that in a couple of Twitter messages. “Create standardized contract for credit cards for issuers to incorporate by reference, merely adjusting specific rates and fees.”

And then: “Limit the total number of words in consumer financial contracts. Disclosures are not transparent if their length is unlimited.”

Mr. Mitchell said he worried that credit card agreements had become like the software and Web agreements that so many people mindlessly speed through.

“We are actively working toward simplifying credit card contracts,” said Gail Hillebrand, associate director of consumer education and engagement for the bureau.

At the moment, the bureau is in the midst of an overhaul of mortgage disclosure forms, something Congress demanded. Congress hasn’t ordered the bureau to revise card agreements, though, and it is not clear how much authority the bureau would have to force card issuers’ hands if it decided to try.

Still, it’s clear that Ms. Warren is a believer in the religion of simplicity. “We are opposed to complicated forms and fine print,” she said Thursday in a hearing before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

HUMOR Matt Stoller (@matthewstolller), a former Democratic Congressional staff member, just wants a good laugh. “Hold a weekly public complaint essay contest called ‘Why You Should Fine My Bank,’ ” he said in a Twitter post.

In all seriousness, this would have its advantages once the bureau’s novelty wears out, since it would keep consumers coming back looking for the most outrageous sins. Mr. Stoller, in an interview this week, added that the bureau should have a bank-as-hero letter of the week, too, as an incentive for good behavior.

“I think humor and interestingness are not used by government nearly enough,” he said. “To the extent that you do that, you create a situation where if you get a malevolent politician in there trying to kill these programs, then they have to kill something that the public likes.”

The bureau’s Ms. Hillebrand wouldn’t go near the self-preservation angle but got a good chuckle out of Mr. Stoller’s contest notion. “We have to learn from the most effective techniques that people inside and outside of government are using to reach the public,” she said. “If it’s funny, it gets forwarded.”

twitter.com/ronlieber

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=08226758e6b359faa041670658aa1661