Effective Oct. 1, The Small Business Administration will modify a restriction it had placed on loans used to finance acquisitions of small companies.
In March, the SBA, capped the guarantee it was willing to extend on "goodwill" financing, which is the amount of a loan used to purchase an existing business's intangible assets, such as an established name, brand or customer base. The market price of a small business is based partly on its tangible assets, such as property, equipment and inventory, but often primarily on its goodwill.
For years, lenders were free to administer SBA-guaranteed loans with any amount of goodwill financing. But in March, the SBA changed its rules so that guarantees for goodwill financing would be capped at $250,000, or 50% of the loan amount, whichever was lower. The rules were designed in part to prevent sellers from inflating companies' intangible assets.
Starting in October, the SBA is raising the cap on its guarantee of goodwill financing to $500,000. If the goodwill financing exceeds that amount, the SBA will recommend that lenders consider requiring more equity from the borrower or seller. The SBA adjusted the cap after collecting data on goodwill financing, and found that the average goodwill amount was close to $400,000.
The guidelines also clarify the circumstances under which lenders may process loans. For instance, for goodwill financing that exceeds $500,000, the SBA recommends 25% in equity from the purchaser.
The guidelines are seen as a compromise between the free rein on goodwill that lenders and business appraisers had historically experienced and the March rules. For potential buyers, the new rules, like the March rules, may provide security that they aren't overpaying for a company's intangible assets.