Business owners, media, politicians and the
public in general, are in the dark when it comes to business banking. I am not talking about complex derivatives, credit default
swaps and currency futures. These are incomprehensible to most bankers, hence this little thing called the credit crisis! (I actually
know what those things are and they never help me in my dealings with small and
medium sized enterprises.) No, I am
talking about good old fashioned borrowing and lending.
Banking, to quote the Canadian Bankers
Association, is a low risk, low margin, high volume business. Banks raise money two ways...debt and
equity. A bank incurs debt when it issues
a bond or takes deposits from customers.
A bank finances through equity by issuing shares or retaining earnings
in the business. The government requires
a certain ratio between debt and equity known as the reserve requirement.
But let's make this easy... we will start-up
our own bank. We'll call it the
Entrepreneurship Bank and lend money to struggling entrepreneurs who want to
start and expand their businesses.
Step
One: Capitalize the Bank
To begin we capitalize the bank with
$100,000. (It's a small bank for small business) The rules allow us to raise $1,000,000 in
debt. This is a total of
$1,100,000. We keep side $100,000 in
cash float, and have one-million dollars left.
We can now begin to lend money.
Step Two: Borrowing and
Lending
We can now look at the bank’s revenue &
expenses under the following assumptions.
Our lending rate averages 6%.
• We pay, on average 2% on deposits
• We generate $20,000 in fees
• Our overhead costs are $30,000
We can look at the income statement:
Notice, we have a profit of $30,000 per
year…not bad for an investment of $100,000.
However I have forgotten one small detail...bad loans. Banks and other financial institutions must
make reserves for those loans that will never be repaid. When I ask participants in small business
seminars for an estimate of the percentage of loan loss (sometimes known as
PCL, provision for credit loss), they usually tell me, “I guess it’s around
10%” In this example, if the bank would lose $70,000, wiping out most of the
capital in the bank and forcing it into insolvency. In our example, a loan loss
of 3% would leave the bank without a profit and 4% would create a loss!
In real life, the numbers are much larger,
the Net Interest Income is a bit higher and the loan loss provision is between
.5% and 1%. Regardless, if a bank makes a net profit of 2% on loan assets after
loan loss, they are doing well. Banks
are lenders, not investors. If your bank seems to be somewhat conservative,
then it is another reminder that banking is a low risk, low margin high volume business.
Understanding your bank, and how bank
financing works, is essential if you want to be successfully apply for bank
financing. Unfortunately, most bank
lending to Small and Medium Enterprises...loans under $250,000 are written by
personal and not commercial lenders, The
implications of this fundamental flaw in the banking system is a topic for
another law.
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