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1 Preliminary Findings The Washington RLF Profile Conducted by Corporation for Enterprise Development with funding from the Ford Foundation and the Washington Department of Community Trade and Economic Development and The Washington Lenders Network Counting on Local Capital
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2 Preliminary Findings Project Overview Research and policy project to collect, analyze, and disseminate information about revolving loan funds (RLFs). Conducted by the Corporation for Enterprise Development (CFED), an organization which specializes in developing policies and programs to promote economic competitiveness and economic opportunity at the local, state, and national levels. Implemented in two phases, with Phase I focused primarily at the federal level and Phase II at the state level.
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3 Preliminary Findings To develop individual state profiles of the RLF industries in up to five states, creating a model data collection and source of best practices for the RLF industry. To assess the feasibility of statewide and/or regional RLF intermediaries which offer data collection, asset management, access to capital, and technical assistance services. To communicate the knowledge and lessons learned through the project by convening national, regional, and electronic meetings of practitioners, funders, and policymakers. Project Goals
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4 Preliminary Findings Washington RLF Profile Washington selected as state partner in September 97 Sponsored by Washington Department of Community Trade and Economic Development; The Lenders Network; and Cascadia Revolving Loan Fund Steering Committee first convened September 1997 tailored survey to interests of practitioners and funders refined list of funds to survey Survey mailed December 1997 -- last one returned May 4, 1998
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5 Preliminary Findings Methodology Surveys were mailed to 53 potential economic development RLFs 41 RLFs returned surveys. (Several of these RLFs were managed by the same organization) 12 reported that they did not have an economic development RLF, or operating as part of another, larger fund. Washington is the only state with 100% response rate
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6 Preliminary Findings The RLF Organizations Organizational Structure 25 Responding Organizations Oldest RLF--17 years
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7 Preliminary Findings The RLF Organizations Made a loan in the last 6 months
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8 Preliminary Findings The RLF Organizations Operate Single or Multiple RLFs
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9 Preliminary Findings The RLF Organizations Washington’s RLF organizations are relatively small…. Exactly half are capitalized at less than a million dollars 67% (14 of 24 respondents) have an operating budget of less than $100,000 47% (17 of 36 respondents) are staffed at one full-time employee or less But sophisticated Almost all services (loan packaging, underwriting, portfolio management, liquidations) are provided in house by over 80% of the RLFs 59% use a spreadsheet software and all feel proficient in it In addition, 33% use an RLF software and 38% use accounting software
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10 Preliminary Findings RLF Capital RLFs reported total capital sources of $70 million smallest fund has $10,000 largest fund has $20 million The $70 million was provided by the following sources
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11 Preliminary Findings Federal Funding Sources Other Dept. of Energy1.5% SBA4.0% HHS0.1% Other0.3% Total Federal Funding $31 Million
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12 Preliminary Findings Philanthropic Funding Sources
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13 Preliminary Findings Timing of Capitalization
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14 Preliminary Findings Timing of Capitalization RLF funding came almost entirely from the public sector until 1993 All foundation funding occurred in 1993 or later All religious organization funding occurred in 1993 or later All but 0.6% of private sector (banks, corporations, and other unspecified private groups) funding was in 1993 or later
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15 Preliminary Findings RLF Capital Structure
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16 Preliminary Findings RLF Capital Structure Most Washington RLFs do not have a diverse funding base 43% (of 35) RLFs received funding from only 1 source Another 22% received funding from only 2 sources Several funders are being accessed by few RLFs; only three RLFs received money from: the SBA, the US Forest Service, religious organizations
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17 Preliminary Findings RLF Loan Terms First loan to RLF made in 1982 69% of debt financing invested since 1995; 51% in 1996 alone (IRP) Interest rates range from 0% to 2.5% Loan terms range from 1 to 40 years
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18 Preliminary Findings RLF Products Average loan size was $10,163 40% had a minimum loan size of less than $1,000 83% offered fixed interest rates Interest offered varied from 0 to 12.7% 45% had loan terms of 3 years or less; 30% terms of five years or more
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19 Preliminary Findings RLF Services Services currently offered (percent of RLFs): One-on-one assistance -- 81% Formal technical assistance -- 35% Mentoring -- 22% Provided no services -- 8% Additional services customers requested: Line of credit -- 69% Venture capital -- 59% Marketing -- 9%
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20 Preliminary Findings Communities Targeted 66% RLFs (21 of 32 who responded) target low - to moderate income people 86% of those funds providing detailed data (18 RLFs) made over 25% of their loans to low-mod income people 59% RLFs (19 of 32) target minorities Start-ups are being targeted as much as existing companies (31 vs. 33 respondent RLFs) Manufacturing is predominant industry type (23 RLFs have made loans), closely followed by retail (20 RLFs) and services (19 RLFs) and fewer timber (6) and salmon (3)
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21 Preliminary Findings RLF Portfolio Data RLFs asked to report the following portfolio data Current capitalization levels Amount of loan loss reserves (if any) Value and number of outstanding loans Average loan size Cumulative value and number of RLF loans Capital available for lending
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22 Preliminary Findings RLF Portfolio Data RLFs asked to report the following performance data Amount and value of delinquent and defaulted loans Amount of loan losses Definitions of delinquency and default
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23 Preliminary Findings RLF Portfolio Data Performance data reported varied widely in quality and consistency RLF Capitalization levels rarely matched total capitalization sources reported earlier in survey However, data on outstanding loans, average loan size, and delinquency was generally strong 41% of the RLFs reported Loan Loss Reserves totaling $664,000--equal to 1.3% of total capitalization (compared to 19% of California RLFs with reserves of 0.4%)
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24 Preliminary Findings Current and Cumulative Lending Activity
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25 Preliminary Findings RLF Portfolio Data
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26 Preliminary Findings RLFs and the Secondary Market
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27 Preliminary Findings Barriers to the Secondary Market
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28 Preliminary Findings Defining Delinquency 33 RLFs provided definitions for delinquency 1as past due 15 days 31 as past due 30 days 1 as past due 60 days
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29 Preliminary Findings Delinquent Loans 30 RLFs collectively reported 70 delinquent loans; values were reported for 53 of these loans & totaled $894,637
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30 Preliminary Findings Delinquency Rates 13 RLFs reported values for both delinquencies >0 and loans outstanding $ 894,637 $14,102 068 28 RLFs reported values for both delinquencies>= 0 and loans outstanding $ 894,637 $28, 593,239 6.34% 3.13%
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31 Preliminary Findings Defining Default 35 RLFs provided definitions of default 1had no definition yet 1payments past due60 days 28payments past due90 days 4payments past due120 days 1payments past due180 days
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32 Preliminary Findings Default Data 31 RLFs collectively reported 54 loans in default; Values were reported for 49 of these loans totaling $1,459,428
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33 Preliminary Findings 13 RLFs reported values for both defaults >0 and loans outstanding $ 1,535,156 19,722,285 30 RLFs reported values for both defaults >= 0 and loans outstanding $ 1,535,156 31,944,401 Default Ratios = 7.8% = 4.8%
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34 Preliminary Findings Job Creation
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35 Preliminary Findings Jobs Retained
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36 Preliminary Findings Preliminary Capitalization Findings q29 organizations -- managing 41 funds -- reported $70 million in capital, with 64% provided by federal, state and local sources, while 11.1% came from private sources. qMost capital was from public sources before 1993 q$26.8 million was invested in 1996 and 1997, indicating recent dramatic growth in the field. qMost RLFs are small, with operating budgets under $100,000, and capitalization of less than $1 million qMost RLFs have undiversified sources of funding
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37 Preliminary Findings Preliminary Recapitalization Findings RLFs identified a need for an additional $20 million in capital, matching almost exactly the $23.4 million in total available capital or reserves reported. No RLFs have sold loans on the secondary market, but 19% expressed an interest in doing so. Loan pricing policies and discount rates were identified as the key barriers to loan sales.
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38 Preliminary Findings Preliminary Performance Findings qThe most common definitions of delinquency and default were 30 and 90 days past due respectively. qDelinquency rates were 3.1% for all RLFs reporting and 6.3% for those reporting delinquencies > 0. qDefault rates were 4.8% for all RLFs reporting and 7.8% for those reporting defaults > 0.
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39 Preliminary Findings Preliminary Impact Findings q87% of RLFs reported using job creation as a measure of impact and 64% use job retention. q25 RLFs reported creating 6,432 jobs, an average of 257 jobs per RLF at an average cost of $12,411 per job. q24 RLFs reported retaining 2,928 jobs, an average of 122 jobs per RLF at an average cost of $20,004.
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40 Preliminary Findings Next Steps qSolicit feedback on preliminary findings qReview preliminary findings with Steering Committee for additional input during summer qConduct final analysis and share with Steering Committee by September. qPrepare final report for release by end of July.
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41 Preliminary Findings Preliminary Findings on Lending Activity 41 RLFs reported cumulative lending of $60 million, at an average of $1.6 million loans outstanding per RLF The average loan size equaled $66,182 for current loans and $56,061 for cumulative loans.
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42 Preliminary Findings RECOMMENDATIONS qFunders need to provide money for operating support, equity and liquidity, particularly for the younger RLFs that do not yet have much income from loan repayments at a time when their training and support needs are greatest. An intermediary institution, such as the Washington Lenders Network, should provide targeted training and assistance to RLFs across the state. A large portion of RLFs are young and inexperienced and do not have access to nearby specialized training, or other needed support service.
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43 Preliminary Findings RECOMMENDATIONS Some institution, such as the Washington Lenders Network or a regional intermediary, must collect data for Best Practices and advocacy to legislators, funders and citizens. Best practice information and data detailing impact and need should be made available on a regular basis. Programs or institutions are needed that can pool the costs for expensive operating services such as bonding requirements, auditors experienced with development finance institutions, Director and organizational liability insurance, employee benefit plans and specialized document production.
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