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CAUTION FLAG: Loan approvals take Lewis & Clark Bank a week on average because community bankers want to 'truly know their customers' and develop a 'comprehensive relationship' with them, CEO Trey Maust says.

Small Banks' Speed Advantage Threatened by Online Lenders

MAY 15, 2013 1:41pm ET
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Community banks often brag how quickly they approve loan applications—small bank loan officers, they say, aren't forced to wait for authorization from the corporate office in another city.

Now that selling point could be usurped by a group of online lenders, who say they approve loans in a day or less. Kabbage, an online lender based in Atlanta, says applicants can get an answer in "fewer than 7 minutes."

"We've removed the human element and the fax machine," says Eric Burd, vice president and general manager of CapTap, a New York online lender that competes with Kabbage. "One of my central value propositions is that no bureaucracy is in the way."

CapTap, Kabbage, On Deck Capital and other online lenders say they move faster for several reasons, including streamlined online application forms and fewer underwriting restrictions. They also tend to focus on small-business lending—a far less intensive loan-review process than residential mortgage lending, for example.

It also helps online lenders that they don't accept deposits and thus are virtually unregulated.

"Frankly, community banks just haven't been able to invest in new technology," says Andrea Gellert, senior vice president of marketing at On Deck Capital, of New York. "Because of all the regulatory challenges, they've had to invest in new compliance measures."

Many community bankers would be open to using online applications and other technological tools to make faster loan decisions, says Trey Maust, co-president and chief executive at the $121 million-asset Lewis & Clark Bank in Oregon City, Ore. But most community banks use a business model that requires more hands-on interaction with borrowers, he says.

"Community banks still like to truly know their customer, so I would view the strategy as more of an entree to a comprehensive relationship," Maust says.

Maust says that once a potential borrower provides the documents that are typically requested — such as financials, tax returns, liquidity verification and corporate legal documents — his bank can underwrite and approve a loan, on average, within one week.

Other banks are said to take longer, though industrywide data is hard to find.

If online lenders' speed claims are true, the upstarts could grab a big part of the small-business loan market, says Jim Miller, senior director of banking at J.D. Power in Westlake Village, Calif.

"There is a significant advantage if an application is turned around the same day," Miller says.

Online lenders either supplement, or replace, traditional scores supplied by credit bureaus with their own data. CapTap, for example, uses data compiled from the $2.6 billion of loans made over a 10-year period by its parent company, Capital Access Network. Those data points include the average balance in a customer's deposit accounts, and a historical look at debit and credit card sales through merchant-processing data.

Community banks and large banks, on the other hand, still rely on the old ways, Burd says.

Dave Seleski, president and chief executive of Stonegate Bank (SGBK), a $1 billion-asset bank in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., agrees, based on his time at the community bank and former jobs with large banks.

"It's all based on credit scores and on historic losses," Seleski says.

Some small-business lending opportunities don't go to community banks because they are unwilling to lend to borrowers with "no business plan, no collateral and their income is not where you want it to be," Seleski says.

Community banks also seek borrowers who "want the human touch," Seleski says. But that might actually work against them and in favor of online lenders, Miller says.

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Comments (3)
As a commercial lender of 30 plus years both to Fortune 1000 companies and small businesses (however that may be defined these days) while I am supportive of credit review and approval systems that maintain consistency of decision making, to totally eliminate for example, the "know your lender" requirement is I think very risky. Secondly I know everyone likes to receive instantaneous approvals, rushing through what is a very complex process may ultimately result in higher loss rates then tradionally has been the case - and I must say as a senior credit officer I am nervous about "speed of approval" being a key criteria of lending. Technology is nice but credit decision-making without any human interaction is not something I would institutionally aspire to. I guess only the loss rates for the associated C&I lendidng using speed as the new principal credit methodology, will prove its validity. I however prefer an efficient but more traditional approach - and I don't anticipate losing much business.
Posted by rmartin47 | Wednesday, May 15 2013 at 4:40PM ET
RMartin47 - I think you hit the nail on the head..... The difference with many of the automated online lenders like IOU Central - they are lending to micro business not "Small Business".... Small Business is to broadly defined. A "Small Business" with 1m per month in revenue, manufacturing eqpt, multiple distribution channels and networks is FAR different from the neighborhood drycleaner or Coffee Shop. Yet many SBL underwrite, process and qualify similarly. A typical SBL touches a deal 14+ times, enters into multiple systems and reviews a great deal of data to be able to risk mitigate the expectations of the loan repayment over many years. Online lenders are more focused on Micro Businesses (although no one wants to use that term). These are businesses that have between $150k - $1m in gross rev. These loans are underwritten very differently and looking for short term working capital loans with repayment expectations of 12 months - 18 months. These loans are not collateralized other than by the day to day cash flows of the business. While the systems are built to review all kinds of traditional and non traditional data to help mitigate risk - there is still a human validating the system decision and making exceptions where they may be warranted. Many times we are partnering with SBA lenders - we have all had deals blow up over taxes due, needing a quick infusion of capital to shore up the balance sheet etc. These small loans can serve as a nice gap fill and because they are so quick and easy can be done in hours or days vs a week or longer. I don't think it's a matter of online lenders "stealing business" from the banks but more using this new lending method to help augment the gap that exists for a non collateralized quick access to capital for micro businesses.
Posted by rgloer1 | Thursday, May 16 2013 at 11:16AM ET
Speed is not usually the most important determinant for choosing a lender, as long as it is "reasonable" to the borrower. Nothing is said about the cost/interest rate of these immediate loans. Credit card companies have expanded the types of instant approval loans for business loans as well as large home improvement loans, but the rates reflect the risk. A depositary institution should be able to provide money at much better rates and terms to a small business, because they are able to do analysis, not just play with average numbers. Certainly there are small/micro transactions where a credit card rate may make sense for because of the loan size, but most small businesses will want something better. The relationship, which the bankers emphasize, is what gets money to the small business person under the best terms and with the best reliability.
Posted by MGrayson987 | Thursday, May 16 2013 at 3:55PM ET
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