How to Document Borrower Equity Injections for the SBA Loan
Transcription
How to Document Borrower Equity Injections for the SBA Loan
How to Document Borrower Equity Injections for the SBA Loan By Bob Coleman Editor, Coleman Report bob@colemanreport.com Overview ● Equity Injection Fraud ● Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● Equity Injection 101 ● Documenting Equity Injection ● Common Mistakes & Errors ● Best Practices 2 Equity Injection Fraud 1. False Equity Injection Based on OIG loan fraud investigations, false equity injection is a significant and recurring problem. False documents submitted to verify the required equity injection often include: a) False gift letters or gift affidavits, b) False promissory notes and standby agreements c) False financial statements, or d) False bank statements and cashier checks. SBA Information Notice Control No.: 9000-1793 Effective: 4-7-2009 3 Equity Injection Fraud a) Gift letters and gift affidavits (investigation often proves such “gifts” to be false – either the money does not exist, or it is never paid into the business, or it is subsequently repaid to the donor). b) Tax returns reporting income that does not seem to support the required equity injection, c) Bank statements that upon close inspection appear to have been altered, d) Bank account records showing a recent, unexplained, large dollar deposit into the borrower's account, and e) Credit reports showing a poor credit history for a borrower who claims to have substantial cash. SBA Information Notice Control No.: 9000-1793 Effective: 4-7-2009 4 Equity Injection Fraud There are many ways a borrower or loan agent may attempt to falsify the equity injection or conceal the actual source of funds. OIG investigations have often determined that the cash injected was actually borrowed, and that the related debt was not disclosed to the lender or SBA. 5 SBA Information Notice Control No.: 9000-1793 Effective: 4-7-2009 Equity Injection Fraud When lending officials are suspicious that equity injection verification documents may be false, it is suggested that lenders take affirmative steps to detect and deter such fraud such as the following: SBA Information Notice Control No.: 9000-1793 Effective: 4-7-2009 6 Equity Injection Fraud ● If a gift letter is involved, have both the donor and the borrower sign an affidavit detailing the alleged gift and stating that the gift does not have to be repaid or returned, and request that the borrower provide a copy of a bank statement showing the injection was made prior to disbursement ● If funds are being transferred by wire (especially from a foreign country), request a copy of the wire transfer and include it in the loan file, and ● If an inheritance is cited, verify that the funds exist by obtaining a copy of the inheritance bank statement showing the funds exist prior to disbursement. 7 SBA Information Notice Control No.: 9000-1793 Effective: 4-7-2009 Equity Injection Fraud The OIG encourages lenders to take proactive steps in order to reduce fraud, including such measures as having borrowers sign a certification at closing detailing the equity injection requirements for the SBA loan, and specifically how they have been met, and verifying with bank records that the equity injection is actually put into the business prior to disbursement, and used by the business. SBA Information Notice Control No.: 9000-1793 Effective: 4-7-2009 8 Equity Injection Fraud SBA OIG recommends consideration of the following practices and internal controls to deter and detect suspicious lending activity: ● Development of sufficient management oversight of loan approvals, including the use of multiple “eyes” reviewing the underlying documents that are used in generating credit approval memoranda, at least on larger dollar loans. 9 SBA Information Notice Control No.: 9000-1793 Effective: 4-7-2009 Overview ● Equity Injection Fraud ● Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● Equity Injection 101 ● Documenting Equity Injection ● Common Mistakes & Errors ● Best Practices 10 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements Setting the LTV/equity requirement is a function of credit policy to define parameters about various lending channels, borrower conditions and collateral demographics. Equity policy constraints can reveal plenty about the credit culture of the organization and will determine how regulators approach portfolio supervision. How much is enough ‘equity’ is never answered for sure until the loan is repaid. Or charged-off. Charles Green, Coleman Report Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 11 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements A lender’s loan policy is expected to define boundaries to lending practices in adherence to applicable regulations. The FDIC and other regulators provide broad outlines of suggested CRE leverage limitations, or “supervisory LTV” (SLTV) guidelines. The SBA suggests lenders adhere to their own policies, but that’s not intended to be a ticket to stupid. Charles Green, Coleman Report 12 Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements LTV/equity guidelines can only provide a framework to assess specific loan risks. What is Loan Risk? Charles Green, Coleman Report Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 13 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements 1. Business history: Is it a seasoned company, intermediate stage growth company or start-up? 2. Financial results: Are there steady revenues and profits, growing sales with profits beginning or projected success? 3. Management depth: Does borrower have solid track record, only industry exposure or did they just lose their job? Charles Green, Coleman Report Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 14 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements 4. Business plan: Is there a fully developed plan, a general idea shared by managers or is borrower still working on it? 5. Industry: Is it manufacturing, wholesale, retail or service? 6. Business sector: Is it always in demand, niche oriented, seasonal or so cutting edge that no one’s ever heard about it? Charles Green, Coleman Report Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 15 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements 7. Collateral: Is it obsolete, mature, functional or to-be-built? 8. Location: It is a high grade site, acceptable site or is borrower still looking for it? 9. RE Improvements: Is it a generic commercial space, limited-use or single-purpose? Charles Green, Coleman Report Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 16 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements The point? Equity requirements/LTV are not just about property or asset types. Equity measures the protection hedge that collateral offers the lender against many different kinds of credit risks. Automatically judging every deal is a category the same without genuine qualification is flying blind. Charles Green, Coleman Report 17 Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements Equity is a means to temper credit risk by using borrower’s cash investment as a means to lower lender exposure to multiple business risks. Recognition and adherence to regulator/agency guidelines is a smart and necessary tactic to maintain a balance between the business of lending and responsibility to the source of lender funding/guaranty. Charles Green, Coleman Report 18 Volume 22, Number 3 --Issue #583 January 20, 2014 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements 504 Borrower’s Contribution 1. The borrower must inject at least 10% of the Project cost. 2. New businesses must inject at least 15%. 3. Businesses with a Limited or Special Purpose Property also must inject 15%. SBA considers only the following as a Limited or Special Purpose Property: a) Amusement parks; b) Bowling alleys; c) Car wash properties; d) Cemeteries; e) Clubhouses; 19 Pg 241 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective January 1, 2014 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements f) Cold storage facilities where more than 50% of total square footage is equipped for refrigeration; g) Dormitories; h) Farms, including dairy facilities; i) Funeral homes with crematoriums; j) Gas stations; k) Golf courses; l) Hospitals, surgery centers, urgent care centers and other health or medical facilities; m) Hotels and motels; n) Marinas; o) Mines; p) Museums; q) Nursing homes, including assisted living facilities; r) Oil wells; s) Quarries, including gravel pits; t) Railroads; u) Sanitary landfills; v) Service centers (e.g., oil and lube, brake or transmission centers) with pits and in ground lifts; w) Sports arenas; x) Swimming pools; y) Tennis clubs; z) Theaters; and aa) Wineries Pg 242 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective January 1, 2014 20 Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● If a Project finances both a New Business and a Limited or Special Purpose Property, the applicant is required to inject 20% of the project cost. ● The additional borrower’s contribution will reduce the SBA’s portion of the financing. ● The borrower’s equity in land previously acquired may be counted toward the borrower’s contribution. The borrower also may count toward its contribution, equity in land and buildings that will be part of the Project if they are adding a new building to the same property. Pg 242 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective January 1, 2014 21 Overview ● Equity Injection Fraud ● Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● Equity Injection 101 ● Documenting Equity Injection ● Common Mistakes & Errors ● Best Practices 22 Equity Injection 101 _____Lender has made a personal loan to an individual for the purpose of providing an equity injection into the business. (Loan is not eligible to be submitted under delegated authority.) Pg 9 SBA Form 1920 (Revised 2-14) 24 Equity Injection 101 SBA Express Loans 1. The credit decision, including how much to factor in a past bankruptcy or whether to require an equity injection, is left to the business judgment of the lender. 2. If the lender requires an equity injection and , as part of its standard processes for non-SBA guaranteed loans verifies the equity injection, it must do so for SBA Express loans. 3. Lenders must adhere to the requirement that owners of 20% or more must inject equity into the business above certain thresholds. Pg 36 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 25 Equity Injection 101 An SBA-guaranteed loan may be used to finance a change of ownership that includes intangible assets. 1. If the purchase price of the business includes intangible assets (including, but not limited to, goodwill, client/customer lists, patents, copyrights, trademarks and agreements not to compete) in excess of $500,000, the borrower and/or seller must provide an equity injection of at least 25% of the purchase price of the business for the application to be processed under delegated authority. (Seller equity is defined as seller take-back financing that is on full standby (principal and interest) for a minimum of 2 years.) Pg 122 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 26 Equity Injection 101 2. The borrower and seller will agree how much equity each will provide. For example, the borrower and seller may each provide half of the equity or the borrower may provide 15% and the seller may provide 10%. 3. If the purchase price of the business includes intangible assets of $500,000 or less, b)(1) immediately above does not apply. 4. If the purchase price of the business includes intangible assets in excess of $500,000 and the equity contribution from the borrower and the seller combined is less than 25% of the purchase price of the business, the application may not be processed using delegated authority and must be sent to the LGPC. Pg 123 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 27 Equity Injection 101 5. The “purchase price of the business” includes all assets being acquired such as real estate, machinery and equipment, and intangible assets. Real estate may not be removed from the transaction and financed separately to avoid the 25% equity injection requirement for PLP processing. 6. The value of the intangible assets is determined by either the book value as reflected on the business’s balance sheet, a separate appraisal for the particular asset, or the value of the business as identified in the business valuation minus the sum of the working capital assets and the fixed assets being purchased. 7. If any of the loan proceeds will be used to finance intangible assets, the amount must be specifically identified in the Use of Proceeds section of the application and the Authorization. Pg 123 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 28 Equity Injection 101 Loans Less than $350,000 Lender must determine if the equity and the pro-forma debtto-worth are acceptable based on its policies and procedures for its similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans. If the lender requires an equity injection and, as part of its policies and procedures for its similarly-sized, non-SBA guaranteed commercial loans verifies the equity injection, it must do so for SBA loans. Pg 163 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 29 Equity Injection 101 Equity Requirement for loans in excess of $350,000 Amount of Equity Adequate equity is important to ensure the long term survival of a business. The lender must determine if the equity and the pro forma debt-to-worth are acceptable based on the factors related to that type of business, experience of the management and the level of competition in the market area. The lender must include in its credit analysis a detailed discussion of the required equity and its adequacy. 30 Pg 166 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 Equity Injection 101 Equity Requirement for loans in excess of $350,000 Source of Equity Injection The following may be considered as Equity Injection: 1. Cash that is NOT borrowed 2. Cash that IS borrowed only under the limited circumstances outlined on the next slide: 31 Pg 166 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 Equity Injection 101 Equity Requirement for loans in excess of $350,000 2. Cash that IS borrowed – (a) SBA considers funds borrowed through the use of personal credit for injection into the business as additional debt, not equity, with one exception. – (b) If the Small Business Applicant can demonstrate repayment of this personal loan from sources other than the cash flow of the business, the cash injection may be considered equity. (Note: The salary of the business owner does not qualify.) – (c) A lender must disclose any loan made to an individual for the purpose of providing an equity injection into the business. The lender’s credit analysis must address the impact on the personal and business balance sheets and sources of repayment for such side loans. If the SBA participating lender is providing the personal loan, the lender must submit the application for guaranty through standard 7(a) processing. Pg 167 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 32 Equity Injection 101 Equity Requirement for loans in excess of $350,000 3. Assets other than Cash Lenders must carefully evaluate the value of assets other than cash that are injected by owners or principals. Therefore, an appraisal or other valuation by an independent third party is required if the valuation of the fixed assets is greater than the depreciated value (net book value). A valuation of the fixed assets provided as part of a business valuation will not meet these requirements, except as part of a going concern appraisal as described in paragraph II.C.5.e) below. Pg 167 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 33 Equity Injection 101 Equity Requirement for loans in excess of $350,000 4. Standby debt Debt that is on full standby (no payments of principal or interest for the term of the SBA-guaranteed loan) may be considered acceptable equity for SBA’s purposes. A debt that is on partial standby (interest payments only being made) may be considered equity when there is adequate historical business cash flow available to make the payments. A copy of the note must be attached to the standby agreement. (See Chapter 5, Paragraph IV of this Subpart for additional discussion of standby agreements.) 34 Pg 167 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 Equity Injection 101 The following may not be considered as Equity Injection: 1. Value or cost of education; and 2. Funds that are borrowed and do not meet the exception noted in subparagraph a)(2) above. 35 Pg 167 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 Overview ● Equity Injection Fraud ● Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● 504 Rule ● Equity Injection 101 ● Documenting Equity Injection ● Common Mistakes & Errors ● Best Practices 36 Documenting Equity Injection ● Lenders must verify the injection prior to disbursing loan proceeds and must maintain evidence of such verification in their loan files. ● Lenders are expected to use reasonable and prudent efforts to verify that equity is injected and used as intended, and failure to do so may warrant a repair or partial/full denial. ● Lenders must submit with each purchase request on a loan for which the loan authorization required an equity injection, documentation to show that they verified the equity injection. 37 Pg 167 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 Documenting Equity Injection Verifying a cash injection requires the following documentation: ● A copy of a check or wire transfer along with evidence that the check or wire was processed showing the funds were moved into the borrower’s account or escrow; ● A copy of the statements of account for the account from which the funds are being withdrawn for each of the two most recent months prior to disbursement showing that the funds were available; and ● A subsequent statement of the borrower’s account showing that the funds were deposited or a copy of an escrow settlement statement showing the use of the cash. ● A promissory note, “gift letter” or financial statement is not sufficient evidence of cash injection without corroborating evidence consistent with paragraph a) above. 38 Pg 168 SBA SOP 50 10 5(F) Effective Date: January 1, 2014 Documenting Equity Injection Evidencing Equity Line of Credit If the funds are being injected from the use of their personal credit the borrower must demonstrate repayment of this personal loan from sources other than the cash flow of the business, the cash injection is considered equity. 1. The settlement sheet/HUD from the closing of a personal loan can be used to verify the source of the injection. 2. Copy of HELOC Note 3. If the funds are being deposited into the business account prior to closing ‐ A copy of the statement from the account (or accounts) to which the equity injection funds were deposited and copy of the closing settlement statement showing the equity injection funds were injected/used. *If the loan is approved under delegated authority be sure to include sufficient justification and comments in regard to the borrower’s personal ability to repay. banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 39 Documenting Equity Injection Evidencing Standby debt Debt that is on full standby (no payments of principal or interest for the term of the SBA‐guaranteed loan) may be considered acceptable equity for SBA’s purposes. 1. A copy of the note (complying terms should be verified) must be attached to the executed Standby Agreement form 155. 2. Standby Creditor must subordinate any lien rights in collateral securing the Loan to lender’s rights in the collateral, and take no action against Borrower or any collateral securing the Standby Debt without lender’s consent. banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 40 Documenting Equity Injection Evidencing Cash used for business purposes Cash that was used for business purposes prior to loan disbursement. 1. A copy of the bank statements from the account which the funds were spent dated along with corresponding evidence such as; Copies of cleared checks or wire transfers with corresponding invoices evidencing use of cash or detailed receipts showing cash payments for business purchases (hand written receipts are not sufficient‐ must be formal PD IN FULL invoice). banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 41 Documenting Equity Injection Evidencing Cash used for business purposes using Credit Cards 1. A copy of a the statements from the account which the funds were used to pay the credit card bill for each of the three most recent months showing the funds were available and spent. 2. A copy of a the credit card statements reflecting the purchases and payments made along with any subsequent statements needed to show the amount evidenced has been paid by the borrower. Statements should not reflect a balance after payment. banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 42 Overview ● Equity Injection Fraud ● Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● Equity Injection 101 ● Documenting Equity Injection ● Common Mistakes & Errors ● Best Practices 44 Common Mistakes and Errors ● Not collecting all documentation evidencing Equity Injection prior to loan disbursement. ● Not fully evidencing Equity Injection prior to disbursement. (Disbursing the loan before all injection has been acquired.) HUGE NO! ● Out dated bank statements. Bank statements are typically collected prior to or during the application process. If the loan doesn’t close with in the anticipated time frame then new statements should be collected and reviewed for accuracy. ● Credit card statements that carry a balance and that haven’t been paid in full. (It is difficult to evidence which purchases remain unpaid if the statement isn’t paid in full.) 45 banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 Common Mistakes and Errors ● Often checks, receipts and bank statements do not collaborate. (Dates don’t match or account numbers.) (Equity Injection may originate from different accounts.) ● In some cases the giver of the gift may be hesitant to provide the origination of their gift. (This must be enforced.) ● Invoices are not provided with a corresponding cleared check or evidence of payment. ● Hand made receipts or no receipts at all. ● Failure to provide a Note. (HELOC or Standby) banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 46 Common Mistakes and Errors ● Failure to prove repayment ability for a personal loan. (HELOC) ● No evidence of the Equity Injection at the time of Closing. (The HUD or Settlement sheet didn’t evidence the Equity coming in or going out.) ● Disbursement was made directly to the borrower. E.g. cash injection for working capital. ● Failure to evidence other assets value or failure to provide evidence of asset injection. ● These are just a few examples of the most common mistakes that we come across. If in doubt. Don’t disburse! 47 banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 Overview ● Equity Injection Fraud ● Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● Equity Injection 101 ● Documenting Equity Injection ● Common Mistakes & Errors ● Best Practices 48 Developing Best Practices ● Lenders are responsible for complying with SBA requirements to keep the SBA guaranty in force, and the Authorization emphasizes this SBA policy. 49 banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 Developing Best Practices ● If there was an Early Default on the loan, documentation verifying that any equity injection required by the Loan Authorization was not only made, but that it came from a proper source, must be included in the Lender's Purchase Package. (See early default clarification) 50 banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 Developing Best Practices ● The Lender's failure to verify and properly document a material portion of an injection 0f cash or non‐cash assets required by the Loan Authorization raises a rebuttable presumption that the Early Default was caused by the lack of the injection and a full Denial of Liability is justified. 51 banc‐serv PARTNERS, September 2013 Overview ● Equity Injection Fraud ● Setting Borrower Equity Requirements ● Equity Injection 101 ● Documenting Equity Injection ● Common Mistakes & Errors ● Best Practices 52 Questions? By Bob Coleman Editor, Coleman Report bob@colemanreport.com 53