Well, I have had just about enough of “the banks aren’t lending money” crap. Everywhere I turn I read about the so-called credit crunch and small business just can’t get the resources it needs for expansion.
Let me see if I can help out the media with this “problem.” First, if you have a true creditworthy borrower who is seeking funds to expand their established, cash flowing profitable business, call me. I can put him or her in touch with about 6000 independent community banks that would love to have a good earning asset on their books.
Second, call Christopher “I am now a lobbyist for the motion picture industry” Dodd and Barney Frank. They, by virtue of their so called Financial Reform legislation, have created such trepidation and doubt and red tape that many community banks are hesitant to lend to marginal customers. Their Dodd-Frank legislation has so empowered the federal regulatory agencies (including new ones) to conduct “witch hunts” on the industry. In this economic environment, Congress has blamed the regulators for the financial crisis for not being “tough” enough. The regulators in turn have unleashed their wrath on the industry with a “we’re going to getcha” mentality. Community bankers are scared to death to lend. You would be too if you had already been judged guilty until you could prove yourself innocent.
Hell, even the Department of Justice has gotten into the game. Examiners looking at hundreds of loans on the books might discover a fair lending discrepancy in a rate charged one borrower vs. another for almost identical loans. Forget about the fact that one of the borrowers might have a lower FICO score than the other…Justice Department referral.
Want to solve the so-called credit crunch and get this country moving again? Find a few members of Congress with the backbone to reverse the horrible trend of over regulating the innocent and set their sights on the big bank abusers. It is ludicrous to think that the same regulatory rules should apply to a 100 mm community bank and a 100 billion mega bank.
If something is not done soon to reverse this horrible regulatory overkill trend, I’ll show you a real credit crunch when all the independent community banks throw in the towel and sell, leaving all the small business and consumer credit decisions to the big banks.
