Small businesses that would otherwise have difficulty
securing private equity or venture capital may now find funding easier to get
as a result of changes made as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act to the US Small Business Administration’s Small Business Investment
Company (SBIC) program.
“The Recovery Act expands SBA’s venture capital program to increase the pool of
investment funding available to the Small Business Investment Companies licensed
by SBA,” said SBA Administrator Karen G. Mills. “We believe those companies
will be better equipped by these changes to help sustain and grow small
businesses for their next important growth steps.”
SBICs are privately owned and managed venture capital firms which are licensed
and regulated by SBA. SBICs use a combination of funds raised from private
sources and money raised through the use of SBA guarantees to make equity and
mezzanine capital investments in small businesses. There are approximately 338 SBICs with $17.4 billion in capital under management. The program
changes made as part of the Recovery Act are:
- SBICs are
now eligible for greater SBA guaranteed funding. They are required to invest
25% of their investment dollars into “smaller” businesses. Also, the
amount of funding an SBIC may invest in a single small business is set at
10% of an SBIC’s total capital rather than the previous limit of 20% of
private capital only. This translates to an effective 50% increase in
funding available to a single business by an SBIC.
- Maximum
SBA funding levels to SBICs will increase up to three times the private
capital raised by the SBIC to a maximum of $150 million for single SBICs
and $225 million for multiple SBICs that are under common control. The licensee
cap is set at $137.1 million.
- These
limits are higher for SBICs licensed after October 1, 2009 that certify
that at least 50% of their investments will be made in small businesses
located in low-income areas, up to $175 million for single licensees and
$250 million for jointly controlled multiple licensees.
- Changes
made to the SBIC program under the Recovery Act are permanent.
The SBIC program was created to stimulate the growth of
America
’s small
businesses by supplementing the long-term debt and private-equity capital available
to them. Since the SBIC program’s formation in 1958 through April 2009,
it has invested approximately $56 billion in more than 106,000 small businesses
in the
United
States
. For more
information about the SBA’s Investment Division and SBIC program, go to
www.sba.gov/INV or call
1-800-
UASK-SBA.
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Friday, October 30, 2009 at 1:01 PM
Mo Husain says:
MH Systems, Inc. is a small business located in San Diego, California. MHS has a 'Clean-Tech' and 'Mandatory market' project and the project will create jobs immediately. But we are having a hard time to locate SBIC investors who has received stimulas funds - (i) where are they? (ii) Do we need to outside California to locate these SBIC investors?