What will tighter monetary policy mean for my small business loan rates?
#1
I’m trying to understand how the recent shift in central bank policy will actually affect my small manufacturing business’s borrowing costs for new equipment. Everyone talks about the broader economic impact, but I’m unsure how directly this monetary policy tightening will hit my next loan’s interest rate.
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#2
In our shop we bought a new laser cutter last year and the quotes drifted as rates tightened. Banks price new loans off the base rate such as prime or SOFR plus a spread that depends on risk and on the term. I saw the quotes move a few tenths month to month and it varies a lot by lender and by how new the equipment is. When you get a quote ask if the rate is fixed or variable and what date it applies.
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#3
We did a quick refinance attempt on a small press and the rate moved from mid sixes to high sixes in a few weeks. A bank suggested a three year fixed but the price was similar and it carried higher fees.
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#4
A lender told us they price equipment loans by the DSCR and the collateral value. The tighter policy means the base rate is higher and the spread can rise if cash flow looks tighter. The better your numbers the easier it is to get a decent quote but not a guarantee.
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#5
Sometimes I wonder if the real problem is not the rate but cash flow. For us the main risk is can we keep the debt service from cutting into payroll and maintenance. Maybe the question is whether we should chase a bigger loan or cut headcount to stay afloat.
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#6
We tried a small loan for a new spindle and we did lock in a rate for a fixed term. The bank offered a fixed rate but then added a sizable origination fee in their wording. It felt like the total cost still rose even if the headline rate looked stable.
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#7
Since policy talk started to hint more hikes we began negotiating terms with suppliers to stretch cash and reduce upfront spend. The rate move is one lever but the timing of orders and delivery trucks matters too.
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#8
Do you feel the rate is the real lever or is the problem more about access to collateral and the banks appetite for lending to small manufacturers?
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