How will your bank assess your risk now?
Good question.
In the old days, banks took the risk of lending money on themselves and ensured that borrowers would be able to pay it back over time. The recent fad for the securitization of risk meant that they can lend to any Tom, Dick or Harriet, then package up the debts into large parcels of small slices from many borrowers, and sell them onto other banks and finance houses.
These financial instruments, for example : collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), are the financial equivalent of supermarket sausages — nobody knows what’s in them, and many prefer not to.
How will the demise of CDOs affect the small business borrower? In the sense that many startups are categorized as sub-prime, since they don’t have a year or three’s accounts to back up their case, the situation is probably being reassessed.
The policy of reckless securitization is starting to be reversed, according to many accounts. If you have not been caught up in the debt trap created by the sub-prime fiasco, you may just be a better risk than the trailer-park poor, especially as many governments give tax breaks to banks which lend to small businesses.
Let us keep our fingers crossed.


