SME and Entrepreneurship Financing Tools and Measures

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SME and Entrepreneurship Financing Tools and Measures Capacity Building Seminar Implementing SME Policy Tools Trento, 27 October 2011 Lucia Cusmano Senior Economist Secretary to OECD Working Party on SMEs and Entrepreneurship (WPSMEE) OECD Centre for SMEs, Entrepreneurship & Local Development (CFE)

SMEs account for SME Financing Gap 98% of enterprises, 60% of employment in OECD countries 45% of employment, 30% of GDP in developing economies (not including the large informal sector) But receive a minor share of financing 10%-30% of bank loans across OECD countries 65%-70% of SMEs in developing countries lack access to credit

The impact of the global crisis Two shocks that adversely affected SME cash flows: 1) a drastic drop in final demand for goods and services 2) a deterioration of credit conditions: credit crunch o Greater risk aversion by financial institutions o SME creditworthiness deteriorated. Decline in - Economic prospect - Balance sheet quality - Real estate (price levels and uncertainty) o Long-standing, structural problems in financing new/innovative companies 3

Credit demand side SME s reacted by: a)conserving liquidity through reducing operating costs running down inventories cutting investment including innovation spending b)reducing use of external finance c)changing the composition of credit demand -Less investment finance -More working capital and export finance

Key trends SME loans shares in business lending generally declined: - supply component: rejection rates increased - demand components ( discouraged borrowers ) SMEs faced more severe credit conditions than large firms o interest rate spreads increased o Shortened maturities o Increased request for collateral Other sources of funding declined o Venture capital invested declined o Payment delays increased

ITALY l Total and SME business loans, 2007-09 Quarterly, in EUR millions and as a % of total business loans 1,200,000 Business loans, large firms % of business loans, SMEs Business loans, SMEs 25% 1,000,000 20% 800,000 15% 600,000 400,000 10% 200,000 5% 0 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 2007 2008 2009 0% 6

ITALY l Interest rate and spreads, 2007-09 Quarterly, average SME interest rate and spreads between SMEs and large firm rates 7% Interest rate spreads (SME vs large firm) SME average interest rate 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% 0.77 0.95 1.07 0.80 0.80 0.94 1.04 1.39 1.45 1.31 1.35 1.32 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 2007 2008 2009 7

Government responses to improve SME access to finance Easing cash flow Increased direct lending Rolling over SME loans Loan guarantees o New, extended coverage, postponed repayment Combining guaranteed loans with advice services for start ups (get started loans) Deferring or exempting tax payments temporarily Capping interest rates Credit mediation Favouring long term investment and balance sheet restructuring Guarantees and tax incentives for equity capital Co-financing venture capital

Direct Loans and Loan Guarantees Official loan guarantees and direct official loans were the most widely used policy measures to increase access to finance o New or expanded programmes o Change in nature: Before the crisis mainly concentrated on long term investment credits Following liquidity shortages, government increasingly supported working capital

Loan Guarantees Boost of the leverage factor of private and public guarantee schemes by: - raising the total counter- guarantee: Increased volume, coverage rate or sectoral coverage Creation of new counter-guarantee funds - increasing the coverage rate: Increased share of the loan risk that can be covered by guarantees (e.g. in France and Germany from 50%-60% to 90%)

Utilisation of Assistance Programmes Heavy take-up of official programmes, especially for Working Capital and Trade Finance Largest users of Official Guarantees & Direct Loans Medium-Sized Firms Manufacturing Firms Export-Oriented Firms Some Programmes heavily used by Smaller firms Mutual Guarantee Societies (MGS) Credit Mediation

Mutual Guarantee Societies (MGS) Purely mutual schemes: Beneficiary SMEs are shareholders and provide own fund via cooperative shares. The entrepreneurs manage the scheme themselves Private schemes: Shareholders and providers of own funds are SME organisations, chambers of commerce, banking networks operate mid-way between SMEs, financial organisations, public authorities

Added Value of MGS (1) SMEs: Cultural proximity (language and business environment) Recognition of qualitative factors in risk assessment (in-depth knowledge of sector, market, technology, etc) Management support services and business plan analysis by third parties Intermediary function ( credit mediation ) Non-profit orientation

Added Value of MGS (2) Banks: Specific sectoral knowledge of SME customer Detailed financial file (vs. use of simple and standard methods) Use of more qualitative criteria in the credit application, which completes the more financially-oriented analysis of the bank loan. Financial supervision and support to SMEs

in EUR 000 in '000 European Association of Mutual Guarantee Societies (AECM) Pan-European Grouping of 34 MGSs or federations of MGSs in 18 countries More than 2 million SMEs beneficiaries P ro g re ss i on of g u a ra n te e ac ti vity 2 0 0 2-2 0 0 9 8 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 7 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 55% increase in volume of new guarantees 6 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 5 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 4 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 3 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 O w n f u n d s V al u e o f g u a ra n t ee s g r a n te d d u ri n g ye a r T o ta l v a lu e o f g u ar a n te e s in p o rt fo l io 2 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 1 0, 0 0 0, 0 0 0 0 2002 2003 2004 2 0 0 5 2 0 0 6 2 0 0 7 2008 2009 99% of guarantees under special crisis measures for short-term, working capital loans Source: European Association of YMutual ea rs Guarantee Societies (AECM), March 2010.

Credit Mediation (1) Introduced in several countries (e.g. France, Belgium, Ireland, Germany, Spain) to address the problem of information asymmetry, one of the major sources of conflict in the credit process, but also provide support in managing the credit relation: Conflicts in the credit process Insufficient clarity and detail in the communication by the entrepreneur Inconsistencies in the proposed business plan, requiring adjustments Difficulties in meeting existing obligations due to temporarily shocks Request for guarantees Insufficient authority of the local bank, despite positive assessment of the business plan (decision made at a higher echelon)

Credit Mediation (2) Objective: Improve information flows and use moral suasion (i.e. informal pressure or influence from authorities such as central banks) to encourage agreement between prospective lenders and SMEs. Mechanism: Firms whose credit applications are rejected bring their case before a mediation panel (usually organised by the central bank) in which the SME, the bank and other interested parties (i.e. industry associations) participate Advantages remedy to information asymmetry low cost (through existing institutions)

The process of Credit Mediation Credit request rejected Possibly appeal to the bank and confirmed rejection Firm s call to the Credit mediator: submission of relevant information Assessment by the Credit Mediator and decision to proceed with the mediation process Integration and revision of information by the firm Facilitation of dialogue between the parties Engagement of local or sectoral expertise Access to guarantees or other support instruments No authority to impose decision Facilitation, moral suasion, learning and improvement by SME

Credit mediation in France (Since 2008) Network of 105 local mediators, departmental directors of the Banque de France Role of the Prefect, chairing a monitoring unit Support by OSEO, participating and providing guarantees Support by by professional networks, providing expertise and knowledge November 2008 June 2011: The rate of successful mediation was 63%. The credit mediation scheme has reinforced contextual about 15 000 firms of all sizes; unblocked EUR 3.5 billion in credit

Challenges ahead Governments fiscal consolidation Phasing out of support measures Need to mobilise private capitals SME capital structure: excessive reliance on debt Favour equity investments Broaden the funding options Venture capital, business angels, hybrid instruments Monitoring and evaluating

Equity Seed Early stages Expansion Venture capital and growth capital E.g. Tax-based VC schemes: providing investors income, capital gains and firm-level tax reliefs E.g. Tax advantages to employee share schemes to raise equity and retain staff needed to grow Business Angels o Funding more relevant than VC o Filling the gap in early stages - E.g. Tax incentives, co-investment funds, support to angel associations and networks

Measuring and monitoring Since the onset of the crisis, the assessment of its impact on SMEs and Entrepreneurs revealed that policy makers and major stakeholders (e.g. financial institutions) lack the hard data necessary to: Monitor SME financing trends and needs Evaluate SME financing policies and programmes

OECD Scoreboard on SME and Entrepreneurship Finance Framework to monitor trends and support formulation and evaluation of policies SME loans / business loans SME short term loans/sme loans SME gov. guaranteed loans/sme loans SME gov. direct loans/sme loans SME loans authorized/sme loans requested DEBT SME non-performing loans/sme loans SME interest rates Interest rate spreads (small vs. large firms) SME collateral EQUITY Venture capital and growth capital OTHER SME payment delays SME bankruptcies

OECD WPSMEE Recommendations to improve data collection and monitoring Require financial institutions to use the national definition for an SME, based on firm size to report on a timely basis to their regulatory authorities SME loans, interest rates, collateral requirements, as well as those loans that have government support Encourage international, regional and national authorities as well as business associations to work together to harmonise quantitative demandside surveys Promote the harmonisation of the definition of Venture Capital