Here are some useful tips for businesses approaching banks and lending institutions for loans.
Be Realistic
Plan Ahead
Understand The Lender
Improve Your Chances Of Success
Borrow The Right Amount
Ask Your Banker For Help
Check Your Credit Rating
Be Realistic
- Banks and other lending institutions see hundreds of loan applications a day.
- It is up to you to convince the lender that your business is worth investing in.
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Plan Ahead
- Apply for a loan way ahead of time. Last-minute applications will make the lender doubt your ability to manage your money.
- Don't rush the lender. The lending institution needs time to evaluate your application. Rushing may weaken your relationship and affect your chances of getting loans.
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Understand The Lender
- Entrepreneurs are risk-takers, while lenders are conservative.
- To a lender, a loan is an investment. The lender's job is to protect the bank's or institution's funds by minimising risk.
- Lenders often come into contact with borrowers who are dishonest or who have poor business plans. It is their job to make sure yours is not such a business.
How Lenders View SMEs
- If you are an SME, you should know that lenders worldwide view SMEs as high-risk investments for the following reasons:
- SMEs often have unstable cash flows.
- SMEs have small capital.
- SMEs often do not honestly disclose financial information.
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Improve Your Chances Of Success
Be Honest
- Borrowers often make the fundamental mistake of being untruthful about their accounts and financial information.
- To reduce their taxable income, many sole proprietors and partnerships under-declare income or over-inflate expenses.
- Borrowers also tend to overstate their revenue projections hoping give lenders the impression that their businesses are healthy.
- Remember that hiding the truth will make it hard for your banker to feel comfortable with your business. If your lender suspects that you are not being honest, he/she will not give you the loan.
Ensure Your Financial Records Are In Order
- Many SMEs neglect to keep their books in order. They may be unable to account for every dollar spent, or they may mix business and personal expenses.
- This is especially true of SMEs with less than S$5 million revenue, as the law does not require their accounts to be audited.
- Proper bookkeeping gives the lender a truthful picture of your financial situation. It also shows that your business is stable and professionally run.
Manage Your Money Well
- Lenders are always impressed with businesses that manage their money well.
- Warning bells go off if the lender discovers that you:
- write cheques that bounce
- have a low bank balance
- have frequent overdrafts
- do not make your credit card repayments on time
- have defaulted on previous loans
- were sued for non-payment or late payment by suppliers
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Borrow The Right Amount
- Every lender will look at your business and see if you have a healthy debt-to-equity ratio. This simply refers to the amount of money you are borrowing compared to the amount you have invested.
- For instance, if you want to borrow S$500,000 and you have only invested S$10,000 cash in your business, your debt-to-equity ratio is 50. If you are a start-up, that ratio will be considered too high. You are effectively asking the lender to bankroll your start-up!