Lending

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State-Compliant Lending in Atlanta

Lending (also known as "financing") in its most general sense is the temporary giving of money or property to another person with the expectation that it will be repaid. In a business and financial context, lending includes many different types of commercial loans. Lending and borrowing are the same transactions from the two viewpoints

What Is a Lender? 

Lenders are businesses or financial institutions that lend money, with the expectation that it will be paid back. Banks, credit unions, and savings and loans are all potential lenders for a small business. 

The lender is paid interest on the loan as a cost of the loan. The higher the risk of not being paid back, the higher the interest rate. 

Lending to a business (particularly to a new startup business) is risky, which is why lenders charge higher interest rates and often they don't give small business loans. 

Lenders do not participate in your business in the same way as shareholders in a corporation or owners/partners in other business forms. In other words, a lender has no ownership in your business.

Lenders have a different kind of risk from business owners/shareholders. Lenders come before owners in terms of payments if the business can't pay its bills or goes bankrupt. That means that you must pay lenders back before you and other owners receive any money in a bankruptcy. 

What Are the Types of Commercial Loans? 

  • Loans to even out cash flow – working capital loans
  • Commercial and Industrial loans for short-term needs, with collateral required.
  • Asset financing for equipment and machinery or business vehicles.
  • Mortgages
  • Credit card financing
  • Vendor financing (through trade credit) from suppliers.
  • Other types of loans are for special purposes, like loans to finance disaster recovery or loans for business startup.

The type of lender you will need for a business loan depends on several factors: 

  • Amount of loan: The amount of money you want to borrow influences the type of lender. For larger loans, you may need a combination of types of commercial loans. 
  • Assets pledged: If you have business assets you can pledge as collateral for the loan, you can get better terms than if your loan is unsecured.
  • Type of assets: A mortgage is typically for land and building, while an equipment loan is for financing capital expenditures like equipment.
  • Startup or expansion: A startup loan is typically much more difficult to get than a loan for expansion of an existing business. For a startup, you may have to look at some of the more untraditional types of lenders described below. 
  • Term of the loan: How long do you need the money? If you need a short-term loan for a business startup, you will be looking for a different lender than for a long-term loan for land and building.