- Posted June 04, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Small biz lending shrinks as owners grow cautious

NEW YORK (AP) -- Lending to small businesses is shrinking as company owners grow more pessimistic about the economy.
A study released last Thursday by PayNet, a research firm that tracks loans to small business, shows that lending fell 2 percent in April after a 3 percent drop in March. The Thomson Reuters/PayNet Small Business Lending Index fell to 94.1 in April from the previous month's 98.5. It was at 110.5 in December.
The PayNet report comes a day after payroll company ADP said the pace of hiring by the smallest businesses, those with fewer than 50 employees, slowed in May. Both reports show that company owners are increasingly reluctant to hire or expand in an uncertain economy.
PayNet bases its report on new commercial loans and leases granted to small businesses in its database.
Published: Mon, Jun 4, 2012
headlines Oakland County
headlines National
- March 1, 1828: Sojourner Truth goes to court
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- DOJ nominees hedge on whether court orders must always be followed
- DNA evidence in open cases explored in ABC reality series
- Which law-related films have won Oscars? You may be surprised (photo gallery)
- ‘Radical agreement’ could lead to Supreme Court victory for reverse-discrimination plaintiff