The Fed expands its $600 billion lending program for struggling businesses but leaves start date unannounced
- The Federal Reserve announced Thursday it will expand its Main Street Lending Program to include mid-sized companies and those with greater leverage.
- The central bank expanded program eligibility to businesses with 15,000 employees or $5 billion in revenue, up from the 10,000 employee and $2.5 billion limits.
- The Fed didn't provide a start date for the relief program, adding that it would be announced "soon."
- A separate aid program for nonprofit organizations is under consideration, the Fed said in a release.
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The Federal Reserve is widening its Main Street Lending Program to include more mid-sized businesses seeking loans amid the economic downturn.
The central bank announced Thursday it will expand credit eligibility to firms with up to 15,000 employees or $5 billion in revenue. A third loan option for "borrowers with greater leverage" was created, and the minimum loan size for certain offerings was lowered to $500,000 from $1 million.
The lending pool was previously limited to businesses with up to 10,000 employees or $2.5 billion in revenue.
The Fed didn't provide a start date for the $600 billion program, only noting it "will be announced soon."
The newest loan allows participating lenders to retain a 15% share on loans that, when added to existing debt, don't surpass six times the borrower's income. The existing loan options let lenders hold only a 5% stake after selling the debt to the Fed.
Apart from expanding its Main Street facility, the Fed Board is mulling a separate aid program for nonprofit organizations, according to the Thursday release. Such a facility could target universities and hospitals hit by the coronavirus and its economic toll.
The announcement comes one day after the Federal Open Market Committee elected to hold rates at historic lows. The committee's April meeting yielded little guidance on how the central bank may act further to pad the economy against heightened risk, though Fed Chair Jerome Powell urged policymakers to spend more on relief measures.
"Will there be a need to do more, though? I think the answer to that will be yes," he said, adding that additional stimulus could defend businesses, corporations, and households from "avoidable insolvency."
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