Going for Broker
At the end of your rope for ways to finance your business's growth? Forget the usual suspects and try the last place you'd think of.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/financing/othersources/article51888.html
When Kevin Nikkhoo took the entrepreneurial plunge in 1992, it
was with a modest amount of start-up capital--his own--that he
co-founded Los Angeles-based Vertex Systems Inc. The technology
consulting firm thrived without so much as a loan, providing
technology solutions to the entertainment, manufacturing and
financial services industries.
In 1999, however, Nikkhoo found himself in an unfamiliar
situation. Eager to position his company for significant growth and
to capitalize on the booming IPO market of the late 1990s, he
needed a loan. He was also seeking a commercial lending
relationship that extended beyond just borrowing.
28% of venture-backed start-ups have received
follow-ups financing since January 2001. SOURCE:
PriceWaterHouseCooper
|
"We talked to many organizations," recalls Nikkhoo,
41, the firm's chairman and CEO. "We found that although
they were very interested in providing a credit facility, they did
not have the ability to scale up with us as we grew. If we needed
to strategically look at the different areas we were going to go
into, we [needed] to feel comfortable that [the organization] could
provide those kinds of services."
Nikkhoo found credit in his stockbroker's office, of all
places. While meeting with a Morgan Stanley Dean Witter & Co.
broker to discuss his personal assets, he learned the firm offered
credit and advisory services to established businesses like
his.
In January 2001, Vertex Systems finally had its financing: a
long-term loan and credit facility from Morgan Stanley. While the
company didn't go public, Nikkhoo felt Morgan Stanley's
expertise with IPOs and acquisitions made it the ideal long-term
financial partner for his $10 million company.
While Morgan Stanley is a relative newcomer to the
small-business financial services industry, its commercial lending
practice is hardly unique. Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. introduced
the first central asset account to consolidate checking, investing
and borrowing for small businesses in 1986. Morgan Stanley and
Salomon Smith Barney Inc. are now mining their own customer bases
for potential small-business clients. Their often friendlier
lending procedures, account consolidation and other services
intended to cut the clutter of running a business are effective
marketing pitches small businesses are embracing. At the same time,
bank consolidation has left some disgruntled entrepreneurs seeking
a personal relationship with a financial advisor, which has also
fueled the financing trend.
This credit option isn't for the fledgling business, though.
Minimum deposit requirements, typically $20,000, as well as lending
restrictions on some industries-Morgan Stanley, for example,
won't lend to restaurants, gas stations, hotels and
construction firms unless they pledge securities as
collateral-favor a more select group of high-end small businesses
than typically found on a bank's loan roster. Morgan
Stanley's standard client has been in business for five years
and has sales of more than $10 million. As a minimum, businesses
must be at least two years old and have sales greater than $1
million. Merrill Lynch, meanwhile, generally focuses on companies
at least three to five years old with revenues of at least $5
million.
Merrill Lynch, which has tripled financing commitments to small
and midsized businesses to more than $6 billion over the past five
years, now ranks among the top 10 small-business financial services
providers, according to market research firm NFO Financial
Services.
While brokerages are attracting small and midsized businesses
with convenient offerings, they haven't displaced banks. NFO
Financial Services research suggests entrepreneurs are still more
likely to go to brokerages for investment and cash management
products than for financing; the vast majority of brokerage
customers still use a bank for some of their needs.
The brokerages have had success with larger small businesses and
those less dependent on a bank's branch-based service, says
Charles Wendel, president of New York City-based Financial
Institutions Consulting. And while brokerage customers may find
account officers more sophisticated than the typical banker,
"the best banks have closed a lot of the gaps," Wendel
says, citing Citigroup, Wells Fargo & Co. and National City
Corp. as examples. "Because of the drop in interest rates, and
because banks are better at marketing to small businesses, I
don't think there's a great advantage anymore."
Another potential drawback is the lack of local credit
decision-making, even for a "story loan," Wendel
maintains. "If the loan is complex, you're better off
dealing with your bank. They have more of a local presence, and can
deal with some of these issues more easily than a Merrill Lynch
can."
Access to credit wasn't an issue for Vertex Systems. Rather,
finding a commercial lender that would advise the company on
economic and growth issues was Nikkhoo's greatest challenge. He
also feared volatility in the tech sector might wield too much
pressure on a bank's lending decisions. "Everybody is
willing to give you money in an up market," Nikkhoo says.
"The challenge is when the markets get tough, how are banks
going to react to the companies?"
Crystal Detamore-Rodman is a Charlottesville, Virginia,
writer who covers the small-business finance market.
Contact Sources
- Financial Institutions Consulting Inc.
(212) 252-6700 - Merrill Lynch Business Financial Services
(800) MERRILL - Morgan Stanley Commercial Financial Services
(212) 310-6258 - NFO Financial Services
(813) 637-0087 - Vertex Systems Inc.
(310) 571-2222, ext. 222
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