Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 54— - STATE SMALL BUSINESS CREDIT INITIATIVE › § 5704
States can ask the Secretary to approve a State capital access program so the State can get federal money for a loan-loss reserve fund. To get approval, a State had to file a notice within 60 days after March 11, 2021, and a complete application within 9 months after March 11, 2021. The program must follow other existing program rules. The program must use a separate reserve fund for each lender, require both the lender and the borrower to pay insurance premiums into the fund, have the State match those premiums for newly enrolled loans, and cover only loans where the borrower has 500 or fewer employees when the loan is enrolled and the loan is $5,000,000 or less. Federal contributions equal the insurance premiums paid by borrowers and lenders for eligible loans. The State can use federal money to make its required contribution. The Secretary must set rules that require the State to check that each participating lender has enough lending experience and capacity after talking with the proper federal agency or the CDFI Fund. Reserve funds can be kept in a deposit account at the lender or invested in safe, liquid ways. Loans can have normal terms, but the lender must keep a meaningful amount of its own capital at risk. Total premiums for a loan must be at least 2% and no more than 7% of the loan. Lenders must get borrower promises that the loan is for a business purpose, not for banned uses, and the borrower is not an insider or related person of the lender. States must also give a report showing how federal money will help small businesses in low- and moderate-income, minority, and other underserved communities, including women- and minority-owned firms.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 5704
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73