Business Owners Skeptical of Economic Recovery, Report Finds
The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) released results of a survey which suggest cost-conscious businesses are still struggling in an uncertain economy.
A report from the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) found although small business owners still remain skeptical of economic recovery, the organization's optimism index rose 0.3 points in October to 89.1, 8.1 points higher than the survey's second lowest reading reached in March. Four of the 10 index components posted gains, two were unchanged and four declined. "The October gain was minor, so the good news is still less bad news," said NFIB chief economist William C. Dunkelberg.For those businesses that want to borrow, getting a loan continues to be difficult, with a net 14 percent reporting loans harder to get than in their last attempt. "With very weak plans to make capital expenditures, add to inventory and expand operations, it would appear that many of those trying to borrow are having cash flow difficulties due to very weak sales, most frequently reported as the top business problem," Dunkelberg said.
Thirty-three percent reported regular borrowing, unchanged from September. Overall, loan demand remains weak due to widespread postponement of investment in inventories and record low plans for capital spending, Dunkelberg said. In addition, he pointed out continued poor earnings and sales performance has weakened the credit worthiness of many potential borrowers. "This has resulted in tougher terms and higher loan rejection rates, even with no change in lending standards," he said.
Reports of positive profit trends were unchanged at a net-negative 40 percentage points. The persistence of this imbalance is bad news for the small business community and a contributor to the reported difficulties in obtaining credit, Dunkelberg said. For those reporting lower earnings compared to the previous three months (52 percent, up two points), 62 percent cited weaker sales, four percent each blamed rising labor costs and higher materials costs, two percent blamed higher insurance costs, and eight percent blamed lower selling prices. Four percent blamed regulatory costs. "Poor sales and price cuts are responsible for much of the weakness in profits," said Dunkelberg.








