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Paul C. Wright interview on the Philippe Matthews Show
Bank of America Corp., under pressure to raise capital and cut risks, is severing lines of credit to some small-business owners who have used them to stay afloat.
The Charlotte, N.C., bank is demanding that these customers pay off their credit line balances all at once instead of making monthly payments. If they can't pay in full, they are being offered new repayment plans for as long as five years, but with far higher interest rates than their original credit lines had.
Business owners complain that BofA's credit squeeze is abrupt and could strain their small companies and even put them out of business. The credit cutoff is coming at a time when the California economy can't seem to catch a break, and bucks what the financial industry says is a new trend of easing standards on business loans.
One such customer, Babak Zahabizadeh, was told in
a letter that the $96,000 debt carried by his Burbank messenger
service must be repaid Jan. 25. A loan officer offered multiple
alternatives over the phone that Zahabizadeh called unaffordable,
including paying off the debt at 12% interest over two years. That's
about $4,500 a month, nearly 10 times his current interest-only
payment.
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