HR-754-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Sponsored by Judy Chu (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would amend the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 to raise the cap on how much a bank or savings association may invest in Small Business Investment Companies (SBICs) — from 5% of capital and surplus to 15%. SBICs are federally licensed private funds that provide equity and debt financing to small businesses. The change would apply to both the general investment limit and the related sub-limit in Section 302(b) of the Act.
Who benefits
Small businesses that seek equity or debt financing through SBICs, particularly those that struggle to access conventional bank loans. SBIC fund managers, who would have access to a larger pool of bank capital. Banks and savings associations that want to deploy more capital into SBICs as an investment. Venture capital and private equity firms that operate SBICs. Rural and minority-owned small businesses, which SBICs are specifically designed to serve. Indirectly, communities where small businesses create jobs and economic activity.
Who is hurt
Bank depositors and regulators who prefer banks to hold more conservative, lower-risk assets — SBIC investments are illiquid and carry higher risk than traditional bank assets. Competing non-bank lenders and community development financial institutions (CDFIs) that may face increased competition for small business financing deals. Taxpayers who back the SBA's SBIC debenture guarantee program, which could face greater exposure if SBIC portfolios underperform at larger scale. Banks that choose not to participate may face competitive disadvantage relative to those that do.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current 5% cap — unchanged for decades — has become a binding constraint that prevents banks from channeling meaningful capital to small businesses through the proven SBIC structure. They contend that SBICs have a strong track record of financing small businesses that lack access to conventional credit, and that tripling the cap would unlock billions in additional private capital without requiring new federal spending. They further argue that banks are well-positioned to evaluate SBIC risk and that modern capital adequacy rules already constrain excessive risk-taking.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that concentrating more bank capital in illiquid, higher-risk SBIC investments could increase systemic fragility, particularly for smaller community banks with limited diversification. They contend that the 5% cap exists precisely to protect depositors and the federal deposit insurance system from losses on speculative equity investments, and that tripling it — without accompanying changes to bank safety-and-soundness oversight — may outpace regulators' ability to monitor the added exposure. They also argue that the primary constraint on small business financing is not the investment cap but rather SBIC fund availability and deal flow.