S-3341-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship.
Sponsored by John Hickenlooper (D-CO)
What it does
This bill would amend the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 to allow Small Business Investment Companies (SBICs) — privately managed investment funds licensed by the SBA — to exclude certain investments from their federally imposed leverage caps. Specifically, investments made in small businesses located in rural or low-income areas, small businesses in critical technology sectors, and small manufacturers would not count against an SBIC's maximum borrowing limit. The bill would also adjust the overall leverage ceilings for SBICs and expand the definition of qualifying private capital to include college and university foundations, endowments, and trusts.
Who benefits
Small businesses in rural areas and low-income communities that would gain access to more private investment capital. Small manufacturers seeking growth financing. Startups and firms in critical technology sectors (as defined by defense authorization law). SBICs themselves, which would gain greater capacity to deploy capital without hitting leverage limits. College and university endowments and foundations, which would gain a new pathway to participate as SBIC investors. Investors in SBICs, who may see expanded deal flow and returns. Indirectly, workers and local economies in underserved areas that could benefit from increased business investment.
Who is hurt
Competing investment vehicles not eligible for the same leverage treatment, which may face an uneven playing field. Taxpayers who bear the risk if SBICs with higher leverage ratios default on SBA-backed debentures. Larger or urban-based small businesses that do not qualify for the exclusion and remain subject to existing leverage caps. SBA administrators, who would face increased complexity in monitoring leverage ratios and compliance. Existing SBIC investors in non-qualifying portfolios, who may see relative competitive disadvantage compared to SBICs focused on qualifying investments.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that current SBIC leverage caps create a structural barrier that prevents private capital from reaching rural communities, low-income areas, and critical technology sectors — precisely the markets where patient, risk-tolerant investment is most scarce. They contend that the SBIC program has a strong track record, having backed companies like Apple and FedEx in their early stages, and that targeted leverage exclusions would multiply the program's impact without requiring new direct federal spending. Bipartisan sponsorship across four senators reflects broad agreement that the existing caps disproportionately constrain investment in underserved markets.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that raising leverage limits increases the federal government's contingent liability, since SBA-backed SBIC debentures are ultimately guaranteed by taxpayers — and that past SBIC program losses, including hundreds of millions in defaults during the 2008 financial crisis, demonstrate the real fiscal risk of loosening these guardrails. They contend that the "critical technology" category, defined by reference to defense authorization law, is broad enough to encompass a wide range of investments that may not genuinely serve underserved communities, potentially allowing the leverage exclusion to be used well beyond its stated purpose.