Bloomberg
The Federal Reserve formally expanded its Main Street Lending Program to include nonprofit organizations and eased some of its initially indicated terms to allow smaller entities to participate.
“Nonprofits provide vital services across the country and employ millions of Americans,” Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome H. Powell said in a statement. “We have listened carefully and adapted our approach so that we can best support them in carrying out their vital mission during this extraordinary time.”
The Fed had previously said it was looking to broaden Main Street — its emergency facility to help small- and midsize businesses weather the coronavirus outbreak — to include nonprofits, which have been on the front lines of helping needy Americans survive during the pandemic.
The Fed changed the minimum employee provision for nonprofits to 10 from 50, allowing smaller organizations to participate. Nonprofit organizations employ 12.5 million Americans, or about 8% of the workforce, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The COVID-19 pandemic is weighing on the nonprofit sector as contributions and revenues suffer, with organizations on average having laid off or furloughed 18% of their workers, a survey showed. Some 22,000 nonprofits may fail during the crisis, according to a report from Candid, an industry research group.
The Fed also modified the revenue provision, giving access to nonprofits with nondonation revenues equal to or greater than 60% of expenses in the two years through 2019. The central bank adjusted other financial provisions, but left the overall terms of the loan the same. The endowment cap remains at $3 billion.
The changes follow a public comment period, in which some 300 organizations asked for modifications so that smaller nonprofits could participate.
This adjustment marks the latest expansion of the program, which the central bank first announced in March as part of its emergency response to the coronavirus-fueled economic crisis. It buys 95% of loans made to eligible entities by financial institutions.
Thousands of nonprofits, including public hospitals and universities, may be eligible, the Fed said. The program has faced questions over processing the Main Street facilities, as lenders and borrowers have said the loans are too complex and the terms too onerous.
The Fed started buying for-profit business loans from banks Wednesday. Its weekly reserve balance report published Thursday showed it purchased just $12 million in the first day.
Nonprofits would be able to tap two of the program’s three facilities at terms similar to that of the for-profit, small- to midsize businesses.