An official website of the United States government
Parts of this site may be down for maintenance Saturday, November 23, 7:00 p.m. to Sunday, November 24, 9:00 a.m. (Eastern).
News Release 1998-72 | July 16, 1998
Share This Page:
WASHINGTON, D.C.—The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) today issued Advisory Letter 98-9—Access to Financing for Minority Small Businesses—to the national banking industry, identifying some of the approaches national banks have used to successfully meet the financial needs of the minority small business community.
"A positive attitude is the hallmark of the banker who sees minority small business lending not as a legal compliance' or political responsibility, but as a business opportunity waiting to be seized upon. In other words, bankers who are successful treat minority small business loans as a profit center, not as a compliance cost," said Acting Comptroller Julie Williams.
The Advisory Letter includes information shared with the OCC by national bankers, small business owners and business development officials who participated in outreach meetings last year in eight cities throughout the United States. The OCC conducted these meetings to develop a mutual understanding of the barriers that restrict minority-owned small businesses' access to credit and financial services. The meetings also provided insight into successful approaches some banks are already using to tap the growing minority business market. Some examples of these approaches are:
"National banks are employing many strategies to serve the financing needs of the growing minority small business market sector, and establishing prototypes for other financial institutions," added Acting Comptroller Williams. "The goal of full economic opportunity for all, including minority small businesses can, and will be, accomplished safely and soundly through continued innovation and adaptation."
Advisory Letter 98-9 can be obtained from the OCC's website, http://www.occ.gov, or by calling the OCC's Information Line at (202) 479-0141.
Public Affairs (202) 649-6870