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Independent, non-profit Foundation studying markets, trends and operations to illuminate the future of the equipment finance industry.

February 2010 MCI-EFI

February 2010 Survey Results:

The overall MCI-EFI is 60.6, the highest level since the index was launched in May 2009. Respondents indicate:

  • When asked to assess if their current business conditions would remain the same over the next four months, 42.9 % of executives responding said they believe business conditions will improve over the next four months. Only 2.4% believe conditions will get worse, and the majority, 54.8%, believe business conditions will remain the same over the next four months.
  • 59.5% of survey respondents believe demand for leases and loans to fund capital expenditures (capex) will "remain the same" over the next four months while 31% indicated there will be an increased demand for leases or loans to fund capex, up from January's index of 20% of CEOs who believed their would be an increase in demand.
  • 61.9% of the survey respondents indicate they expect the "same" access to capital to fund business, down from 67.5% in January. 38.1% of executives expect more access to capital to fund equipment acquisitions over the next four months, up from January's survey of 32.5%.
  • When asked, 23.8% of the executives reported they expect to hire more employees over the next four months, up slightly from 22.5% in January, and 52.4 % expect no change in headcount over the next four months, compared to 57.5% from January 2010.
  • 100% of the leadership evaluates the current U.S. economy as "poor" or "fair." In January, 59.5% rated the economy as "fair," an improvement from January when 45% rated the economy at "fair."
  • 42.9% of survey respondents believe the U.S. economic conditions will get "better" over the next six months, virtually the same as the January's survey response of 42.5%. Survey respondents indicate 52.4% believe the US economy will "stay the same" and 4.8% believe it will get worse during the next six months.
  • 38.1% of respondents believe their company will increase spending on business development activities during the next six months, up from 32.5% in January, while 59.5% believe their will be "no change" in business development spending.

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February 2010 Survey Comments from Industry Executive Leadership:

  • From the Small-Ticket Sector:

    Ken Collins, Susquehanna Commercial Finance: "I feel like we are in the aftermath of a major storm. It will take time to repair the infrastructure, but once the repair work is completed the reset will have taken hold and business will begin to move forward."
  • From the Middle-Market Sector:

    Elaine Temple, Bancorp South Equipment Finance: '[I'm] cautious but optimistic, and the worst is over but the economy will still be stalled for a while."
  • From the Large Ticket Sector:

    A large ticket MCI-EFI participant: "At this point, the outlook for the industry in 2010 appears to be just slightly better than 2009. Greater improvement would require a more focused and business-friendly effort from Washington."

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Survey Respondent Demographics:

Market Segment:

  • Bank 37.5%
  • Captive 22.5%
  • Financial Services 7.5%
  • Independent 30.0%

Market Segments Based on Transaction Size of New Business Volume

  • Large-Ticket (New Business Volume Avg. Transaction Size Over $5 Million) 12.5%
  • Middle-Ticket (New Business Volume Avg. Transaction Size of $250,000 - $5 Million) 47.5%
  • Small-Ticket (New Business Volume Avg. Transaction Size of $25,000 - $249,999) 40.0%
  • Micro-Ticket (New Business Volume Avg. Transaction Less Than $25,000) 0%

Organization Size (Based on Annual New Business Volume for Fiscal Year 2008):

  • Under $50 Million 12.5%
  • $50 Million - $250 Million 17.5%
  • $250 Million - $1 Billion 27.5%
  • Over $1 Billion 42.5%

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