Paycheck Protection Program; Loan Forgiveness Simplified

Many small and midsize businesses with Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans under the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act have been struggling with spending those funds productively within the eight-week loan forgiveness period (Covered Period). Many projected that a portion of their PPP loan would not be forgiven unless they re-hired or paid workers who were not needed (due to their current level of operations) to satisfy the loan forgiveness safe harbors. Restaurant, hospitality and retail businesses were hit especially hard due to closures, occupancy limitations, and curtailed travel during their Covered Period. In addition, many self-employed individuals realized they would have to repay some of their PPP loans since the loans were based on 2.5 months (75 days) of 2019 Schedule C income, while forgiveness was based on only eight weeks (56 days) of that same number (assuming the individual did not have any other expenses that qualify for loan forgiveness).

The Paycheck Protection Plan Flexibility Act (PPP Flex Act) (H.R. 7010), enacted on June 5, further enhanced the opportunity for loan forgiveness by expanding requirements on how the loans are spent and extending the time to use the funds to 24 weeks (but not beyond December 31, 2020). The PPP Flex Act allows borrowers who received PPP funds before June 5, 2020, to elect to use their original eight-week Covered Period. To reflect the PPP Flex Act changes, the Small Business Administration (SBA) issued amendments to existing rules on June 16, 2020, and June 22, 2020. The amendments provided more clarity, along with a simplified application (discussed below) for borrowers who maintained employee counts and wages during their Covered Period or who were not able to return to their February 15, 2020, level of operations due to COVID-19 requirements or guidance.


Maximum Compensation Amounts for the 24-Week Covered Period

The extended Covered Period will allow borrowers to request forgiveness on gross cash compensation paid to or incurred for non-owner employees during 24 weeks, not to exceed $46,154 ($100,000/52 x 24). Employer contributions paid or incurred during the 24 weeks to qualified retirement and health care plans for those employees can also be submitted for PPP loan forgiveness.

The 24-week payroll costs for any one “owner employee” (which is different than a “self-employed” individual or partner) is capped at $20,833 ($100,000/12 x 2.5) because that is the total amount that would have been loaned for any one employee to cover cash compensation. Employer contributions to qualified retirement and health care plans paid or incurred during the 24 weeks for owner employees can also be submitted for PPP loan forgiveness.

Note that while self-employed individuals and general partners are also subject to the $20,833 cap per individual, their contributions to retirement plans and payment of health plan expenses are not added to the eligible for forgiveness amount, based on the reasoning that replacement income amount already includes those contributions. Note also that S corporation shareholders’ employer health insurance contributions made on their behalf cannot be separately added because those payments are already included in their employee cash compensation.


No Need for Documentation if Compensation Achieves Total Forgiveness

For many borrowers, 24 weeks of cash compensation may completely use up all of their PPP loan funds, making it unnecessary to substantiate any other eligible costs. This simplification is not likely for the eight-week period because the loan proceeds provided for 2.5 months (75 days) of payroll costs that had to be spent in eight weeks (56 days). This potential shortfall in PPP loan forgiveness prompted many employers to rush to pay bonuses or fund retirement plans — actions that may no longer be necessary under the 24-week Covered Period.


Less of the Forgiven Amounts Must be Spent on Payroll Costs

The PPP Flex Act lowered the SBA’s original requirement that 75% of the forgiven amount must be spent on payroll costs (the 75% rule prompted many employers to rush to pay bonuses or make retirement plan contributions to use up their PPP funds). Instead, the PPP Flex Act provides that only up to 60% of the PPP funds must be spent on payroll costs for maximum PPP loan forgiveness with partial forgiveness for lower spending on payroll costs. This change applies to all PPP loans, regardless of whether the eight-week Covered Period is elected. This change alone will allow many borrowers to achieve 100% forgiveness even when electing the eight-week period.  


More Eligible Costs Can Support More Reductions in Headcounts and Salary/Wages

The reductions based on decreases in full-time equivalent (FTE) employees and salary/wages are applied to the total amount spent on eligible expenses. The 24-week Covered Period may result in eligible expenses far exceeding the total loan amount and that can absorb reductions before falling below the total loan amount. The greater the eligible expenses, the greater the FTE or salary/wage reduction that can be supported. For example, if a borrower has a $1 million PPP loan and has total eligible costs of $2 million during the Covered Period, then the FTE quotient can be up to 50% before the total amount spent on eligible expenses is the limiting factor on account of falling below the total loan principal.  


EZ Application for Forgiveness Avoids Data-Intensive Calculations

Perhaps the most significant simplification for PPP loan forgiveness is a new, streamlined PPP loan forgiveness application. SBA Form 3508-EZ and related SBA Form 3508-EZ instructions eliminate the need to compile the numerous counts of FTE employees if one of the following statements apply:

  • The borrower did not reduce the number of employees or the average paid hours of employees between January 1, 2020, and the end of the Covered Period (other than any reductions that arose from an inability to rehire individuals who were employees on February 15, 2020, if the borrower was unable to hire similarly qualified employees for unfilled positions by the later of the application date or December 31, 2020, and reductions in an employee’s hours that a borrower offered to restore and were refused).
  • The borrower was unable to operate between February 15, 2020, and the end of the Covered Period at the same level of business activity as before February 15, 2020, due to compliance with requirements established or guidance issued between March 1, 2020, and December 31, 2020, by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, related to the maintenance of standards of sanitation, social distancing, or any other work or customer safety requirement related to COVID-19.

Borrowers using Form 3508-EZ are still required to submit the number of employees on the loan application date and the forgiveness application date, but that is a much easier tally than undertaking the FTE counts.


Application Can be Filed Before the End of 24-Week Period

A PPP borrower may submit a loan forgiveness application based on the use of the funds during the eight weeks after receipt of the funds or as soon as all the loan proceeds have been used after the eight weeks and before 24 weeks have passed. However, if the borrower is not using the eight-week Covered Period, any reduction on account of a greater than 25% decrease of employee salaries or wages must be calculated for the entire 24-week Covered Period. The June 22, 2020, interim final rules provide the following example: A borrower using the 24-week Covered Period reduced a full-time employee’s weekly salary from $1,000 per week to $700 per week during the Covered Period. The employee continued to work on a full-time basis during the Covered Period (with an FTE of 1.0). In this case, the first $250 (25% of $1,000) is exempted from the PPP loan forgiveness reduction. The borrower seeking forgiveness would list $1,200 as the salary/hourly wage reduction for that employee (the extra $50 weekly reduction multiplied by 24 weeks). If the borrower applies for PPP loan forgiveness before the end of the Covered Period, the borrower must account for the salary reduction for the full 24-week covered period (totaling $1,200).


Long-Form Filers Can Begin Data Collection Now

Borrowers that do not qualify to use SBA Form 3508-EZ would request PPP loan forgiveness on regular (long-form) SBA Form 3508. Based on the corresponding SBA Form 3508 instructions, borrowers can move forward now with calculating and documenting their FTEs because the dates of the comparison periods are fixed (i.e., they do not depend on the Covered Period). On long-form SBA Form 3508, historical FTE counts are compared to a borrower’s average FTE count for the Covered Period.

But borrowers will need to wait until their Covered Period ends to finalize their FTE determination for that time. Projecting the average number of FTEs for the Covered Period is useful for analysis but may be difficult for any business that is uncertain about when they can put employees back to work. Thus the elimination of FTE counts under the new safe harbors discussed above for Form 3508-EZ. Still, for long-form filers, the 24-week period allows employers more time to reduce or eliminate their calculated FTE reduction by re-hiring laid-off employees by the earlier of the loan forgiveness application date or December 31, 2020, instead of June 30, 2020.
 
If borrowers reduced employees’ hourly rates or annual salaries during the Covered Period, they must document that the reduction did not exceed 25% of the wages/salary for the calendar quarter preceding the PPP loan date. If borrowers did not reduce the rate of pay, they do not need to perform this calculation, even if actual payments to employees decreased due to reduced hours. Reductions in wage payments due to reduced hours are not a part of this calculation because the reduced hours generate a reduction in the number of FTEs.
 
Any reduction in rates of pay or salaries that exceeds 25% will decrease the amount spent on expenses that are eligible for forgiveness. However, the 24-week Covered Period allows more time to recover from temporary wage or salary reductions. For example, if a full-time employee’s hourly rate was reduced from $20/hour in Q1 to $10/hour for an eight-week Covered Period, the reduction at the end of the eight weeks in excess of 25% would be $5/hour, which for a typical 40-hour work week would equate to $1,600. But, if the business restores the wage rate to $20/hour for weeks 9-24, the new average rate for the Covered Period is $15/hour, meaning the pay reduction does not exceed 25%, preventing any reduction of forgivable amount due to a pay reduction during the Covered Period.

Insight

Businesses will likely want to apply for forgiveness very soon after their Covered Period ends so they can make business decisions, such as any necessary payroll or staffing cuts, without impacting loan forgiveness.

PPP Loan Forgiveness and Payroll Tax Deferral Has More Flexibility

The Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020 (H.R. 7010) (PPP Flexibility Act), enacted on June 5, 2020, makes welcome changes to the forgiveness rules for Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans made to small businesses in response to the novel coronavirus global pandemic (COVID-19). The PPP Flexibility Act greatly increases the likelihood that a large percentage of a borrower’s PPP loan will be forgiven. PPP loans (and related forgiveness) were created by the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) (Public Law 116-136), which was enacted on March 27, 2020. The PPP Flexibility Act also eliminates a provision that made recipients of PPP loan forgiveness ineligible to defer certain payroll tax deposits.

Insight:

The PPP Flexibility Act does not address whether employers can deduct the expenses underlying their PPP loan forgiveness. In Notice 2020-32, the IRS announced that employers could not deduct such expenses, but congressional leaders vowed to reverse the IRS’s position in future legislation. On June 3, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, Richard Neal (D-MA), said that in the next COVID-19 stimulus bill he intends to clarify that the loan forgiveness expenses are tax deductible. But negotiations on that bill are still in the early stages.

PPP Loan Forgiveness Expanded

The PPP Flexibility Act makes the following changes:

1. Extends the “covered period” for PPP loan forgiveness from eight weeks after loan origination to the earlier of (i) 24 weeks after loan origination or (ii) December 31, 2020. Borrowers who received their loans before this change can elect to use their original or alternative payroll eight-week covered period.

Insight:

In connection with passing the PPP Flexibility Act, a Statement for the Record was issued by several Democrats and Republicans in the House and Senate, clarifying that the Small Business Administration (SBA) will not accept applications for PPP loans after June 30, 2020. The statement says: “Our intent and understanding of the law is that, consistent with the CARES Act as amended by H.R. 7010, when the authorization of funds to guarantee new PPP loans expires on June 30, 2020, the SBA and participating lenders will stop accepting and approving applications for PPP loans, regardless of whether the commitment level enacted by the Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act has been reached.” Given this affirmation, very few loans will have fewer than 24 weeks as a covered period.

2. Replaces the June 30, 2020, date for the rehire safe harbor with December 31, 2020. 

Insight:

Additional guidance is needed to determine if a borrower who elects their original or alternative payroll eight-week covered period would also retain the June 30, 2020, date for the rehire safe harbor.

3. Expands the rehire exception based on the non-availability of former employees and applies that exception when the need for workers is reduced to comply with COVID-19 standards. Specifically, PPP loan forgiveness would not be reduced due to a lower number of full-time equivalent (FTE) employees if:

  • The employer is unable to rehire individuals who were employed by the employer on February 15, 2020, and the employer shows the inability to hire similarly qualified employees for unfilled positions on or before December 31, 2020, or
  • The employer documents its inability to return to the same level of business activity as it had before February 15, 2020, due to having to comply new COVID-19 standards for sanitation, social distancing or other safety requirements during the period of March 1 through December 31, 2020.


4. Allows up to 40% of the loan proceeds to be used on mortgage interest, rent or utilities (previously such expenses were capped at 25% of the loan proceeds), while at least 60% of the PPP funds must be used for payroll costs (down from the 75% that was noted in SBA guidance). This applies even if the borrower elects to use the eight-week covered or alternative payroll covered period. If the borrower does not use at least 60% of the loan on payroll costs, then it appears that no forgiveness would be available (i.e., the 60% would be a “cliff,” even though it was previously unclear whether the 75% limit would allow for partial loan forgiveness for payroll costs of less than 75% of loan proceeds).

Insight:

Some members of Congress are considering a “technical correction” that would provide that the new 60% limit is not a “cliff” (thereby allowing partial loan forgiveness if less than 60% of PPP loan proceeds are used for payroll costs).

5. Provides a five-year term for all new PPP loans disbursed after June 5, 2020. Loans disbursed before that date would retain their original two-year term unless the lender and borrower renegotiate the loan into a five-year term.

6. Changes the six-month deferral period for loan repayments and interest accrual so that payments on any unforgiven amounts will begin on either (i) the date on which loan forgiveness is determined or (ii) 10 months after the end of the borrower’s covered period if forgiveness is not requested.

Insight:

Although the PPP Flexibility Act doesn’t clearly say as much, it appears that the $100,000 maximum on cash compensation paid to any one employee that is eligible for PPP loan forgiveness would continue to apply, such that the $15,385 cap (for eight weeks) would now be $46,153 (for 24 weeks).

The PPP Flexibility Act does not address whether the loan forgiveness cap for “owner-employees” (i.e., 8/52 of their 2019 compensation) would change to 24/52 of their 2019 compensation.

Notwithstanding some commentary that has been released, the statute does not appear to allow borrowers to request PPP loan forgiveness as soon as they spend all of their PPP funds in the ninth to 24th weeks following receipt of their PPP funds. That is because the CARES Act has been amended to substitute “24 weeks” for “eight weeks,” so absent additional guidance, it seems that borrowers must wait until the end of the 24-week period to request PPP loan forgiveness, unless they elect to use the original eight-week period (regular or alternative payroll covered period).

These changes garnered nearly unanimous, bipartisan support in both the House and Senate because the CARES Act assumed that most businesses would be up and running in a matter of weeks. But more time is needed to incur forgivable costs, because many businesses are at or near the end of their initial eight-week loan forgiveness period, yet they remain partially or fully suspended by governmental orders.
 

Payroll Tax Deferral Expanded

In addition to PPP loan changes, the bill allows all employers, even those with forgiven PPP loans, to defer the payment of 2020 employer’s Social Security taxes, with 50% of the deferred amount being payable by December 31, 2021, and the balance due by December 31, 2022. Previously, the CARES Act prohibited such payroll tax deferral after a borrower’s PPP loan was forgiven. 

Update: Paycheck Protection Program

The SBA established The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) to provide funds to small businesses that have been negatively affected by the Coronavirus pandemic. Small businesses must meet certain criteria, as the loans are granted for uses such as rent, utilities, mortgage interest and payroll costs, and may be forgiven if they are used in accordance with PPP terms and conditions. However, due to the SBA’s initiative to disperse money in a timely fashion to small businesses, it has left multiple requirements of the program to be ambiguous, therefore needing the SBA to provide additional guidance of the program.

Here’s the latest:

On April 28, the SBA released an update to its FAQ document that can be found here: https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/Paycheck-Protection-Program-Frequently-Asked-Questions.pdf

On April 28th, the SBA also provided guidance for:

Treasury Secretary, Steve Mnuchin, announced on April 28th that all companies receiving over $2 million in PPP loans will be reviewed and audited by the SBA before there is loan forgiveness which may result in investigations for fraud, abuse, and other unethical violations.

Key Considerations:

  • If a business receives loan funding and later determines that it does not comply with the terms and conditions of the PPP, then the entire loan must be repaid by May 7, 2020.
  • If a business has been granted the PPP loan, it is required to keep detailed documentation of its eligibility, how the funds are being used, and compliance with the forgiveness terms of the program.
  • Businesses that do not adhere to the PPP’s terms and conditions or are later found to be ineligible will be subject to legal or regulatory consequences.

As we expect additional guidance from the SBA, we advise that all PPP loan applicants and recipients visit: www.sba.gov/funding-programs/loans/coronavirus-relief-options/paycheck-protection-program and home.treasury.gov for ongoing updates.

If you have any questions, please contact your Urish Popeck advisor.