Small businesses are demonstrating resilience in the face of continuing macroeconomic uncertainty, as more entrepreneurs are starting businesses and expressing confidence in the economy, both bankers and survey findings indicate.
According to a recent
Though entrepreneurs are concerned about access to capital and the impact of tariffs, “we continue to see very positive and optimistic outcomes from small-business owners in terms of how their businesses are growing and how they’re investing in the day-to-day,” Shruti Patel, U.S. Bank’s chief product officer for business banking, told American Banker.
With
Small businesses have faced so many challenges over the past five years — a pandemic, inflation, labor and supply chain disruptions — that they’ve developed “a certain amount of numbness” to macro factors, according to Richard Cabrera, head of corporate and small-business banking at the $52 billion-asset Umpqua Bank, a subsidiary of Tacoma, Washington-based Columbia Banking System. That has enabled them to concentrate on positioning their companies for growth.
“They can focus on their business. They can focus on investment,” Cabrera told American Banker. “They realize the elements that they have within their control and grasp, and that gives them a more positive outlook.”
“We’ve seen really strong, robust activity around the SBA 7(a) program,” Patel said. “We’re actually not seeing any softness, despite the macroeconomic stressors.”
Startup activity, too, “is still very strong,” Patel said. Indeed, Census Bureau statistics show that so-called “high propensity” applications for a license to operate a small business are trending up in 2025. Licensing applications are categorized as “high propensity” if they are deemed likely to result in the formation of a business with a payroll.
“What I will say is that [the total of U.S. small businesses] is growing faster than the pre-COVID level,” Patel said. “Small-business entrepreneurship is still very top-of-mind.”
About 70% of the small businesses that
Umpqua released its
“I think it was a little bit of a surprise,” Cabrera said, referring to the uptick in optimism.
About half of the small and middle-market businesses that participated in Umpqua’s survey expect revenue as well as demand for products and services to increase. Meanwhile, 50% of the small businesses surveyed reported that they anticipate investing to adopt or expand their use of generative artificial intelligence tools over the next 12 months.
Those numbers point to stability more than “frothy growth,” according to Cabrera. The Business Barometer “is really a gauge of sentiment,” he said. “It’s an emotional feel that business owners have that somehow affects their behavior. … That means we think things are okay, steady, and steady’s not bad.”
The
“While the economy will continue to stumble along until the major sources of uncertainty are resolved, owners reported more positive expectations on business conditions and sales growth,” NFIB Chief Economist Bill Dunkelberg said in a press release.